Astonishing, really, how easily and quickly the Maynards adapt to having three new members of the family, within a couple of months of, erm, having two new members of the family. I mean last July there were nine of them and now there are fourteen. That's a 50% increase in children, give or take. Most families do this by having another baby when they already have two children, not by having twins and then adopting a bunch of teenagers. Although, to be fair, I did once know a family whose fourth baby turned out to be triplets, thus doubling the size of the family overnight.
Anyway, Ruey's all right, I suppose; she asks some good questions about why Chalet girls are the way they are, although the answers she gets are a bit rubbish. Lacrosse becomes the new Big Thing - apparently they always used to play it (not that I remember it ever coming up at prefects' or games committee meetings, and anyway I would have thought ditching it made sense when the school moved to an area prone to weeks on end of rain and snow). Francie Wilford gets the role of stroppy teenager in this story (she's been practising for several books) and we have a fun evening with 200 rolls of coloured paper. The Christmas play lasts less than two pages and *finally* we get a reference to the end of term trunk packing, even though it's not actually described at all.
This is also the book where Len becomes a dormitory prefect, and so begins her meteoric ascent to the ultimate goal of the true Chalet girl - which, ludicrously, happens before she even finishes at the school (for those who haven't read the last book, no, she doesn't give birth to twins, this wasn't the swinging sixties in Chalet School land). Fortunately, in 'Ruey', her duties as dormy pree aren't too demanding, and she's still bearing in mind Mary-Lou's advice from last term to stop being an interfering fusspot. Was it really only last term? It seems ages ago. I was surprised to find Mary-Lou at St Mildred's. That's what eight weeks in the Tiernsee does to you.
Update Jan 2017: nice EBDism spotted. The girls are talking about lacrosse, and Margot says, 'We dropped it when, when- when was it, someone?'
'The term after Mary-Lou was so nearly killed,' Rosamund replies.
IIRC, the term *after* Mary-Lou was so nearly killed was the term *before* Rosamund joined the school.
But maybe, in a deleted scene from Problem, Rosamund asked what winter sports they play, and someone told her that they used to play lacrosse, but they stopped last term while Mary-Lou was recovering from a near-fatal accident, and this just stuck in Rosamund's mind. Maybe.
Update Feb 2020 after reading the unabridged GGBP edition:
Major deletions by Armada here. If you've ever wanted to read a full description of a lacrosse match, with field positions, then this is the book for you. Also I never previously noticed pockets on the uniform dress - there were a lot of staffroom edits. Finally, Con switches off the light in a dormitory she doesn’t even sleep in. I'd like to see the (v talented) short story writers rationalise this one!