Just finished Maisie
Dobbs by Jacqueline Winspear. I’m really
impressed. Even though it’s a mystery, the mystery is almost incidental to the
story. It’s much more about Maisie’s
story, World War I and its effects on everybody, and just people being who they
are as best they can and getting on with their daily lives in a loving manner.
I loved the main character Maisie Dobbs. Hooray for strong female characters! She
embodies many of the changes happening in England in that time period. Moving
from service to well-educated, middle-class, respected business owner. Healing
from grievous wounds. Forging a new identity for herself after a traumatic
experience made her rethink who she was.
She does all this without losing her compassion and humanity. She’s
independent, strong-minded, and not cooing over babies from page 1. She’s her own person, and a role-model.
The emotional story is really vivid and well told. The love story, the emotional component of Maisie's journey through society, the effects of war, the sense of the
characters constantly growing and changing are all unmistakable and interwoven,
but not maudlin. Winspear allows you to
take in as much of the emotional landscape as you can or want, and at your own
pace; she doesn’t push it at you. The
subtleties make it that much more effective and realistic, as I find that my
emotions often sneak up on me and it takes me a while to figure out what
exactly is going on in my heart. But they pack a punch. I was crying at the end
of the book, at the final reveal.
Her plotting is subtle. There are a number of things going
on at any one time, and Winspear manages a number of reveals throughout the book
that keep it fresh. The story also takes
some unexpected turns that keep you guessing.
Her characterization is such that even when a character is off-page, you
wonder what’s happening to her and how the current events are going to effect
her.
I really liked the theme of World War I. This is a war that Americans don’t talk about
much, although there’s more seen now because of the upcoming 100 year
anniversary of the beginning in a couple of years. Winspear’s obviously done her research, based
on my, admittedly, sketchy knowledge of the time period, and I reveled in the
historical detail and her wonderful ability to evoke a time period.
I also really liked the metaphysical and human aspects of
the novel. The metaphysical is nothing
overwhelming, but the stress on the importance of meditation for problem
solving and living deliberately, the importance of spiritual development, the
emphasis placed on empathy were healing. I loved the insistence that we’re all
connected and we all have a responsibility to help our fellows as much as we
can while allowing each other space and dignity to be who we are and help
ourselves as we need to. There’s also an
almost complete lack of judgment, an insistence that that sometimes we’re
overtaken by forces we can’t control and we need help that we may or may not receive.
You don’t read many novels with this level of intentional humaneness; Winspeare
is conveying an admirable way of being as much as a very entertaining story.
No comments:
Post a Comment