The Dragonfly Pool
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The Dragonfly Pool

3.85 of 5 stars 3.85  ·  rating details  ·  928 ratings  ·  217 reviews
At first Tally doesn't want to go to the boarding school called Delderton. But she soon discovers that it is a wonderful place where freedom and self-expression are valued. Tally organizes a ragtag dance troupe so the school can participate in an international folk dancing festival in Bergania in the summer of 1939. There she befriends Karil, the crown prince, who would lo...more
Hardcover, 377 pages
Published September 4th 2008 by Dutton Juvenile
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Tanja
I have read many books by Eva Ibbotson. She almost always has a female character that is innately good. She affects others by her lack of knowing how great she really is and she can move people to action. What I liked about this book is it came about because of Eva's own experience at bording school. The main character goes off to school and it is a very unusual school. Tally soon learns what kinds of horrors war can bring. I like this book and I think I liked it better because I listened to it....more
Lynn
Delightful! This was classic Ibbotson and was a perfect comfort read for me. I listened to this on audio and I found myself taking the long way home and doing extra chores just to keep listening. Ibbotson has a charming old-fashioned feel to her stories that I adore. This book is peopled with wonderful characters, both children and adults, who quite firmly know what is right and what should be fought for. The humor is wonderful and the "progressive" school not only made my smile ...more
Elizabeth
To read a book that is pure pleasure is a gift, particularly when you've been reading a lot of so-so or merely okay books for a while. My history with Eva Ibbotson has been a kind of stilted one. As a librarian I've shelved her fantasies on a regular basis. As a reader I tasted one of her realistic stories ( The Star of Kazan) and one of her more imaginative flights of fancy ( Island of the Aunts). And I did like them both, but that was all. I "liked" them. I didn't love them, look for...more
Beth Bonini
This novel for older children -- 11 to 13 is probably the ideal age, but my almost 14 year old loved it -- is a good example of the Ibbotson oeuvre. I was working on a unit of Ibbotson books, and having read about seven of them in a row (not to mention those I've read in the past), a clear pattern of "Ibbotson values" emerged. For instance: Love of the environment, the importance of friendship, displaced or orphaned persons (the search for a home is a major theme), standing up to bul...more
Cat
Title: The Dragonfly Pool
Author: Eva Ibbotson
Year: 2008
ISBN: 9780230704589
Type: Book
Genre: Semi Historical Fiction
Length/Pages & Reading: 416 pages; 12 and up
Publisher/Studio name: Macmillan Children’s Books
Plot: The story takes place in 1939 and centers on a young girl whose life is going well. Then, due to safety concerns owing to the Nazis, she is sent to a boarding school. She school turns out not to be what she expected and she ends up thriv...more
Mara
Eva Ibbotson is one of my favorite authors - her stories have always been interesting and deal greatly with WWII. Her writing style is also very enjoyable and not overly-modern. The writing of this particular book was fun. It was slightly light-hearted and comical, though serious in the parts it needed to be.

Tally is yet another main female character that I have grown to like. Her stubbornness does not get in the way of anything or cause problems like most stubborn heroines. And she ad...more
Catherine Woodman
This is an interesting new book by a seasoned children's book writer that is loosely tied to her own experience in WWII. The book takes place in three separate sections, which makes it almost "normal" rather than a book where awful things happen--so while it is within the context of WWII, it largely skirts the difficult issues of the day and keeps the story at a kids eye view. Tally is a good kid in a great family, who's father wants to get her a broader education and shelter her fro...more
Creativity's Corner
Review originally posted on my blog, Creativity's Corner [creativityscorner.blogspot.com]

First let me just say that this book was not at all what I expected. I picked it up because I have been hearing many good things about Eva Ibbotson for a while now but I had not yet run into one of her books in a library. Though I had never heard of this title specifically, I read the book jacket and thought I might like it - after all between Tally being shipped off during the air raids of WWII an...more
Alex Baugh
Eva Ibbotson was an unusual writer. She didn’t begin publishing children’s books until she was 50 and, she didn’t publish The Dragonfly Pool until she was 83. In addition, because of her own unhappy childhood, she had penchant for happy endings.

Yet, when I first began reading The Dragonfly Pool, I didn’t think I would like it. But I was wrong. The story begins in London, in the spring of 1939. Everyone is preparing for the expected war, and the Hamilton household is no different. Tal...more
Worthreading
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Sandra Stiles
Tally is living in 1939 London and Hitler is on the move. With this threat looming, Tally's father decides to send Tally to a school far away. She has always been an obedient daughter and doesn't want to create anymore pain for her father so she goes. Her father, a doctor is well respected in the area because he is one of the best yet treats the poor no different than he would treat the rich. The difference is they have very little money. His brother, also a successful doctor and his wife r...more
Laura
This book was fairly enjoyable, but I had to give it 2 stars simply because it was so incredibly similar to "A Song for Summer." Tally goes to a progressive school where the dance teacher has the children give birth to themselves and pretend to be forks. Sound familiar? It's nearly word-for-word identical to Ibbotson's previous work.

Having said that, this book has all the pieces that make Ibbotson's work so enjoyable; beautiful writing, a well-developed cast of secondary...more
S. Bell
Absolutely loved it. :D Delightful characters and setting and a thoroughly exciting story. Actually it has a few similarities with A Song for Summer - both are set in a "progressive" school, both set during the second World War, etc - but where A Song For Summer was frightfully dull and a chore to slog through, The Dragonfly Pool is easily one of Ibbotson's most charming stories.
Mara
The king of a Bergania (a fictional country, though one that seems a lot like Switzerland) refuses to allow Hitler's troops to march through his country. Seeing this on a newreel at the movies, Tally is struck by his courage, and also interested in the prince, who's face she can't really see, obscured as it is by the plumes from his helmet. When the headmaster of Delderton (her boarding school) brings up an invitation to go to Bergania to participate in a folk dancing festival, Tally jumps at th...more
Jill
Tally is an exceptional girl who belongs to an exceptional family living in London. With the threat of WWII looming, when her father gets an offer of a scholarship to boarding school in the country, he jumps at the chance to get Tally out of harms way. Of course, she does not want to go, but once she gets there, Tally finds that the school fits her like a 2nd skin. After seeing an advertisement for the small country of Bergania, Tally feels she must go there. For there is a king who has defied H...more
Pamela Huxtable
This was a lovely, old fashioned story. The story follows Tally, a girl from London whose father sends her to a "progressive" boarding school when England declares war on Germany at the start of the Second World War. Tally, although apprehensive about attending school far away from her family, soon adapts and grows to love her school and thrive under its unconventional tutelage.

The children at the boarding school, at Tally's urging, attend a folk dance festival in the ficti...more
Cathy
12-year-old Tally knows the war between Hitler and Britain will begin soon and she wants to do everything she can to help. When her father secures a scholarship for her to attend boarding school in the countryside, Tally is at first dismayed she'll have to leave her father and aunts. She soon learns that Delderton, a hippie-ish "free school" where children are not forced to wear uniforms or even attend classes, is an amazing place where she begins to discover who she is. What starts...more
Jenny
Tally is a young girl who doesn't want to go off to boarding school at Delterton. But once she arrives, she sees that this boarding school is nothing like she imagined. She makes great friends. Then she meets Karil, the Prince of Bergania (spelling? I listened to this.) She and other children want him to come to their boarding school and he wants to...but many obstacles stand in his way.

It also weaves in a little bit of WWII...but with few of the horrors.

I liked this an...more
Susan P
Eva Ibbotson is so great! This reminded me a lot of her "Star of Kazan", but since I love that book too, I didn't mind this. Just as WWII is breaking out, Tally's father sends her away from London to a boarding school in the country, where he hopes she'll be safer. There she makes some wonderful friends, and ends up being part of a troupe of dancers that go to a festival in the country of Bergania to perform at a festival. Bergania has so far remained neutral during the war, but Hi...more
Megan
Charming! Although I usually prefer books where the lines between the good guys and the bad guys are a bit fuzzy (don't we all have a bit of darkness in us?), sometimes it's refreshing to read a book where the characters are just inherently good. Despite the fact that the backdrop for the story is rather sad (the outbreak of WWII and the events that surround Karil's family), the book is full of characters that are just nice, kind people trying to find ways to survive in a world that sometimes i...more
Deborah
surprisingly awful,especially given that it was partially based on ibbotson's own childhood experiences. it offers badly rehashed themes from ibbotson's other (better) books and unintentionally trivializes war with its simplistic characters and almost unbelievable naivette.
Sarah
Sarah rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: grades 5-8
Recommended to Sarah by: historical list
Eleven-year-old Tally doesn’t want to go to a far away “progressive” boarding school, but she agrees to go, understanding that her father wants her to be safe if England really does enter the war against Hitler. Much to her surprise, she finds that she really enjoys the school and the other students.

Meanwhile, Prince Karil of (the imaginary country) Bergania dislikes his royal life more than ever. All he wants in life is to be free; that is, do what he wants and to have real friend...more
Jennifer
I was prepared to really love this book based on the recommendation of friends, but in the end I can only say that I liked it.

I loved the characters (especially Tally and Matteo) but I never felt like they were fully developed. I love the boarding school aspect, but in the end it simply felt like a means to get Tally to Bergania. And speaking of Bergania, Ibbotson didn't do a good enough job of making it feel like a real country. I was never able to fully buy in to the premise of th...more
Kristen
A stunning look at WWII from the point of view of a British girl sent to a school in the countryside so as to protect her from the war. The school is progressive and she finds herself convincing her fellow students to travel to a country in Europe whose king has openly spoke against Hitler and made him unable to enter the small country. There is an assassination and the sudden need to help a prince escape from the country.

I'm not sure why I loved this book so much, I believe it was ...more
Kit
I absolutely loved this book. It's on my list of "books that make me feel like the Harry Potter books do" despite it's setting in a more-or-less real World War II era Europe with no magic. For one thing, Tally and her classmates go to the most wonderful boarding school ever - picture Hogwarts with no Snape, Filch, or Mrs. Norris to spoil things. For another, their heartfelt fight against the forces of evil is every bit as high-stakes and heartwrenching as Harry and his friends'. Ibbots...more
Brooke Shirts
The fictional country of Bergania, when it isn't overrun with Nazis, is just the place I'd like to visit, if I had the chance. Young English girl Tilly takes a trip there in 1939 with a very hilarious set of school chums as part of a folk dance competition, and ends up befriending and rescuing Bergania's young prince from the clutches of said Nazis. Folks, this book has everything -- including a high-class cheese tasting, daring escapes, semi-comical bad guys who get just what's coming to them...more
Kristin Redmond
During the early days of World War I, young Tally Hamilton is sent off to a boarding school in the countryside of England. She can’t think of anything worse than leaving her father. However, once she gets there and makes new friends and meets her teachers she thrives. This school is unlike traditional boarding schools and a group of them go off to perform in a folk dance festival in Bergania. Once there she meets young Prince Karil and they form a lasting bond at the Dragonfly Pool. It is un...more
Eggy
When one of my friends' ask me if I have read the dragonfly pool, I always remember endless nights, with my mother shouting at me to put the book down and get some sleep because it is a school night. But let me tell you from the start, once you start reading it,you cannot put it down. Although it is a book about children struggling at war times, such as (Carrie's War), it has very funny parts. It's main character is Tally Hamilton, a girl who beleives in that there is other things to think about...more
Ryan
Ibbotson's books are always a splendid romp, with children doing things adults think they can't (escaping from the Nazis and producing plays and finding themselves and coping with the horror of war) and adults rediscovering themselves and the world through the eyes of these children. She doesn't allow the practical or real world to get in the way of a good story. The selfish bad people are duly punished with accidental death or horrid jobs - they are given every opportunity to redeem themselves ...more
Sheila Beaumont
I love all of Eva Ibbotson's books, and this enchanting tale of heroism and friendship, with its fairy-tale atmosphere, is one of her best. The story is set in 1939, just before WWII, and Hitler is on the move. The heroine, 11-year-old Tally, is sent by her father, a doctor in London, to Delderton, an unconventional boarding school in the Devon countryside where students are encouraged to think for themselves.

Meanwhile, in the small European country of Bergania, the king is bravely s...more
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Eva Ibbotson (born Maria Charlotte Michelle Wiesner, 1925, Vienna, Austria) was a British novelist specializing in romance and children's fantasy.

Eva Ibbotson was born in Vienna, Austria, in 1925. When Hitler came into power, Ibbotson's family moved to England.

She attended Bedford College, graduating in 1945; Cambridge University from 1946-47; and the University of Durham, ...more
More about Eva Ibbotson...
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