3.72 AVERAGE


This just plods along, slowly and aimlessly. And the title is misleading, the war starts pretty much right away. I started flipping ahead and couldn't get into it so it's going back to the library unfinished.

An old-fashioned story told in a straightforward, old-fashioned way, this story begins in the sweet English summer before WWI. Our heroine, Beatrice, is recently orphaned and is determined to find her own way teaching Latin in darkest Sussex.
Events unfold slowly, with few surprises, as the country turns to war. There are coincidences, Beatrice can be relied upon to faint conveniently, and there are good English country gentry, awful mushroomy English trades folk, noble Tinker families, and appalling British military men.
Thoroughly researched, well written -- I have no real, mechanical complaint about this long novel, but I wasn't especially engaged.

3.5 stars. A bit uneven in parts but the overall theme is marvelously and subtly done. I don't know that I needed a love story but the British culture in 1917 shines through.

While not my particular genre, it was well-written with good humor and characters. More importantly, it does a great job of subtly highlighting the ideas around class that carry through today.

DNF. I have decided to stop reading this book. It is too hard to get through and I feel like nothing is progressing. The author focuses on details that do not matter to me and just take up time and space. Halfway through and I feel like we are still in the prologue.

Helen Simonson’s new novel The Summer Before the War pulled me right in at chapter 1. This book by the author of Major Pettigrew’s Last Stand opens in England in the summer before the Great War.

The narrative is lovely and lyrical but the plot is very slow moving. Very slow moving. If you are looking for lots of action, this book is not for you. It is very wordy with much narrative explanation. On the other hand, if you like character development, as I do, you might enjoy the book very much. I really felt I came to know not only the main characters (of which there are several) but many of the side characters as well.

Agatha and John are a middle-aged couple with no children. Agatha dotes on her two adult nephews, Hugh and Daniel, who are not brothers but cousins. Hugh is studying to be a doctor; Daniel is a poet. (“No woman can resist having her name rhymed with a flower in iambic pentameter,” he says at one point. (p. 29 of the advance reader copy))

Agatha is a forward-thinking woman who understands that she can most effectively bring about change by working in small ways to alter village life. One such way is to convince the school board to hire a female Latin teacher for the village school. Beatrice, an independent woman who has recently lost both her widowed father and most of her independence, arrives in the summer to tutor three promising young Latin students before the school year officially begins.

The small details woven into the story seemed very true to life. The politics of the local women’s group certainly ran true as well. The author seems to have done her research about the location and time period. The novel reminded me in a good way of the early days of Brideshead Revisited.

I paused a numbers of times to admire a bit of writing I especially liked, such as this passage: “His eyes watched the curl of smoke from the tip of his cigarette paper as he scratched at the itchy wool of his school uniform. He felt the tightness of the hatband around his head, smelled the dry dirt and green cemetery waxiness of the yew. His neck grew hot and his teeth clenched.” (p. 251 of the ARC)

And this exchange between the cousins:

“Youth’s lost companion may be the measured friend of old age, I hope,” said Daniel. “I may write a poem on the subject.”

“Dear God, it sounds more like a cross-stitched pillow than a poem,” said Hugh. (p. 269 of the ARC)

As a single woman with no children but 10 nieces and nephews, I liked that one of the primary relationships was not that of a mother and her children but of an aunt and her nephews. The plot also deals very subtly with the reality of gay couples at a time when same sex love could not be acknowledged.

I cried on and off for the last 30 pages, hoping for certain outcomes but knowing others would be more reflective of real life and would therefore make it a better book. Is the subject matter covered here original? No, but Simonson has covered the topic in a compelling way.

I highly recommend The Summer Before the War for readers who like realistic historical fiction heavy on character development. If you are a fan of Major Pettigrew, you may or may not enjoy this book as well, depending on what drew you to Major Pettigrew. The Summer Before the War contains heartbreak and loss, but handled in a manner that feels truthful.

I read an advance reader copy of The Summer Before the War.

bkowalczik's review

5.0

This book had so much more depth than I was expecting. I thought it might be a light romance set in turn-of-the-20th Century England where a young woman (already a spinster at the age of 22) tries be an independent woman. As the book progresses social class, hypocrisy, love, shallowness, war, grief are all explored. Loved this.

This is such a charming and beautifully written book. The characters and their conversation kept reminding me of Jane Austen. The book begins in England just before the start of WWI and it is obviously such a different time, a time of genteel manners, though not without scandal. I dearly loved the spunk and intelligence of Beatrice and Aunt Agatha. If I found any fault at all, it was that the ending wrapped up a little quickly. I was so invested in the characters that I found I wanted a little more, despite the fact that it's not a short book.

Highly recommended.

(I received a complimentary copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.)

This is the summer before the Great War the one that was to end all wars. What it really did was put an end to a way of life in England which is vividly described through the lives of the main characters. A testimony to the futility of clinging to the past.

I listened to this as I walked. Eye opening regarding the single female's place in society at the time. The main character seems to do a fine job of negotiating her position.