Burning Bright –by Tracy Chevalier
Fiction, Historical
637 KB / 327 pages
4 Stars
London 1793-1793, or rather, one small neighborhood and two
families, with the Blake's in the middle.
To be honest (and somewhat embarrassed) I didn't realize the
neighbor, Mr. Blake was THE William Blake until I began reading some of the
other reviews. Neither that particular part of history, nor he, nor his poetry,
have ever been great favorites of mine, in case you couldn't tell.
I read this story as a coming of age story of two young
people, Jem and Maggie and except for the long bouts of poetry I fairly well
enjoyed it. Until the end. Something about the end left me dissatisfied. Like a
well prepared gourmet meal and a bag of cheap cookies from the corner store for dessert.
It was OK, but....
My first Chevalier book was The Last Runaway, and I loved
it. This is my second book, and though not as soul satisfying as the first, I
am eager to read the rest of her books. Ms. Chevalier is an accomplished
author, she does her research, and her characters are captivating.
The picture she paints of London fairly reeked with the
stench that Jem and his family must have up with put once there after having
come from the country. The street-wise girl, Maggie was a delight. I enjoyed
the banter between the two, in their own dialects. Normally, I don't care for
dialog in dialect, but Chevalier both handled it well, and did not over-use it.
If you are interested in London of the 1790s, and or Blake
(yes, THAT Blake;-) I highly recommend this book. If you just want a good story, I
still recommend this book. A most engaging story well told of life as it was
lived then.
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