Flora Thompson Books
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Lark Rise to Candleford (Penguin Modern Classics)
Published in Paperback by Penguin Classics (2000-05-25)
List price: $21.18
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Collectible price: $24.83
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Average review score: 

One of my favorite classics
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-20
Review Date: 2006-03-20
I am so glad this book is still in print. It is one of my very favorites, and I read it at least once per year, like Huckleberry
Finn. For those of us who love nature, and tales of growing up in the out-of-doors, this is a beautiful book of the natural
world and agricultural lands. It contains wonderful sketches about farm life in the turn-of-the century English countryside,
school life, and village characters. This book reminds me of Cider With Rosie (also called The Edge of Day) by Laurie Lee,
another excellent book about growing up in England, set around the time of WWI. This is truly worthwhile reading. If you
have read "Lark Rise to Candleford" and enjoyed it, another book by Flora Thompson, "Still Glides the Stream", deals with
the same subject matter and is also very good.
A literary time machine
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-07
Review Date: 2005-12-07
LRTC is one of those books that I read almost every year. Why you should ask? There is no other book that provides a view
into a time long past as Flora Thompson does in this and her other major work, "Still Glides the Stream". These are works
that allow you to see, smell, taste and touch the fabric of a society in full measure. There is nothing maudlin or sentimental
in these works, they demonstrate the grinding poverty of the rural poor in the late 19th century when slowly but surely the
winds of change were at work to topple once and for all the rigid hierarchy of the Victorian class system. Also lost are
the rural traditions and folk life of a people bonded to the earth and its seasonal cycles. Yet at the same time fully demonstrating
the quiet joys and happiness that take place within the family of Laura, the main character who is a thinly disguised Flora
Thompson.
One of the great characters in literature you will meet here is Miss Dorcas Lane, the village postmistress Laura goes to work for. She has the grit, grace and humanity of a Dickens character. Miss Lane also is at the vanguard of a new era, when it's revealed she prefers reading Darwin than suffering the Victorian Bible babble around her.
Once encountered, this book will remain a trusted old friend to turn to again and again.
One of the great characters in literature you will meet here is Miss Dorcas Lane, the village postmistress Laura goes to work for. She has the grit, grace and humanity of a Dickens character. Miss Lane also is at the vanguard of a new era, when it's revealed she prefers reading Darwin than suffering the Victorian Bible babble around her.
Once encountered, this book will remain a trusted old friend to turn to again and again.
An excellent appreciation of the "old" ways
Helpful Votes: 21 out of 22 total.
Review Date: 1997-12-27
Review Date: 1997-12-27
This trilogy was one I read many years ago and only returned to recently. On this reading it was an even better - recalling
in detail a life which has totally gone now but has a wonder and joy in it which we can no longer experience. On having her
fortune told - the main character was told she would be loved by people she had never met - for once astrology worked. An
excellent piece of literature.
Nostalgia not what it used to be.
Helpful Votes: 28 out of 31 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-17
Review Date: 2001-08-17
As the previous customer review notes, "Lark Rise to Candleford" fully details life in, alternately, an English hamlet (Lark
Rise), a village and a town (Candleford) at the turn of the 20th C. And, as with the prior review, the book is invariably
described as a fond recollection of a bygone, uncomplicated era. I value it, though, for the opposite reason, that by describing
agricultural life of the last century so accurately and dispassionately, it unintentionally shows such life to be overwhelmingly
impoverished, bare and humdrum. In several passages, the author Flora Thompson scolds herself for making the hamlet and village
sound so unremittingly dull. Ironically, her protests only underscore the reality of daily existence. One of her most telling
observations is about the rarity of drunkenness in Lark Rise, not, as one might infer, because of a higher moral standard,
but because no one could afford more than a glass of beer at a sitting. At another point, she describes without editorial
the death of noblesse oblige and the resulting hand-to-mouth poverty, unbroken by one-time manor-sponsored holidays and fetes,
that accompanied the transition from tenant to wage farming in the latter half of the 19th century. The ultimate strength
of this book for me, therefore, is its reminder that, for so many Western people, these really are the good, old days.
The illustrated Still glides the stream
Published in Unknown Binding by Bracken Books (1992)
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Still Glides the Stream by Flora Thompson
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-13
Review Date: 2007-02-13
This is a great book of nature and growing up in turn-of-the-century England by the author of "Lark Rise to Candleford".
If you enjoyed reading "Lark Rise" or "Cider With Rosie" by Laurie Lee, you should definitely read this book.
Lark Rise to Candleford
Published in Paperback by Penguin Books Ltd (1984-10-25)
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Great evocation of a bygone age.
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 1997-11-12
Review Date: 1997-11-12
This is a depiction of country life in England in the 1870's and 1880's, as seen through the eyes of the author when a young
girl.Everyday events are described with much detail, bringing vividly to life the people of a small hamlet.Her family and
neighbours were poor, but they made the most of what they had, and lived a simple but satisfying life.As the author grows,
she describes a wider world that she experiences, and her wonder at new products and inventions that will eventually change
the world.The book is very well written and really brings the period to life.It is superbly read by Judi Dench.It is an excellent
book to read to remind us of a time when life was not so complicated and did not have all the pressures that beset us today.
Still glides the stream
Published in Unknown Binding by Oxford Univ. Press (1948)
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reminiscences of village life
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-25
Review Date: 2006-08-25
If you enjoyed "Cider With Rosie" by Laurie Lee, you are sure to also like "Lark Rise to Candleford" and "Still Glides the
Stream" by Flora Thompson. These three books are all gentle, loving, and humorous recollections of childhoods spent in English
villages. I first read "Lark Rise to Candlford" in Junior High. I have read it again almost every year, because it is one
of my favorite books, full of the author's appreciation of the out-of-doors and agricultural ways, but I did not know Flora
Thompson had written another book. When I received "Still Glides the Stream" in the mail, I was delighted to find that it
exactly matches my illustrated "Cider With Rosie" and "Lark Rise to Candleford". All three books have similar covers and
feature cut-outs of dried leaves, flowers, and insects, and paintings and sketches of farm and small-town life. In "Still
Glides the Stream", Charity Finch, a retired schoolteacher, returns to the village of her childhood after the end of WWII.
She remembers what life was like in "Restharrow", a made-up village in Oxfordshire. She has many warm memories of the unique
characters and traditions which began disappearing after WWI and even more so after WWII. If you have an affection for old
days and old ways, you are sure to find this is a charming, lovely and interesting book.
Illustrated Lark Rise to Candleford
Published in Hardcover by Crown Publishers Inc. (1984-12-30)
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simple account of a lost lifestyle
Helpful Votes: 19 out of 20 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-02
Review Date: 1999-12-02
I borrowed this book from the library. I love the illustrations, which very much enhance the story. The author reminisces
about the way things were in the English countryside in the 1880's. Her accounts and descriptions might be simple, of everyday
tasks that we don't think much about, but i really enjoyed learning about these details.
The book i read, the "Illustrated" version, is an abrigment of the thre volumes. The editors say at the end that the abridgment was done mostly to avoid repetition, which exists in the three books so that they can be read independently of each other.
Annotated Checklist of the Flowering Plants and Ferns of Main, Argyll
Published in Paperback by Argyll Flora Project (1994-04-21)
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Baseline inventory of aquatic macrophyte species distributions in the AOSERP study area (AOSERP report)
Published in Unknown Binding by The Program (1980)
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APPETITE FOR LIFE
Published in Hardcover by FLORA (2002)
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APPETITE FOR LIFE
Published in Hardcover by FLORA (1000)
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Candleford Green
Published in Audio Cassette by ISIS Audio Books (1998-06)
List price: $49.95
New price: $42.19
Used price: $26.83
Used price: $26.83
Books-Under-Review-->Arts-->Literature-->Authors-->T-->Thompson, Flora-->1
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