The Story Girl by L.M. Montgomery ~ 1911. This edition: 1st World Library, 2007. Hardcover. ISBN: 978-1-4218-4202-8. 312 pages.
My rating: 9/10. What a delicious period piece. Loved it! Why have I not read this one before?
Beautifully evocative of golden childhood summers in a faraway time. Sweet, but never cloying; the very human children keep it real.
*****
An absolutely charming set piece about a group of cousins and friends spending a mostly idyllic summer together on Prince Edward Island.
The narrator is a grown man, Beverley King, looking back on his childhood, when he and his brother Felix travelled from their home in Toronto to spend the summer on the old family farm while their widowed father travelled to Rio de Janeiro on business. They are to stay with their Aunt Janet and Uncle Alec, and cousins Felicity, Cecily and Dan. Nearby is another motherless cousin, Sara Stanley, living with her Uncle Roger and Aunt Olivia, with a father in Paris. Uncle Roger’s hired boy, Peter Craig, and a neighbourhood friend, Sara Ray, round out the group of children.
Nothing much happens in this book, but the days are nonetheless filled to the brim with interesting incidents. The cousins and friends do their chores, play, squabble and run wild as often as they are able. They are generally good children, but not unreasonably so, and their numerous falls from grace drive the narrative, along with the endless succession of tales told by cousin Sara Stanley, the self-named Story Girl, who has an endless collection of anecdotes from a myriad of sources – local and family fables, legends, fairy tales and Greek myths – something for every occasion. Gifted with a natural dramatic ability, Sara Stanley could “make the multiplication table sound fascinating”, as she does on one memorable occasion.
Observant, restless Bev; chubby, sensitive Felix; self-confident, proud Dan; beautiful, bossy, domestically talented Felicity; sober, stubborn, peace-loving Cecily; plain, imaginative Sara Stanley; over-protected, tear-prone Sara Ray; self-sufficient, passionate Peter – these are the eight personalities which make up the core group, though other family members and friends – and a few animals – take their part as well. Ranging in age from eleven up into the early teens, glimpses of the young men and women the children will become are very much in evidence, though childhood emotions and interests still hold sway.
Tragic (and joyful) family love affairs, a mysterious locked blue chest filled with a disappointed bride’s prize possessions, magic seeds, poison berries, various “hauntings”, a neighbourhood “witch woman”, reports of the end of the world, a competition regarding dreams, adolescent crushes, a brush or two with death – all of these (and more) serve to add spice to this halcyon summer, looked back on with fond memory by the adult narrator. A few clues as to what the future holds are given – hired boy Peter is deeply in love with beautiful, scornful Felicity; the Story Girl will perform before royalty in Europe – but by and large the narrator stays focussed on that brief time between heedless childhood and care-filled adult life.
*****
This book, along with The Golden Road, The Chronicles of Avonlea and The Further Chronicles of Avonlea, was the basis for a highly successful CBC-Disney television series co-production, Road to Avonlea, which was widely broadcast from 1990 to 1996. I completely missed this one, having by then entered my “no television” years, but reports by L.M. Montgomery aficionados claim that the show departed drastically from the books, both in characters and plot. Canadian actress (and now screenwriter and film director) Sarah Polley played the Story Girl in the series.
The Story Girl is followed by The Golden Road, another Montgomery book which has been on my shelf for some time, but which I have also not yet read – I will be remedying that this winter. If it is as charming and amusing as The Story Girl, I am in for another nostalgic literary treat.
Read-Aloud: The Story Girl would likely work well as a Read-Aloud for ages about 8 and up – there will be some rather long-winded parts here and there as episodes as set up, so you may need to self edit depending on your listeners. A few of the stories are a wee bit gruesome – in one reference a lost child is found the following spring as only a “SKELETON – with grass growing through it”; ghosts are often referred to; there is a neighbourhood eccentric thought by the children to be a witch – if you are at all concerned over such themes it would be best to read ahead a bit to see if the material is acceptable to your listener’s sensibilities. Many references to and some plots centered on religion. All very era-appropriate. Nothing too extreme, in my opinion, but you may want to preview, especially before starting this with younger children.
Read-Alone: For reading alone, this one is most likely best for older children, say 11 or 12, to adult.
The largest challenge the reader will find themselves faced with, though, is envisioning, or, in the case of a Read Aloud, replicating the Story Girl’s magical talent for tale telling. Good luck! (And enjoy.)
The Golden Road is maybe a bit less enjoyable than The Story Girl — or it was for me anyway. It’s still charming and entertaining, but somehow it doesn’t come off quite as unstudied as The Story Girl.
The Story Girl surprised me by how good it was; I must say my expectations were quite low! I’ll let you know how The Golden Road comes across. I have just discovered, in the process of a grand big bookshelf re-organization, that I have two copies, neither of which I have read that I can remember. Now that I’m on something of an LMM reading spree this one is next on my list, once I catch up a bit on the book pile beside the bed. 🙂
I’ve never really read beyond the Green Gables books, but this one sounds very intriguing!
I think if you liked the Green Gables books, this one would also be appealing. It was written soon after Anne of GG, and has something of the same tone, though it is much more episodic, with no major plot which carries through the whole book.
Good heavens, I thought I’d read all of LMM’s books, including The Story Girl, but from your review, I realise I haven’t. Wait, let me check my LMM shelf….
Okay, I have it only on cassette, which I bought a few years back at a book sale, but haven’t listened to yet. Not in book form. Also The Golden Road, in a 1989 US paperback that I don’t even recognise. Oh, the perils of grabbing books at book sales and tucking them onto the shelf for “later reading.”
I thought I had read it, too, but as soon as I started it I realized I hadn’t. I checked out the hardcover from the library at the same time as A Tangled Web, which is one I’m missing from my LMM collecton, then discovered just a few days ago that I do indeed already own The Story Girl in a very tattered paperback edition. I must have picked that up in my travels & promptly forgotten I had it – an embarrassingly common occurrence.
And I have *two* hardcover ex-library copies of The Golden Road. I remember giving one of those to my mom to read, but somehow I never opened it up myself. I think I was thinking it was a collection of short stories, but apparently it is something of a sequel to Story Girl.
My impression from many years of used bookstore shopping is that the less popular LMM books such as Golden Road, Story Girl, & Blue Castle are few & far between, while Anne & her sequels are super-abundant. I’m sure I’ve seen hundreds over the years!
Would sure like to find a vintage hardcover of Blue Castle… 🙂
Meanwhile, The Blue Castle is still missing.
Don’t you *hate* that? When you *know* you have a book but just can’t seem to find it? I’ve been actively scanning for that one recently out book shopping, but not a glimmer have I seen, in any shape or condition. Though I think it’s currently in print, and there must have been numerous print runs over the years, so you’d think there would be a few out there in 2ndhand book land.
Good luck on the quest!
“Nothing much happens in this book, but the days are nonetheless filled to the brim with interesting incidents.”
That is so true of so many of Montgomery’s stories! They’re somehow quiet books about ordinary life that are still deeply fascinating. The Story Girl was Montgomery’s own favorite among her books. While I can’t say I agree, it is a lovely story. I hope you enjoy The Golden Road too!