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| The Road to Yesterday (L.M. Montgomery Books) | 
enlarge | Author: L.m. Montgomery Publisher: Laurel Leaf Category: Book
Buy New: $4.99 (11.75 RON)
Avg. Customer Rating: 14 reviews Sales Rank: 92539
Media: Mass Market Paperback Reading Level: Young Adult Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 416 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 6.7 x 4.2 x 1
ISBN: 0553560689 EAN: 9780553560688 ASIN: 0553560689
Publication Date: January 1, 1993 Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Promotion: Buy 4 eligible items in the 4-for-3 promotion offered by Amazon.com and get 1 of them free. Terms and Conditions Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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| Customer Reviews:
| Showing reviews 1-5 of 14 | | NEXT » |
A few more details February 15, 2008 The thing I liked about this collection of short stories was that L M Montgomery found a way to tell us a little more about the Blythe Family, in particular what has occured after the end of the original series (Rilla of Ingleside). While I didn't like all of the stories (as I don't with Montgomery's short story collections) there were some that really touched the heart.
Buy Chronicles of Avonlea instead. April 8, 2007 I was excited to find this book because I enjoyed Chronicles of Avonlea and Further Chronicles of Avonlea, but it is not as good as those books. Perhaps it's because the other books have more recognizable characters from the Anne series, but I also think the writing style of this book is not as sophisticated and captivating as the others. One of the reviewers is right, one of the stories is racist. But, if you absolutely need to have everything L.M. Montgomery wrote, at least what is related to Anne, than going ahead and buy, but it won't be as good as Chronicles of Avonlea.
The Blythes are Quoted . . . A Lot! January 8, 2007 22 out of 23 found this review helpful
The Road to Yesterday was the last collection of tales that L.M.Montgomery wrote before she died. Her son, Stuart McDonald, found the manuscript among her papers, and had it published post-humously. Originally, Montgomery had called the work The Blythes Are Quoted, and had framed the tales with accounts of the Blythes at home listening to their favorite stories. This frame-narrative was removed, and the stories were rearranged into their current order.
In many ways, The Road to Yesterday displays both the strengths and the weaknesses of Montgomery's work. It shows her genuine ability to tell stories of the community in the voice of the community. Her narrative voice is that of the neighborhood gossip, who doesn't wish ill on her neighbours but who delights nonetheless in their poor decisions, their misfortunes and their downfalls as an interesting tale. It also shows her command of irony and satire, two qualities with which she is seldom credited. At the same time, though, it reveals how she could never quite break away from the narrative patterns of magazine literature with its improbable coincidences and inevitable happy endings. Most of the stories revolved around love and romance, and tend to be rather implausibly constructed. For instance, "Fool's Errand" tells of a man who becomes lonely after his mother dies and remembers a promise he made long ago to a young girl to return and marry her, while "The Pot and the Kettle" is the tale of a young woman who has to marry a certain man to gain an inheritance and who refuses to do so, only to fall in love with him when he courts her by another name.
Only two stories in the collection are genuinely startling and unconventional. "A Commonplace Woman" is striking in its refusal to conform to generally-accepted standards of morality. It is a savage satire of the hypocrisy surrounding old age and death in a family, a feminist polemic about women's position in society, and a carefully observed character sketch of a woman who feels no remorse or shame about having a child out of marriage or committing murder but merely proclaims that she has lived. Similarly, "Here Comes the Bride" is a gently pointed portrait built up from multiple perspectives of what a village really thinks of a wedding.
Such stories show what Montgomery could have achieved if she had been given the chance. Unfortunately, she was a victim of Anne of Green Gables' early, unprecedented success, which led to her being pigeonholed as the author of rather sentimental tales of girlhood, and which she ultimately came to resent. Some of this bitterness seems to have seeped into The Road to Yesterday. Despite not being its major protagonists, the Blythes are a major presence throughout the novel as friends, neighbours or guests, and they are the subject of much scrutiny by the village. (Montgomery would have been familiar with the feeling, as the wife of a minister who was prone to religious mania and who had to keep up the front of a happy, perfect life for the sake of his parishoners.) People in the tales frequently comment on how tired they are of hearing about the Blythes or having them quoted at them, which surely suggests Montgomery's own irritation at having been linked with Anne throughout her life. Alternatively, the Blythes are praised so often and so profusely that it becomes absurd, which may be intended to parody the public's adulation of Anne.
As a final note, Benjamin Lefevbre is working on a critical edition of The Blythes Are Quoted for publication. This edition will restore the frame narrative and put the stories into their original order. It will be interesting to Montgomery's original intentions for the piece, and to see whether and how the feel of the collection changes.
Cherished book from my past December 9, 2006 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Before they started re-releasing L.M.'s short stories in paperback, my local library had a hardback version of this book. I checked that book out countless times. I still remember the faded pink cover with its fancy Victorian drawing.
I read and re-read this book throughout my teenage years. I had doubts if the stories would translate into adulthood, but the humor lasts. I recommend this book to any L.M. fan. You can pick up this book and find an entertaining story to pass a trainride or a warm evening by the fire.
The Road to Yesterday (L.M. Mongomery Books) November 2, 2006 2 out of 4 found this review helpful
This book, and other books, regarding the character of Anne of Green Gables, character created and wrote about, by Canadian Author, L.M. Mongomery, in a series of books. IS A MUST READ AND HAVE FOR YOUR BOOK COLLECTION, BECAUSE L.M. MONTGOMERY BOOKS ARE A MUST!
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