HomeGroupsTalkMoreZeitgeist
Search Site
This site uses cookies to deliver our services, improve performance, for analytics, and (if not signed in) for advertising. By using LibraryThing you acknowledge that you have read and understand our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. Your use of the site and services is subject to these policies and terms.

Results from Google Books

Click on a thumbnail to go to Google Books.

Loading...

Ancestry

by Simon Mawer

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
604459,384 (3.9)6
Showing 4 of 4
3.5 Stars

[b:Ancestry: A Novel|61482672|Ancestry A Novel|Simon Mawer|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1658044146l/61482672._SY75_.jpg|96742940] Is a very well written blend of Ancestral research and what the author imagines may have been the stories of his Ancestors from the records he found during his research.


I have a passion for All things Ancestry and history and have spent years researching my own family. It’s an amazing hobby that is so rewarding and interesting. So when I came across this book it really piqued my interest.

Simon Mawer has achieved a very cleverly constructed story of his ancestors with fact and fiction. It’s a moving story where women struggled at the hands of men and yet reared and provided for families under very trying circumstances. Every family has a story to tell and Simon Mawer’s family have led interesting lives. While I enjoyed the book for its research and story I am not sure how I would have reacted to this one had I not had a passion for Ancestry.

I do think the book could have been trimmed down quite a bit and while the Crimean war battles was very documented I did find it made for tedious reading. An interest and engaging story, just not one for my favourites shelf.
( )
  DemFen | Oct 31, 2024 |
I have previously liked all of Simon Mawer’s novels that I’ve read, but Ancestry didn’t quite work for me. Not enough to abandon it, but enough to make me scamper sometimes over some pages with little interest in their content.

(Especially those interminable pages about the Crimean War.)

Ancestry is a fictionalised version of Mawer’s family history, which is intended to bring his ancestors to life. But like most people who trawl in their family history, Mawer knows little more than his ancestors’ patchy history in official documents. Births, Marriages, Deaths, Census records, some military history. Women, especially illiterate ones, fade into the shadows. Poor people don’t leave Stuff to inherit, stuff that might (or might not) give descendants some indication of what they were like. Just occasionally there is a bit of ‘family lore’ that might (or might not) have a grain of truth in it.

To read the rest of my review please visit https://anzlitlovers.com/2024/01/15/ancestry-2022-by-simon-mawer/ ( )
  anzlitlovers | Jan 14, 2024 |
Abraham lives an impoverished life in Suffolk. He cannot read or write but he dreams of more and is finally apprenticed to become a seaman. Naomi has moved to London to become a dressmaker but fate has more in store. Ann and George are newly wed and living in Army barracks. The lives of these individuals in 1850s England will link through their families.
This is the story of Mawer's own ancestors, he has taken a few facts and written a gripping fictionalised account of their lives. The stories are wonderful, Abraham's life at sea and the difficulties faced by his family as news is often months late, George's adventures in the horror of the Crimean War. Of course there is a lot of literary licence taken to fill in the gaps but this is where Mawer's expertise as a novelist really shines. This is a wonderful book ( )
  pluckedhighbrow | Aug 18, 2022 |
This is the sort of book that may give catalogers (or anyone trying to figure out what shelf a book belongs on) fits. It's a novel, but it's history. It's a primary-source-based retelling of the past, but it's mostly invented. It's a gifted author shuffling a handful of clues and filling in the vast gaps between them, using the inventive process as an opportunity to reflect on the narrative threads that tie history and fiction together.

In Ancestry, Mawer imagines the lives of two couples, his 19th-century great-great-grandparents. The first ran away from the dreary life of agricultural labor to become a seaman and later married a dressmaker who had a child out of wedlock. The other was a soldier who married an Irishwoman who had to manage alone in a hostile world when he was sent to fight in the Crimean war. Their stories are anchored with scraps of paper - birth, marriage, and death records, some marked with an illiterate's X - but the documentary evidence is scant for people who are poor and landless. What Mawer accomplishes is an imaginative reinvention of these families and their worlds, which I found absorbing and illuminating. The women, in particular, are vividly brought to life, and their hard-scrabble determination to create a life for themselves and their children is more dramatic than ocean crossings or battles. At a time when I often despair of our world, it's eye-opening to see how difficult ordinary lives were not all that long ago. It's an immersive reading experience.
  bfister | Jul 5, 2022 |
Showing 4 of 4

Current Discussions

None

Popular covers

Quick Links

Rating

Average: (3.9)
0.5
1
1.5
2 1
2.5
3 2
3.5 1
4 2
4.5 1
5 3

Is this you?

Become a LibraryThing Author.

 

About | Contact | Privacy/Terms | Help/FAQs | Blog | Store | APIs | TinyCat | Legacy Libraries | Early Reviewers | Common Knowledge | 216,750,665 books! | Top bar: Always visible
  NODES
Project 1