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The Chateau (Vintage Books)

The Chateau (Vintage Books)

List Price: $19.00
Your Price: $19.00
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 3 stars
Summary: The Chateau - Romancing France
Review: I loved the flavor of this book; hard to find authors who seem authentic about this period of time; just post WWII. Reminded me of another French travel book Clementine in the Kitchen; which was about a less sad time in this wonderful country.

The main characters aren't extremely interesting, but one wants to get to know the author better; it is as if a friend is telling you the story of these "babes in the woods" Americans. I think I liked Harold and Barbara Rhodes best on their first trip in spite of themselves. They were too sophisticated the second time to be sympathetic characters.

Good read, don't look for much action.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: The Chateau - Romancing France
Review: I loved the flavor of this book; hard to find authors who seem authentic about this period of time; just post WWII. Reminded me of another French travel book Clementine in the Kitchen; which was about a less sad time in this wonderful country.

The main characters aren't extremely interesting, but one wants to get to know the author better; it is as if a friend is telling you the story of these "babes in the woods" Americans. I think I liked Harold and Barbara Rhodes best on their first trip in spite of themselves. They were too sophisticated the second time to be sympathetic characters.

Good read, don't look for much action.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: An American Couple Go To La Belle France
Review: On review, I think this is an evocative and highly skilful rendering of La Belle France three years after the Second World War. Novels like this show something which is quite ineffable in any other form. Nothing much happens for all the life is in the minutiae of the everyday and the France that is captured here and which of course exists no longer is seen through the uncomprehending eyes of the young American couple who insensitively travel about a France where people are still suffering the physical deprivations of the War, still talking incessantly of Nazi soldiers. Despite being Francophiles in theory at least, this inseparable couple, are quite out of their cultural (and linguistic) depth in the French society they encounter, notably at the Chateau and afterwards in Paris. They are rather painful in their efforts not to be overcharged because they are Americans and preoccupied with their own comforts. They are quite put out that the chatelaine of the chateau has not provided them with a double bed as requested and when they request water for bathing it is tepid by the time they get to it. They cannot guess at the heroic efforts of their hostess to keep the chateau at all. The wonder is that they are taken under the wing of some of the guests of the Chateau. Much is made of one guest, Eugene's subsequent froideur towards them. There is no great mystery. His is a personality that blows hot and cold but this exercises the American pair a great deal. Their coupleness is also irritating but here I am expressing a personal prejudice. Published in the early sixties, The Chateau is an interesting read for anyone who has ever travelled to France. I just wouldn't wish Harold and his wife on anyone and certainly not the French.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: An American Couple Go To La Belle France
Review: On review, I think this is an evocative and highly skilful rendering of La Belle France three years after the Second World War. Novels like this show something which is quite ineffable in any other form. Nothing much happens for all the life is in the minutiae of the everyday and the France that is captured here and which of course exists no longer is seen through the uncomprehending eyes of the young American couple who insensitively travel about a France where people are still suffering the physical deprivations of the War, still talking incessantly of Nazi soldiers. Despite being Francophiles in theory at least, this inseparable couple, are quite out of their cultural (and linguistic) depth in the French society they encounter, notably at the Chateau and afterwards in Paris. They are rather painful in their efforts not to be overcharged because they are Americans and preoccupied with their own comforts. They are quite put out that the chatelaine of the chateau has not provided them with a double bed as requested and when they request water for bathing it is tepid by the time they get to it. They cannot guess at the heroic efforts of their hostess to keep the chateau at all. The wonder is that they are taken under the wing of some of the guests of the Chateau. Much is made of one guest, Eugene's subsequent froideur towards them. There is no great mystery. His is a personality that blows hot and cold but this exercises the American pair a great deal. Their coupleness is also irritating but here I am expressing a personal prejudice. Published in the early sixties, The Chateau is an interesting read for anyone who has ever travelled to France. I just wouldn't wish Harold and his wife on anyone and certainly not the French.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Beautifully written but unfortunately overlooked
Review: The Chateau is a wonderful "travelogue" for people who love well written novels. The story begins with the interesting premise of vacationing in France just after the war. The novel shows the tensions of the "haves" and "have nots" between financially war torn France and the booming post war U.S. The Chateau serves to remind us of the graciousness of everyday life and the small luxuries afforded by simply being American. All of the American insecurities of traveling abroad crop up throughout the novel: (e.g. the gaucheness of being an American, the lack of a long history or the U.S's place in Western Culture). No one character is entirely lovable or wretched. That is precisely what makes it such a thought provoking novel. It is perfect for those who travel or have been to France on an extended trip. Enjoy the book and recommend it to a friend. The story can stand on its own but the writing remains the feast.


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