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Marking Time

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
For fans of Downton Abbey, the second volume of the critically acclaimed Cazalet saga takes readers into the lives of an extended British family and their devoted retinue
 
It is 1939, and Hitler has just invaded Poland. The exigencies of wartime will force the Cazalets to make difficult choices as the older children are evacuated from London and settled in Home Place, their longtime Sussex summer estate.
 
Narrated primarily through the voices of three Cazalet cousins—sixteen-year-old Louise and fourteen-year-old Polly and Clary—Marking Time details the continuing saga of their fathers. With the outbreak of war, Edward is determined to do his part for England. Hugh, crippled in World War I, must sit back and watch other men fight for their country, including his brother Rupert, who enlists and goes missing in action.
 
The Cazalets’ story plays out against the greater drama unfolding on the world stage. Three young girls yearn for the freedom they believe adulthood will confer upon them in this tale of struggle and sacrifice, love and loss, as a new generation of Cazalets makes itself heard. With strong female characters such as the stoic Kitty; her daughter, Rachel, who’s in a relationship with another woman; and the loyal governess Miss Milliment, Marking Time explores the role of women during the war amid early stirrings of feminism.
 
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 3, 1992
      Readers of The Light Years , Howard's earlier novel about the numerous members of the upper-class Cazalet family, their servants, friends and relatives, will find satisfaction in this well-written sequel. In the summer of 1939, Britain has entered WW II, and the nine young Cazalet cousins are gathered for the duration under the rural Sussex roof of their grandparents, the indomitable Brig and his wife, Duchy. The appealing characters engage in a series of interrelated plots and subplots, and each family unit acts out a personal drama against the ever-present backdrop of the war. The children, especially the three older girls (from whose viewpoints much of the narrative is told), are particularly well defined; they are perceptive, funny and brave as they mark time toward adulthood, a state they long to achieve despite the obvious unhappiness and uncertainties of the adults around them. Momentous events may be occurring on a worldwide scale, but the Cazalets cling valiantly to a rigid daily routine and a stiff-upper-lip mentality. Whether describing the backbreaking labor required to run a large house during the war years or examining the feelings of a young girl's growing awareness of her father's infidelities, Howard captures the moment with penetrating accuracy. Perhaps the book has too many minor themes and characters, but the reader of multi-generational sagas will come away with a real knowledge of a particular time and place, and a desire to know what lies ahead for the Cazalets.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 28, 1994
      With great historical accuracy, this second installment in the Cazalet Chronicle follows The Light Years .

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Languages

  • English

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