Thursday, April 28, 2011

A Daughter of the Seine: The Life of Madame Roland, by Jeanette Eaton

I'll admit that with no background in the subject of this book whatsoever, I didn't realize it was a biography until I was quite a few pages into into it and looked it up, because the writing style confused me. Daughter is a biography of Marie Roland, a significant figure in the French revolution. Unfortunately, she met an untimely demise at the guillotine.

This book would be a very, very tough sell. The librarian in me was instantly irked at the fact that it contained no bibliography or citations to verify anything that it said. Additionally, it's a very thick volume and unless you have a background in French history and/or language, the world and names are rather disorienting (especially the author's insistence on writing out digits, for example, Louis Seize instead of Louis XVI). I didn't know enough about the people involved to care enough to continue to plod through it, so I gave up halfway through (a first for me in this Newbery endeavor). I'm a little disappointed in myself, but not enough to go back and try it again.

4 comments:

  1. Huh. It would be interesting to know more about how and why this particular book was selected by the Newbery committee. Based on what you've said, I can't imagine there would be much interest in the book beyond the first few pages. I wonder: how many other 300+ page Newbery Honor books have there been?!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Well, unlike the RITBA, which allots 3 of 10 possible points for a popularity score, the Newbery seems to have no qualms about nominating excellent books which will appeal to virtually no-one ;) Good Masters, Sweet Ladies, I'm looking at you.

    ReplyDelete
  3. hey, I liked Good Masters, Sweet Ladies!!

    ReplyDelete
  4. lol, no offense intended, Sue!

    ReplyDelete