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The Shrimp and the Anemone (Eustace and Hilda #1) Paperback | Pages: 190 pages
Rating: 3.79 | 277 Users | 29 Reviews

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Original Title: The Shrimp and the Anemone (Faber Fiction Classics)
ISBN: 0571070612 (ISBN13: 9780571070619)
Edition Language: English
Series: Eustace and Hilda #1
Setting: Norfolk, England

Explanation Conducive To Books The Shrimp and the Anemone (Eustace and Hilda #1)

Oh, L.P. Hartley, why are you forgotten?

This is the second Hartley book I've read (the first was The Go-Between), and if anything this one was even better. Both of the books take a double view, with a main character seeing things from childhood and the reader having access to what the adult world probably actually looks like. This is the same technique that makes The House in Paris so enjoyable, and what I wanted from and did not find in What Maisie Knew, though of course for the latter, it may just be that I find James' prose extremely heavy going, like trying to swim through some kind of boring and viscous liquid.

I think perhaps part of the attraction for this book was also that I recognize this inner state, and this theory about child-raising: that correction is more important than praise, and that praise will certainly lead to being spoiled, and that being spoiled is somehow the same as not submitted, as expressing one's own will. Eustance's various terrors seem real and convincing and even, from the point of view of such a childhood, reasonable. I'd like to read the two others in this little series of novels, though I wonder how Hartley will hold up as his characters reach adulthood. Of course, the gap between an inner life and an outer one does not disappear with adulthood, even if it doesn't take the form of nightmares and a complete lack of understanding about capital versus interest. And of course lovely prose is good for all purposes.

Details Containing Books The Shrimp and the Anemone (Eustace and Hilda #1)

Title:The Shrimp and the Anemone (Eustace and Hilda #1)
Author:L.P. Hartley
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:First Edition
Pages:Pages: 190 pages
Published:December 1st 1963 by Faber & Faber (first published 1944)
Categories:Fiction. Classics. European Literature. British Literature. Novels

Rating Containing Books The Shrimp and the Anemone (Eustace and Hilda #1)
Ratings: 3.79 From 277 Users | 29 Reviews

Comment On Containing Books The Shrimp and the Anemone (Eustace and Hilda #1)
Excellent portrayal of an Edwardian child's psyche.

On the surface, 10-year-old Eustace Sherrington's summer in early 20th century Edwardian England seems typical and uneventful: he plays on the beach with his older sister Hilda, he indulges in small fantasies while bathing and sleeping; he develops a crush on a local girl and forms a reluctant friendship with an elderly spinster. Yet Eustace is a sensitive (some might say neurotic) boy who overthinks and worries about everything--the summer is an endless stream of imagined horrors and

Having read 'The Go Between' and finding it entertaining I figured there wasn't much to lose in purchasing one of his other novel especially as it was sitting tragically alone in a sale bin for only £1, I'm glad I rescued it... The prose in this book, in my opinion far surpasses that of 'The Go Between'. Hartley manages to capture the beautiful innocence and naivety of a 9 year old boy whilst still using an expanse of wonderful vocabulary. There's something I just can't explain but the soul of

Cool, calm prose that perfectly encapsulate specific childhood feelings. A different approach from others I have read that do this well (Stephen King or Robert McCarthy), and a much more foreign setting. The narrative was just not engrossing enough to make it timeless.

Perfectly lovely, and a few pieces of things to turn over in the mind, but overall it just didn't resonate with me at all. Still, I'll read the next and see how it goes.

The Shrimp and the Anemone by LP Hartley10 out of 10The Shrimp and the Anemone is a glorious, phenomenal, outstanding, insightful, incredible, rather short masterpiece that has been included on The Guardian 1,000 Novels Everyone Must Read list:https://www.theguardian.com/books/200...the hero of the chef doeuvre is Eustace and the formidable access to the mind of a nine year old is a fantastic joy and the main character is such a remarkable, gentle, brave, complex, intriguing figure as to make

3½ stars. This first book in the Eustace & Hilda trilogy takes place during one summer in the 1930s with Eustace at 9 years old & Hilda 13. He is an odd little boy, at once fanciful and submissive, perhaps due to his poor health. Despite the fact that he is unlike any small boy I have ever known, I quickly became sympathetic to him. The book was a fast read but has some ideas in it that I am still mulling over. I look forward to reading the rest of the trilogy!

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