Two huge old Canadian families, the Darks and the Penhallows, have intermarried so often over the past several generations that they're basically all one giant clan now. Old Aunt Becky, the clan matriarch, is expected to announce who will inherit a specific heirloom, an ugly old jug painted with hideous nonsense that is one of the funniest MacGuffins I have ever encountered. Everyone in the clan wants the antique jug, and thinks they have a right to it, even though it's really not a desirable object in and of itself. It has a tragic family history, and because everyone knows everyone else wants it, everyone just keeps wanting it.
Well, Aunt Becky does NOT announce who she's leaving the jug to. She sets up a year of suspense and intrigue for the whole clan by leaving instructions on who is to keep it for the next year, along with a sealed letter saying whom she will bequeath it to. And then she dies like two weeks later, and all the Darks and Penhallows spend a year trying to be as circumspect and respectable and worthy of that jug as they possibly can. Because they all think that the letter might say that the person who has been temporarily entrusted with the jug should decide himself who gets it.
(Mine from my Instagram account.) |
That's really just the backdrop for the book, though. The story mainly revolves around three couples: Gay Penhallow and Noel Gibson, Donna Dark and Peter Penhallow, and Joscelyn and Hugh Dark. Gay and Noel are freshly engaged, but Gay discovers that her engagement may not lead to marriage after all. Donna and Peter's families have hated each other for decades, but then Donna and Peter experience a jolt of love-at-first-sight and have to try to figure out a way to get together. Joscelyn and Hugh have been married for ten years, but parted ways in bitterness a few hours after their wedding and have been living separate lives all this time.
The title makes me think of the old Sir Walter Scott quotation, "Oh what a tangled web we weave When first we practice to deceive." Which I'm sure it's meant to. What's interesting is that most of the deception practiced in this book is self-deception. Gay had deceived herself into getting engaged to a shallow man just because he's handsome and charming. Donna is a widow who deceived herself into thinking she should never love another man because her first husband died young during WWI. Joscelyn deceived herself for ten years that she loves a man other than Hugh that she only saw once, but thinks she is bound to forever because of what she felt in that one meeting. And all the other members of the clan deceive themselves over a whole lot of random things -- including whether or not they are worthy of inheriting the jug.
I laughed aloud quite a lot over this book. Montgomery reveals a sharp and biting wit similar to Jane Austen's as she lays bare the ridiculous things people are capable of thinking and doing. I suspect I will laugh more next time I read it, as I said, because I won't be so worried about what will happen to everyone!
Particularly Good Bits:
And, as Uncle Pippin said, while the truth was all right, in its place, there was no sense in pouring out great gobs of it around where it wasn't wanted (p. 2).
Margaret thought she would not mind growing old if she could be left to do it in peace. It was hard to grow old gracefully when you were always being laughed at because you were not young (p. 86).
"I like any gate," said Roger whimsically. "A gate is a luring thing--a promise. There may be something wonderful beyond and you are not shut out" (p. 134).
One couldn't be altogether hopeless in spring (p. 234).
If This was a Movie, I Would Rate It: PG for a surprising number of mild curse words and one use of the N-word in regards to a statue someone has painted brown.
This has been my 9th book read off my TBR shelves for #TheUnreadShelfProject2023, and my 9th book read for my fourth Classics Club list.
Oh, this went STRAIGHT onto my TBR! I don't know if I knew there was an L. M. Montgomery book that I hadn't read, and if it involves a tangled mess of families and three couples...! I'm looking forward to reading it already.
ReplyDeleteSamantha, well, I hope you get a big kick out of it when you read it! :-D
DeleteWell... this one sounds funny and charming!
ReplyDeleteFanda, it is definitely funny! Maybe a bit too acidic to be exactly charming... but maybe not?
DeleteThis is one of my favorite, if not actual favorite, Montgomery books, its just a scream. Nobody's foibles and absurdities are left unscathed. Several tropes are turned on their head or given a twist, especially love at first sight. Donna and Peter are my favorite!
ReplyDeleteLivia, I am not surprised you like this one! And, yes, she certainly has fun twisting tropes and cliches up in knots here :-D
DeleteI thought this was okay the first time I read it, but wasn't super impressed. Your review has convinced me that this story has a lot more potential and I should re-read it to find all the charm I missed the first time through.
ReplyDeleteRoxann, I think this one has a lot more depth to it than most of LMM's books -- she's got a really serious point to make about deluding yourself. But she writes it all in such a scathingly funny way that it ends up being weirdly fun. For me, anyway!
DeleteI read this but I can't remember much of it. I guess I just didn't enjoy the characters as much. There's just not one person here that stood out. I might re-read this some time later.
ReplyDeleteHave a lovely day
Lissa, it's very much an ensemble piece, so I can see that being the case.
DeleteI love LMM's sense of humor! I haven't read this one, but it sounds like a fun one. I am working my way through the Anne series now.
ReplyDeleteGretchen, she certainly had a razor-sharp wit, didn't she?
DeleteI reread the whole Anne series a few years ago. So delightful!
I've heard of this title but had no idea what it was about. I love L.M. M's sense of humour. I've been reading Kilmeny of the Orchard and it is a more serious story - actually more of a sort of fairytale & I missed not having the humorous bits!
ReplyDeleteCarol, I also didn't know at ALL what this would be about.
DeleteHer sense of humor is so frisky and sometimes acidic, and I love it.
I read Kilmeny a couple years ago and found it to be... not a favorite. But I liked it well enough to want to hang onto my copy so I can reread it sometime. Definitely not very humorous, tho.
I agree--this is a different kind of book for Maud. When I read it the first time I honestly was afraid for these people because they seemed doomed to dysfunctionality, but the ending is really cool. It kinda has an F. Scott Fitzgerald or Dorothy Parker feel to it.
ReplyDeleteRebecca, yes! That's what was making me so anxious to chow the whole book down really fast. I needed to know if any of them would come through okay! The ending is really nicely turned out, I think.
DeleteAnd I definitely can see a bit of a Fitzgerald comparison. Especially to some of his short stories.
At some point I should read more of her novels. I always seem to forget she wrote so many beyond just the Anne books and at some point, I should read some of those too! ;)
ReplyDeleteRissi, I would say the three LMM books I think you "should" read would be Anne of Green Gables, The Blue Castle, and Jane of Lantern Hill. Those three are so, so good!
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