Showing posts with label L. M. Montgomery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label L. M. Montgomery. Show all posts

Thursday, February 5, 2015

Literary Tourism

Long before I ever set foot in Britain, I wandered the bleak, forbidding Yorkshire moors with Catherine and Heathcliff, explored the ancient byroads of Thomas Hardy’s Wessex, and was captivated by Daphne du Maurier’s Cornwall.  How thrilling, then, to do a literary pilgrimage on my honeymoon.

So convinced was I that every fan of Emily Bronte’s classic novel must want to visit Top Withens - the ruins of a farmhouse which supposedly inspired Wuthering Heights - that I was pleasantly surprised there wasn’t a highway to the door and a McDonald’s and souvenir shop flanking it. In fact, my husband and I trekked across miles of empty moorland on a dirt path to get there, encountering only a few sheep en route. How wonderful that the landscape had hardly changed since Emily roamed her beloved moors, and how easy it was to imagine the ghosts of Catherine and Heathcliff still lingering.

Jamaica Inn on brooding Bodmin Moor was the perfect setting for the sinister wreckers and smugglers Daphne du Maurier had instilled in my imagination.  On a more recent visit, I was saddened to see that a motorway now cleaved the moor   – and the once-haunting atmosphere  - and Jamaica Inn had expanded to cater to highway travellers. But you can still stay in the ancient coaching inn, as du Maurier did in the 1930s.

Another literary excursion took my family through the breathtaking Yorkshire Dales so lovingly described by James Herriot. The area is known as “Herriot Country”, and brochures also list the locations where the popular BBC series, ”All Creatures Great and Small”, based upon his novels, was filmed.

Like millions from around the world, we’ve travelled to Prince Edward Island to explore the charming landscape of L.M. Montgomery’s endearing Anne of Green Gables and other tales. Fans of her adult novel, The Blue Castle, are also drawn to Muskoka, which so enchanted Montgomery during a 1922 holiday that she set her only non-PEI novel there.
 
 Site of the Sanatorium in Under the Moon and an important location for Book 4
As an author, I’ve been delighted to hear from fans worldwide that they look forward to visiting Muskoka some day, and others who have been seeking the locations of scenes in my novels, The Summer Before the Storm, Elusive Dawn, and Under the Moon.

Last year had the pleasure of taking German relatives on a tour. Already enthralled by the unfamiliar cottage culture they had read about in my books, they were awed by the unique boathouses, grand mansions and cozy cabins, antique launches and regal steamships, and the rugged beauty of the lakes.  Visiting the Muskoka Boat and Heritage Centre added another interesting dimension for them.  Smitten, they wanted to stay longer and will be returning at the first opportunity.

So literary tourism is a joy for fans, and surely a boost to the local economy.  At the request of Muskoka Tourism, I’ve prepared a “Muskoka Novels Tour”, which directs fans to various locations used or fictionalized in the books.  (It should be on the Tourism website by summer.)  

Muskoka will undoubtedly work its usual magic on newcomers.







Thursday, March 14, 2013

Under the Moon Review by M. Denise C.

Thanks to book blogger M. Denise C. for being intrigued enough by the first two Muskoka Novels to  read the 3rd in the series! Here's her review of Under the Moon. Be advised that the first paragraph contains plot spoilers for those who haven't read The Summer Before the Storm and Elusive Dawn.

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Oh, please!!!!!

Anne (of Green Gables) had fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS)? Such is the conjecture of academic Helen Hoy, as reported in Maclean’s June 21st issue. She interprets Anne’s “challenging behaviours” as symptoms because she sees some of these in her adopted daughter, who suffers from FAS.

As readers, we all bring to stories and characters aspects of our own experiences, prejudices, and desires. If Hoy chooses to see pathological behaviour in Anne, then that is her personal reaction to the character. There is no evidence in the book that Anne’s mother drank to excess, or even at all, or that Anne actually fits the true profile of a child with FAS. And is her behaviour pathological?

Anne is a spunky, outspoken, imaginative girl that so many of us admire, especially as children. She holds her own with adults in an era and society where children were to be seen when required, but not heard, and manages to endear herself to them without giving up those qualities that we love in her. I expect that generations of young readers have looked to her as a role model of how to endure and triumph in difficult situations, as well as being entertained by her antics.

Scholars are not only grasping at straws when they try to recast and even exploit popular fictional characters, but also doing a disservice to the author and the fans. Professor Laura Robinson conjectures that Anne had “lesbian urges”. Hoy claims that seeing Anne “as developmentally challenged, with her impairments the source of some of her charm” will help to see FAS in a new light.  The fact that Anne not only looks after Marilla, but also marries and raises her own children may actually put unreasonable expectations upon children with FAS and their caregivers, who often have to support them for life.

I heartily agree with the author of the Maclean’s article, Anne Kingston - “Leave Anne alone!”

Saturday, May 15, 2010

L.M. Montgomery's Muskoka

Lucy Maud Montgomery, author of Anne of Green Gables and many other beloved novels, spent two weeks with her family in Muskoka in the summer of 1922. She was obviously so impressed with the beauty of the lakes and islands that she wrote The Blue Castle, an adult love story and her only novel not set in Prince Edward Island.
  
For a fascinating account of how that holiday inspired her, read “The Muskoka Dream” by Montgomery scholar, Mary Beth Cavert.

Montgomery stayed at the Roselawn Inn in Bala, which is still in existence. Nearby Treelawn, where she and her family ate their meals, is now the Bala Museum dedicated to Montgomery. Touted as one of the best Montgomery museums, it also contains one of the world’s finest public collections of her books, including first editions and rare printings from other countries. The owners, Jack Hutton and Linda Jackson-Hutton, have written Lucy Maud Montgomery and Bala: A Love Story of the North Woods.

It is believed that few people in Bala knew that Maud Macdonald, wife of  Presbyterian minister Ewan Macdonald, was the famous author.

The characters in my Muskoka Novels who survived the war are now back in their cherished lake district, and indeed, not far from Bala and its picturesque falls. How natural for them to run into Maud. Ahhh, the possibilities!



Muskoka

Muskoka
my inspiration for a series of novels - visit theMuskokaNovels.com for more info

Goodreads Ratings

Gabriele Wills's books on Goodreads
The Summer Before The StormThe Summer Before The Storm
reviews: 2
ratings: 8 (avg rating 4.50)

ELUSIVE DAWNELUSIVE DAWN
ratings: 4 (avg rating 5.00)

MOON HALLMOON HALL
ratings: 4 (avg rating 4.50)

A Place to Call HomeA Place to Call Home
ratings: 4 (avg rating 4.00)