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Loading... Burning Bright (2006)by Tracy Chevalier
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Having loved Girl With a Pearl Earring, I was quite disappointed in this book. For one thing, William Blake was very much a supporting character and I learned very little about him and his work. Also, none of the characters were very endearing. A decent picture of a certain element of life in the late eighteenth century I suppose. Have lost my ability to play this, so donated to HAWL Library. FROM AMAZON: A poor family moves to 18th-century London, where the father has been offered a job as a carpenter for a circus. His children befriend a young girl who introduces them to the great city. Their neighbor is none other than the real-life poet, William Blake. Best-selling author Tracy Chevalier also wrote Girl with a Pearl Earring. 3.5 stars When Masie and Jem’s (both teenagers) family moves from the country to London in 1792, they are fairly unprepared for big city life. They end up living next door to a man, Philip Astley (and his son), who run a circus, and another neighbour is poet and printer (publisher), William Blake. A fast friend (especially to Jem) comes in outgoing neighbour, Maggie. This is during the time of the Revolution in France, which does have an effect on the people in London. This was another slow moving book, but overall it was good. It took a bit to learn the characters, especially with Maggie and Maisie – I think I had to sometimes stop and think for a minute every time one or the other was newly introduced into a scene. The story is mostly from Jem and Maggie’s points of view. Apparently Philip Astley was also a real person and created the first circus. It captured my attention until about the last 1/4th of the book...then it became depressing and almost disjointed to me. I was extremely unsatisfied with how it ended. I hate when you know there are only a few pages left to go in a book and you start thinking there is not enough space for things to be resolved satisfactorily...and this is how this ended. It seems Chevalier used up all her steam and talent before the book ended. Other than that, a great period piece; I felt as if I were in London in the late 1700's with all her detail and dialect. no reviews | add a review
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"Burning bright" is a novel about the 18th-century English poet/painter William Blake and the children who sparked his "Songs of innocence" and "Songs of experience." In March of 1792, young Jem Kellaway and his family move from their small rural village in the Piddle Valley to the bustling city of London. Jem's father, a chairmaker, has agreed to hire on as a carpenter with Astley's Circus. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.54Literature American literature in English American fiction in English 1900-1999 1945-1999LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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But omg it makes me thankful that I did not live back then.
"What's funny about opposites be that wet and dry both has water, boy and girl be about people, Heaven and Hell be the places you go when you die. They all have something in common. So they an'y completely different from each other the way people think. Having the one don't mean t'other be gone." (Bright child to Blake.)
(Circus owner to Blake:) " you are taking ideas in your head and making them into something you can see and hold in your hand; while I am taking real things- horses and acrobats and dances- and turning them into memories.... The world needs us both."
[a:Michael Phillips|8036444|Michael Phillips|https://s.gr-assets.com/assets/nophoto/user/u_50x66-632230dc9882b4352d753eedf9396530.png] was working on [b:William Blake|610065|William Blake|Michael Phillips|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1348651797l/610065._SX50_.jpg|39972604] as Chevalier was finishing this. I wonder if it's as satisfying to her as she hoped it would be. ( )