Showing posts with label Caroleyn Meyer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Caroleyn Meyer. Show all posts

Friday, 6 May 2011

Book Review: Anastasia: The Last Grand Ducess (My Royal Story) by Carolyn Meyer

Anastasia (My Royal Story)
Amazon description

In 1914 Grand Duchess Anastasia, youngest daughter of the Tsar, leads a privileged life in the grand palaces of Russia. The First World War and the Bolshevik revolution are just about to erupt. With the royal family arrested and exiled to Siberia, the life Anastasia knows is swept away forever. Spanning the last four years of Anastasia's life, My Royal Story offers a fascinating insight into her life.

Review

The diary starts when Anastasia is thirteen and enjoying a life of luxury as a Grand Duchess. She is the joker of the family and is always looking for ways to make people laugh. I thought the diary bought her to life well as a fun loving girl growing up in early twentieth century Russia with her thoughts and feelings told clearly. It was easy to relate to and sympathise with Anastasia and get inside her world as the book progressed.The beginning the diary is happy but when Russia become involved in WW1, Anastasia's life becomes harder and sadder as her privileges are taken away. I really liked the distinction that can be seen between these two periods of time and thought the author handled Anastasia's tragic fate very well.

What I liked about the diary format was that it showed that despite being a Grand Duchess, Anastasisa and her siblings had lots of fun escapades, some imagined by the author and others historically documented. There are the typical complaints from a tween and later on teen girl about school work and dreams of a coming out party fit for a Princess that provide a reminder that Anastasia had the same thoughts and feelings as any other teenager commonly experiences whilst growing up.

I read this book almost straight after Anastasia's Secret by Susanne Dunlap, which I loved, and I think that this affected my reading experience because it portrayed Anastasia in a more naive and immature way than in Anastasia's Secret. I also felt that she wasn't as complex a character even though I liked her distinctive  personality filled voice in the diary.

Whilst offering a fascinating insight into the life of the Romonov family, I found it was written in simpler language than other books in the My Story series and this was a bit of a disappointment. Having found out a lot about the Romonov family before, the special bond and closeness that they had especially amongst Anastasia's sisters didn't have the same effect on me as the first time I read about it. Though, this shouldn't be a concern for those who haven't learnt much about Anastasia and the Romonovs before.

One of my favourite parts was the detailed epilogue which included historical notes, the family tree, a glossary of characters in the Romonov household, information about the Russian language and a section on the Russian calendar. This back section was a lovely addition to the story and was very helpful.

Despite some of the pitfalls, I still enjoyed reading it and would particularly recommend it to middle grade readers who want to find out about the Romonov family through the first hand voice of Anastasia if they haven't read much about her before. If you're looking for a more developed YA book about Anastasia with a more mature narrator then I suggest Anastasia's Secret by Susanne Dunlap. You can read my review for that by clicking on the link.

Rating: 3 stars

Thursday, 30 December 2010

What I Got For Christmas!

This is a bit late but I wanted to share what books I got for Christmas to wrap up the All I Want For Christmas meme hosted by Danya @ A Tapestry Of Words that I participated. If you would like to see the books I feature in my posts that were on my wish list you can find them here (1) and here (2)

I was a very lucky girl this Christmas to find that I received nearly all of the books on my wish list . I certainly didn't expect this so thank you so much to my family!

My family were sitting around opening presents to exclamations of 'not another book!' whilst I looked at the pretty covers excitedly. What book lover doesn't love getting books for Christmas?!? After all, as the famous quote says, 'A book is a present you can open again and again.'

Here's what I got:

All of these covers are gorgeous, I couldn't decide a favourite!
I loved some of the surprise books- I've read two of the books in the Royal Diaries series by Carolyn Meyer and I'm very happy to be able to read the next two now. I'm also a fan of the My Story Diaries, written by various different authors as they introduced me to historical fiction. They've recently redesigned the covers and I have to admit that they are a lot more appealing although the old ones have more of a historical feel. I'm very intrigued as to reading Queen Victoria's fictional diary as (as some of you might know!) a favourite of mine since I was very little.

The surprise books :)


I also got 2 Jane Austen DVDs. I have only read Pride and Prejudice so far (I didn't do very well in the Austen challenge I joined a few months ago!) but I'm planning to read the other Austen's in 2011. Until then, I can enjoy the adaptations :D





I'm really looking forward to reading these new books- they should take me a while to get through!


What books did you get for Christmas?

Wednesday, 11 August 2010

Book Review: Loving Will Shakespeare by Caroleyn Meyer

Blurb
'Agnes Hathaway longs for love- but she’s well past the proper marrying age and still stuck living with her brothers, sisters and nagging stepmother in a crowded cottage. Her best friend has a family of her own, and even Will Shakespeare, the neighbour who always made her laugh, is away indefinitely. There seems to be no end to her misery.


Then, suddenly, Will is back. No longer a cute boy who entertains Anne with silly pranks, he is tall and handsome, and his innocent flirtations are taking a serious turn. Although he is much younger than she is Anne can’t get him out of her mind. Could Will be the man for her?'

My review and thoughts

 My Summary

On the very first page, there is a letter from Will to his wife Anne in 1611, which serves as a springboard and introduction for the story.
When Anne’s mother dies from a plague that sweeps her countryside village, her life takes a turn for the worse when her father decides to marry again despite Anne believing that she, her father and siblings and father can survive alone. In a Cinderella like way, her ‘evil stepmother’ Jone is verbally abusive and treats Anne badly. Growing up, Anne tries to escape the misery of her home life with her comforting best friend and various secret suitors. However, the person that makes Anne laugh the most is young Will Shakespeare who she has known since he was born. Entertained by his boyish pranks and attempts at gallantry and court manners, life is brighter when he is at his home in the village. As life moves quickly on, Anne seems to be left behind as her friends get married whilst she stays trapped at home. Sailing past the proper marrying age, Anne becomes desperate and lonelier than ever, having to cope with nightmare marriage threats from her stepmother and the prospect of being a destitute old maid. However, when Will Shakespeare returns home to learn the glove making trade from his father, Anne is drawn to him and he seems to return her growing love for the now not so little Will. Their blossoming passion for each other makes Anne feel cared for and cherished, which is something that she lacked before. The only problem is that Anne is eight years older than him and their love is frowned upon by some people in the village and that the two have different dreams. Will wants to playact and write scripts for London’s theatres whilst Anne longs for a cosy cottage where she can bring a family up with Will in a loving and happy environment. Are Will and Anne too different to be happy together?

Why I wanted to read the book

I have read a few of Caroleyn Meyer’s books before such as Beware, Princess Elizabeth and Mary, Bloody Mary. These were so well written and the character’s emotions were portrayed cleverly so that it made me feel that I knew the thoughts and feelings of famous historical young women at different times of their life so they were not just flat characters in a history book. I also liked the way that they opened doors to thinking about if the way we see the character is a misunderstanding and they were a different person to what historical events make them out to be.

So, when I saw her book about Shakespeare as a boy/young man, I wanted to find out more about the famous play writer whose work I have studied at school but whose life I didn’t know much about. Also, when looking up about his wife, I was intrigued to find out why Shakespeare spent most of his marriage away from his wife and children in London and also only left his second best bed to his wife. Was this a private joke or a symbol that his wife was second best? No one will ever know for sure but I wanted to see an interpretation of Will and Anne's story.

 Writing, Characters and Flaws

I thought that Caroleyn Meyer’s descriptive writing painted a clear picture of what life was like for a young women in a Tudor village who wants to escape the social restraints of her time to live her own way and escape from her miserable home.

I could relate to Anne, who was a feisty young girl woman throughout the book and I admire her for what she endured with courage.

Meanwhile, Will was the type of young man that many young girls could fall in love with, kind, humorous, a master poet and love letter writer, gallant and (according to Anne’s descriptions), handsome. However, as the story was told in the first person by Anne, Shakespeare's thoughts, feelings were very hazy and unclear.

However, I felt that at some points in the book even the main characters were a bit flat and lifeless (apart from Anne, who was consistently real)  and some of the minor characters were not described enough to imagine what they looked like..

I enjoyed the bittersweet romance between Will and Anne that grew from childhood friendship but felt that although the book was based on a good idea,  as it spanned over nearly all of Anne’s life it turned into a bit of an account of everything that happened in her life with one short chapter covering a month to a couple of years. Once the romance between Will and her started to blossom, the pace picked up a bit and it became more interesting but I felt that the end of the book, which the whole book had been building up to in anticipation of a happy ending was slightly rushed.

 Meyer’s vivid writing kept the story alive and interesting with imaginative events happening in Anne’s life even though she did not have much historical information about her character. She managed to create an engaging 'he loves me, he loves me not' tale with Elizabethan themes flowing through.

If you are looking for lots of detail about young Will Shakespeare, then you will be disappointed by this book but if reading about the struggles and thoughts of a rebellious yet kind-hearted young ‘yeomans daughter’ living in rural Elizabethan England appeals to you, then you will enjoy this book despite some of its flaws.

Here is a link to an interesting blog post on Becky's Book Reviews comparing this and another book with a completely different take on the characters and events that was published around the same time.