I must admit I’ve not yet seen the John Wayne version of the film True Grit (costarring the "Rhinestone Cowboy" Glen Campbell, if you can imagine that!)-- or even the new one with Jeff Bridges (though it’s in my Netflix queue), but all the Oscar buzz around the 2010 version got me interested in this little novella. I really quite enjoyed it. Originally published in 1968, the novel had the feel of Cormac McCarthy’s All the Pretty Horses trilogy with the strong male characters, the untamed West, the horses, and the violence. But it was the plucky character of Mattie Ross that made this book a memorable one. There was a little Addie Pray in her, I dare say. I think I prefer the original 1968 book cover that shows Mattie prominently.
This short novel offers a nostalgic look at England in the 1940s and 1950s. Evie, having just lost her husband after a long marriage, looks back at the fateful summer when they met up at the pleasure palace at the end of the Brighton pier. Evie was meant to marry someone else, Ronnie Doane, aka “The Great Pablo,” a magician whose talents really pull in the crowds in the days before television kept people in their front rooms (and to whom she serves as the feather-plumed magician’s assistant). The novel tells of Ronnie’s back story as a London child war evacuee, whose second family in Oxford is so nurturing and loving that he is conflicted about going back to his real home when the war is over. But Evie marries Jack instead and is ghosted (quite literally) by Ronnie even in her final years of life. A wonderful story about people and relationships.
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