Remarkable Creatures –by Tracy Chevalier
Fiction / Herstorical
320 pages 562KB
5 Stars
This is the fourth of Ms. Chevalier's books I have read, and
so far, it is my favorite. I'm not sure why – perhaps I'm getting used to her
style? Perhaps I could identify with her characters better? I don't know, but I
could hardly put it down at night.
Again, Chevalier has taken real people from herstory, Mary
Anning and Elizabeth Philpot, then wove their lives into a delightful tapestry
of the English coast on the English Channel, fossils, friendship between
unlikely people, and the bucking of convention. Perhaps that's why I like it
the best, so far at least, that bucking of convention.
Elizabeth Philpot is a prickly spinster, living with her two
spinster sisters, "banished" so to speak, to live on a limited income
to the small town of Lyme Regis when their brother marries and sells the family
home. The sisters are educated, and Elizabeth discovers once living in Lyme
that she has a fondness for, and collects, fossils of fish.
Mary Anning is a teen of Lyme when the Philpots join the
small community. She comes from a poor working class family and roams the
beaches looking for "curies" – fossils and shells to sell the summer
folk who come for the sea air and wish to take home a curiosity or two when
they return to their winter habitats.
Mary is uneducated, but has an eye for fossils, and a deep
love for them. She is a curious girl, struck by lightning when a baby. Ramrod
straight Elizabeth finds her on the beach, and a bond is quickly formed between
the two. Elizabeth convinces Mary she at least must learn to read and write at
the Sunday School of her church, which Mary does.
The chapters are from the point of view of either the quite
correct Elizabeth, or the far more casual, though literate, Mary. It quickly
becomes apparent who is speaking, just by the voice. As all good stories must
have conflict between friends, there is conflict here—and a most satisfactory
resolution. This friendship, at least as depicted by Chevalier, is believable.
How their friendship ends, I shall leave you to discover on your own.
I had not considered, until reading this book, the impact of
finding and dating such fossils had on the Church and the people's
belief/understanding of God and Creation in the early 1800s. It seems the
religious had, then as now, often a hard time separating their beliefs from the
facts of science.
For those of you who are not familiar with either of these
women, they were "uneducated scientists" who did not receive real
credit for their finds for quite some time. Mary is credited with important
finds she made in the Jurassic marine fossil beds, the first ichthyosaur, the
first two plesiosaur skeletons found outside Germany, and many more.
Elizabeth was an amateur paleontologist and artist. Her well
categorized fossils were used by such illustrious geologists as William
Buckland and Louis Agassiz for their research. Mr. Agassiz gave both women
credit in his book on fossil fish, and named one specie after Elizabeth and two
after Mary.
The www is full of information about both women; however,
the most approachable and most fun read is--Remarkable Creatures.
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