Le château de Cassandra

527 pages

French language

Published Aug. 31, 2009 by Gallimard jeunesse.

ISBN:
978-2-07-062395-2
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OCLC Number:
470604310

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4 stars (24 reviews)

Le journal de Cassandra Mortmain, âgée de 17 ans. Entourée d'une famille excentrique, elle décrit son existence bohème dans un château en ruine perdu au fin fond de l'Angleterre.

55 editions

A deserved classic

5 stars

For some unknown reason I had managed to get completely the wrong idea about I Capture The Castle. I'd avoided reading it for years because I expected a kind of boys own adventure for younger readers! When I spotted a cheap paperback in a Torquay charity shop earlier this year however, I actually read the synopsis and realised my mistake! I'm so glad I did because I love this novel!

A vivid coming of age story, the title I Capture The Castle refers to our heroine, Cassandra who is attempting to hone her writing skills by capturing in prose all the details of her somewhat eccentric family and their life of genteel poverty in a ruined castle. Despite the perpetual cold and lack of sufficient food, I was absolutely entranced by the castle! The history of the place and the idea of its varied rooms and towers totally captured my …

The best book I've read this year

5 stars

It's perhaps appropriate that it's taken until book 51 of 52 to reach the book which will really stay with me. I went to bed last night with the ending buzzing around in my head.

This is a coming of age tale written in the first person by a young girl in a somewhat unlikely setting before the second world war. The style really gets you into Cassandra's head as she's very honest as to her feelings ... even if she sometimes hides them from herself.

It's also notable for the things she's missing but you are not. I won't give away the plot but there are undercurrents in the relationships between the other characters that she simply doesn't see or comprehend.

Anyway recommended, for all sorts of reasons.

Review of 'I capture the castle' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

A joy to read, thanks in no small part to the charming narrator who tells the tale. Smith's book is a response to the canon of female literature - the Brontë sisters and Jane Austin — and the old proposition that women of a certain class must marry to secure wealth for their families. I loved it.

Review of 'I capture the castle' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

3.8ish, if I have to assign a meaningless numerical rating!

This is super charming and very funny (and fun!) to read, however, I was a little disappointed with the last third of the book. While I certainly can't say anything against the authenticity of Cassandra's many conflicting and contradictory feelings for the dudes in her life, I often felt that her infatuation with Simon was tiresome. Basically, when she was being quite hilariously (again authentically) melodramatic about it, I found it just as delightful as the rest of the book, but it grated in the moments where I felt that maybe I was meant to be taking it seriously. As it stands, at the end of the book my primary reaction was, "Lol it is not that serious. You'll get over it, kid. And hopefully make out with Stephen a lot. Because that was hot."

Whiiich, I don't know if …

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