Monique's Reviews > A Northern Light
A Northern Light
by Jennifer Donnelly
by Jennifer Donnelly
Monique's review
bookshelves: 2011, historical-fiction, award-winners, drama, mystery, young-adult
Jul 28, 11
bookshelves: 2011, historical-fiction, award-winners, drama, mystery, young-adult
Recommended to Monique by:
Tintin
Read from July 08 to 27, 2011 — I own a copy, read count: 1
I was set to giving this book a three-star rating when I happened to read on the Author's Note part that the characters of Grace Brown and Chester Gillette, as well as the facts of Grace's murder in the Adirondacks and the fishing out of her body from the waters of the Big Moose Lake, are actually real people and events. Thus, although the book's main protagonist, Mattie Gokey, was fictional, the novel was actually constructed upon and based on history.
And I have a certain penchant for historical fiction.
Mattie is a sixteen-year-old bookish girl who works at the Glenmore Hotel to help make ends meet for her family; since her mother's death and her elder brother Lawton's departure years before, she was tasked, as the next oldest child, to take care of her three younger sisters, and to help their Pa with farm and house chores. Despite their poverty, however, Mattie does excellently in school; her teacher, Miss Wilcox, sees her potential, and helps her in every way she can in order for Mattie to win a scholarship to a New York University and continue her college education.
At the Glenmore, Mattie earns her wages by doing odd jobs in the kitchen and serving food to the hotel guests. It was there that her path crosses with Grace Brown's: the latter, on the day before her body was fished out from the murky waters of the nearby lake, entrusts a bunch of letters in Mattie's care, leaving behind specific instructions to burn them. Grace then goes boating with her beau, Carl Grahm, and never returns. With this unexpected turn of events, Mattie is a loss as to what should be done to Grace's letters.
The novel shifted between time frames: from the time Mattie was at home with her family, pitching in with the farm chores and various errands around their house, to the time when she had started work at the Glenmore as a waitress/kitchen hand. It took some getting used to at first, and yes, I was also confused at first, but eventually the story unfolded, and beautifully. I liked how the author wrote the novel; simple, straightforward, and as vivid as she can make it, such that it wasn't so hard to imagine that you were right there, among the characters themselves.
However, the novel felt like a collection of stories that weren't inter-connected with each other. The story of Miss Wilcox, Mattie's teacher, her personal battles and her secret identity, had no connection with the mystery of Grace Brown's death, which is, of course, another story by itself. At first, I thought that Miss Wilcox would also figure, somehow, in the investigation of Grace Brown's murder, but the story took on a different angle somewhere. So there were parts in the novel when I felt like I didn't know where the storyline was going.
That aside, I enjoyed the book for its historical value (although the realization of that came much later), and more. I loved how Mattie challenged herself to learn new words everyday by consulting a dictionary, picking a word, and attempting to use it for that day. I also loved how she and Weaver would have word duels, throwing back similar words to the other until the other runs out. Back when I was a student, my friends and I used to play the same game, although it wasn't synonyms we'd be "dueling" on; it was just random stuff like one-title songs, one-name artists, etc. I also loved the ending; why, however, I will not elaborate lest I spoil the book for anyone.
Having said all those, I know that the book deserves more than just 3 stars from me. Although it took me a while to finish this (as I read this simultaneously with A Passage To India, a very difficult read), I realize now that the slow but steady reading pace that I kept made me appreciate the beauty of this book all the better. It would be a shame to breeze through this book and fail to see its true value.
And I have a certain penchant for historical fiction.
Mattie is a sixteen-year-old bookish girl who works at the Glenmore Hotel to help make ends meet for her family; since her mother's death and her elder brother Lawton's departure years before, she was tasked, as the next oldest child, to take care of her three younger sisters, and to help their Pa with farm and house chores. Despite their poverty, however, Mattie does excellently in school; her teacher, Miss Wilcox, sees her potential, and helps her in every way she can in order for Mattie to win a scholarship to a New York University and continue her college education.
At the Glenmore, Mattie earns her wages by doing odd jobs in the kitchen and serving food to the hotel guests. It was there that her path crosses with Grace Brown's: the latter, on the day before her body was fished out from the murky waters of the nearby lake, entrusts a bunch of letters in Mattie's care, leaving behind specific instructions to burn them. Grace then goes boating with her beau, Carl Grahm, and never returns. With this unexpected turn of events, Mattie is a loss as to what should be done to Grace's letters.
The novel shifted between time frames: from the time Mattie was at home with her family, pitching in with the farm chores and various errands around their house, to the time when she had started work at the Glenmore as a waitress/kitchen hand. It took some getting used to at first, and yes, I was also confused at first, but eventually the story unfolded, and beautifully. I liked how the author wrote the novel; simple, straightforward, and as vivid as she can make it, such that it wasn't so hard to imagine that you were right there, among the characters themselves.
However, the novel felt like a collection of stories that weren't inter-connected with each other. The story of Miss Wilcox, Mattie's teacher, her personal battles and her secret identity, had no connection with the mystery of Grace Brown's death, which is, of course, another story by itself. At first, I thought that Miss Wilcox would also figure, somehow, in the investigation of Grace Brown's murder, but the story took on a different angle somewhere. So there were parts in the novel when I felt like I didn't know where the storyline was going.
That aside, I enjoyed the book for its historical value (although the realization of that came much later), and more. I loved how Mattie challenged herself to learn new words everyday by consulting a dictionary, picking a word, and attempting to use it for that day. I also loved how she and Weaver would have word duels, throwing back similar words to the other until the other runs out. Back when I was a student, my friends and I used to play the same game, although it wasn't synonyms we'd be "dueling" on; it was just random stuff like one-title songs, one-name artists, etc. I also loved the ending; why, however, I will not elaborate lest I spoil the book for anyone.
Having said all those, I know that the book deserves more than just 3 stars from me. Although it took me a while to finish this (as I read this simultaneously with A Passage To India, a very difficult read), I realize now that the slow but steady reading pace that I kept made me appreciate the beauty of this book all the better. It would be a shame to breeze through this book and fail to see its true value.
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Reading Progress
| 07/08/2011 | page 30 |
|
8.0% | "Hey, I learned 2 new words already! Fractious and abecedarian. Heehee." |
| 07/11/2011 | page 51 |
|
13.0% | "Mattie livens up my reading hours after reading bits and pieces from A Passage To India." |
| 07/13/2011 | page 111 |
|
28.0% | "*gasp* Mattie's Pa did that to her?! Hmpf. I wish she could go to university to pursue her studies." |
| 07/18/2011 | page 135 |
|
34.0% | "I can't seem to concentrate on this book. :(" |
| 07/19/2011 | page 210 |
|
53.0% | "I wish Mattie'd be able to go to college." |
| 07/25/2011 | page 262 |
|
66.0% | "I don't find the book as engaging as I expected it would be, but I'm plodding on anyway." |
| 07/26/2011 | page 276 |
|
70.0% | "Not sure where the story is headed, but the mystery, apparently, is already solved..." |
| 07/26/2011 | page 300 |
|
76.0% | "I need to see what a buckboard looks like, by the way." |
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Tintin
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rated it 4 stars
Jul 28, 2011 03:53am
Very interesting how you fixed on the murder mystery story line -- I considered the murder a subplot while the Ms. Wilcox and Weaver's stories served as triggers to illustrate the kind of society Mattie lived in. At heart it was Mattie's story, not Grace Brown's. As to how Grace Brown and Mattie's stories are connected, my memory's spotty but I think somewhere near the end Mattie realizes something about herself and what she wanted to do while reading Grace's letters.
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I really should get a copy of this one soonest! I hope I get to see another one in Booksale and when I do, I'll make sure I'll buy it this time. :)
TINTIN: I fixed on the murder mystery, I think, because that was where the blurb focused; but I also thought, reading the book, that it was the central story of all stories found in the novel. True, it was Mattie's story, but Mattie was also just the fictional instrument by which Grace Brown's letters would see the light. Also, I think I am more inclined towards the mystery aspects of books, in general. :)As for the connection between Grace and Mattie's stories, it was when Mattie read the final letter written by Grace addressed to Chester (saying something to the effect that she never went anywhere) that made Mattie realize how she didn't want to be like Grace. Hence the ending.
LYNAI: I thought you didn't want a copy! I brought my extra copy to the meet-up, and Joyzi had first dibs on it.

