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Read it. Live it. SORT IT!
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Lazy, opportunist, yet with a redeeming sense of humour, he obtains the perfect sinecure as medical director of a clinic for sick children in Maybelle, Switzerland.
But he has forgotten how swiftly the fabric of comfort, from his cheery Swedish lover to his nightly touch with Kirsch, can be worn away. Carroll's Puritan blood and Catholic conscience, for he is a product of Levenford's distinct societies, tug at him from his roots in urban Clydeside.
Most dangerous of all is the clinging affection of a remarkable small boy called Daniel. His arrival, with his mother Cathy Davigan from Caroll's past, disrupts the young doctor's Swiss idyll and threatens the easy future he has so cleverly contrived for himself.
Cronin writes best about fictional Levenford, based on the small west coast town of Dumbarton; with its descriptions of Carroll's earlier life the book fairly comes alive. His vision and touch for a European life almost extinct is also sound, and excuses his rather epiphanous conclusion. Fine work from a master.
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Miss. Greville, is the most interesting and astonishing of all. Upon Laurence and his mother losing their house, Miss. Greville takes them in. With Miss. Greville's lunatice antics and empty promises coupled with some of the most enthralling experiences, Laurence becomes infatuated with everything she has to teach him.
The story grasps you immediatly when Laurence and the reader experience two very disheartening deaths and he is moved shortly thereafter to live with his odd Uncle Leo. Experience the game of cricket and a summer of botany he begins to love himself and the world.
A Song of Sixpence was not what I expected. I was expecting a parody or an advanced version of the classic poem but it was neither. In fact, nothing of the nursery rhyme was mentioned. Clever, indeed! Although Cronin never wrote about pockets full of rye or black birds, Cronin's tales is just as silly and engaging as one could imagine!!
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The Keys to the Kingdom is one of my favorites of his works. It is the story of Francis Chisholm, son of Alec Chisholm a Catholic in Presbyterian Scotland. Francis is orphaned at a young age when his father and mother are killed in a wave of anti-Catholicism. After his boyhood love commits suicide, young Francis decides to be a priest.
His vocation is an example of humility, love, compassion and tolerance--virtues which are contrasted with the worldliness and superficiality of the ambitious clergyman, Anselm Mealy. Cronin is a master at portraying the character of Scottish people whom he loves in spite of his succint insight and commentary on their faults and foibles.
I highly recommend this book to those who want to know more about Catholicism at its best.
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The story's written with intelligence, as the doctor ponders various ways to deal with the bureaucracy he faces. He deals with incompetent doctors, old doctors that have no desire to learn new treatments, young doctors more concerned with money and prestige than patient care.
And, as he gets absorbed into the system, the doctor begins to be lured in by the money. He starts to prescribe the 'easy' solution to patients, even if it's not the right answer, so that they're happy and he gets more cash. He does finally realize, in the end, that working for the patients is more important than gaining lots of cash, but only after some hard lessons.
I have a few small complaints with the story. One is that the wife could have been a really interesting character, but she's a little flat. She is sad when he becomes money-hungry, and draws back, but that's it. She was a schoolteacher when he met her, and it's made clear that she's very intelligent. But still she just sort of goes along with him, making his meals, wishing things could be better, but far be it for her to actually help out. She tries to get his friends to see him one night to bring back his old ways, but when that fails, "ah well".
My other complaint is that he slides far too easy from a passionate patient-first attitude into a "cash is nice" mentality. But that was necessary for the plot to progress.
Definitely a great book to read to learn about life in the 20s to 40s, from the small towns of Wales to the busy streets of London. Interesting details about the damage that mines caused to the lungs of the mineworkers, and the ways that doctors worked with each other and treated their patients. A great read!
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It's about a young man who comes from a miner family. He has lost some family members and collegues due to bad conditions in mines and he feels like there has to be something done about it, so he wins in the local election and goes to the London. He really wants to make his people life better, he wants to change the whole mining system, make reformations but in the Parliament his ardency is killed by people who are interested in nothing except for power, i.e., money and show no interest for this outstanders pains to fulfill his ideals. As he couldn't win the fight with them he had to go home and become a miner again; he had lost his wife and he had got nothing.
I personally was very touched by the story itself as well as with the way Cronin tells it. Although you know how it's going to end if you've read some other Cronin's books (the thing I really suggest to do), you are so deep in it you are not thinking about it. Stars Look Down is not the new-age kind of book-the one you take, read and put in the bookshelve and never take again, it's got the classical value-you think of it again and again and you recall it when you feel absolutely miserable about your dreams and things you're trying to do or reach.
4 stars instead of 5 cos I really hoped for a better ending, although 4,5 would fit better as it was a realistic one.
I recomend it if you're a serious reader, otherwise you'll simply be bored.
It is set in an English mining town over a number of years before and after the First World War. It follows the fortunes (and misfortunes) of several families, from the wealthy mineowner's, to a humble family where the father and three sons are all miners. There are some wonderfully drawn characters, some doses of realism that shock the reader, and some moving passages which bring tears to your eyes. But there's nothing cliched or sentimental about the book, so if you like television mini-series or the kind of 'feel good' romantic stories that Hollywood specialises in, this is not for you.
But if you want a taste of real life from nearly a 100 years ago, written by an author who was there (he was a doctor in a mining village for a time and many of his books come from out of his medical background) then this is the book for you. Get Amazon to find you a copy!
I sum up this novel to friends by saying it is so great an achievement that I feel it could only have been written by God. I'm probably the only person who thinks so, but perhaps it really is the greatest novel of the 20th Century.
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My grandmother sent me this novel ten years ago. I read it in day, and ten years later reread it in a day. It is a good visual novel that digresses into the small-time life of turn-of-the-century Scotland while creating a modestly suspenseful plot centered about the tribulations of an alienated youth compelled to live as an outsider amongst modestly eccentric personalities.
Yet the moral aspects are done better by Maugham (Of Human Bondage), while the visual images of windy crags and intense emotion are done better by numerous people, especially Goethe.
A fun, but second-rate novel.
It reminded me, as it did the reviewer below, of Maugham's excellent "Of Human Bondage," but I thought it was actually better. It lacked the cynicism of Maugham's book, and instead of endless philosophizing, it simply provided the reader with good thought-provoking material and left him to draw his own conclusions, if he wished.
It was also consistently enjoyable, though some sections were rather depressing.
The characters were realistic and vital. Most of them were multi-dimensional, while a few of them were deliberately done in one dimension. As in real life, one was constantly changing one's opinions about the characters. It was unusually good in this respect.
The plot, finally, was engrossing and, again, realistic. I recommend the book, noting that in my opinion at least, it is far superior to the author's most famous work, "The Keys of the Kingdom."
-Stephen
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Trains containing pregnant women's husbands drop off bridges in the middle of the night, businesses go bust, people go into debt, the man becomes a drunkard,etc etc. Every time you think that things cannot get worse for this unfortunate family something even more dreadful seems to happen.
As usual the characters are extremely one dimensional, but don't let this stop you reading the book if you have a nice cosy chair to curl up in, a warm fire, a box of chocolates and it's raining outside.
Cronin learns to get his melodramatic, pedagogic tendencies under control in his later works but frankly, I enjoyed this book simply because of these attributes. Talk about ramming a point home! It's a case of someone letting their imagination run wild, but at least it keeps the attention. Go on, give it a try. You'll be amazed at the destinies he thinks up for all of his unlovely characters.
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