
Title: A Bird in the House
Author: Margaret Laurence
ISBN: 0771099851
Publisher: M&S/1970
Pages: 191
A Bird in the House can be read both as short story collection or a novel as the short stories are interconnected and yet stand alone. The stories speak of childhood, and girlhood very beautifully, depicting, pathos, wonder and also the joys of growing up.
The protagonist Vanessa MacLeod, is a keen observer and she is attuned to everything that is connected to her. This books speaks of family love, duty and the pain of death too. The conflict too is shown in a very fine way. When Vanessa's father dies suddenly due to flu, she misses him terribly and doesn't know how to cope with her grief. Her relationship with her Grandfather Connor is interesting. He is forceful, dominating yet a steady force. No one expects him to die all of a sudden although he is ninety-four.
With plenty of interesting observations, Vanessa manages to tell us so much about Manakawa. Despite liking the book, I find it hard to review it. Each and every character has a place in the book and are necessary for Vanessa's growing up phase. This book starts when she is 9 years old and finishes when she is around 40 years of age. Vanessa's narration is filled with interesting snippets and beautuful poignant emotions.
Book 1 of The Canadian Book Challenge 3
I love Canadian authors. This Margaret Laurence book sounds wonderful. Thanks for a great review.
ReplyDeleteThe connected short story concept is one I've been enjoying this year...will have to look for this!
ReplyDeleteI like the idea if interconnected short stories making a novel. This sounds like a good one.
ReplyDelete"Loons" in that collection is one of my favourites-- so beautiful.
ReplyDeleteI left you a note back on my blog, btw.
Also, I've got your prize books in the mail. They said it could take 2-3 months! But at least you'll still have 9 months to read them for the Challenge!
This sounds interesting. Good luck with the challenge.
ReplyDeleteSome books are easier to review than others, so I know exactly what you mean. The book does sound good.
ReplyDeleteI like how you get to follow her from 9 to 40 and the stories are interconnected..sounds like a winner!
ReplyDeleteI enjoy novels structured as connected stories, but I know what you mean: they can be hard to review because there's no narrative thread, only a point-of-view thread -- I like this review, and certainly will read the book !
ReplyDeleteGood Luck on your challenge..... I agree with Stacybuckeye... interconnected short stories making a novel sounds cool.
ReplyDeleteThis book sounds very interesting. I am going to add it to my TBR pile.
ReplyDeleteI love Margaret Laurence; she's one of my favourite writers. I need to reread her!
ReplyDelete