Elisabeth Grace Foley

Historical Fiction Author

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Summer Reading 2013

June 28, 2013 by Elisabeth Grace Foley Leave a Comment

So I’m finally settling down to do some summer reading. It seems to have taken longer than usual this year for me to get to this point, for a few different reasons. A couple of months ago I pillaged my original summer-reading list because I just got impatient and couldn’t wait till summer to read some of the books on it! In addition, summer itself has been a while in coming—the first part of June was so cold and rainy that we didn’t even get to use our swimming pool for the first time until last weekend.

But now summer is officially here, and I’ve got my traditional beginning-of-summer case of sunburn and a new summer reading list—because I never have any trouble making new lists. So these are the books I’m planning on reading, not in any particular order. As usual, it’s hodgepodge; I’ve got a little bit of everything on here:


The Longest Day by Cornelius Ryan
Arsenic and Old Lace by Joseph Kesselring
The Flight of the Falcon by Daphne du Maurier
The Gabriel Hounds by Mary Stewart
A Time to Stand by Walter Lord
The Art of the Epigraph: How Great Books Begin, edited by Rosemary Ahern
These Wonderful Rumours!: A Young Schoolteacher’s Wartime Diaries by May Smith
The Governess by Evelyn Hervey
Harlequin and Columbine by Booth Tarkington
Good Men and True, and Hit the Line Hard by Eugene Manlove Rhodes
The Treasure by Kathleen Thompson Norris
The Rider of Golden Bar by William Patterson White
A Room with a View by E.M. Forster
The Elements of Style by William Strunk and E.B. White
The Bellamy Trial by Frances Noyes Hart


In the meantime, I’ve decided to scale back posting on my blog to once a week for the summer months—posts will probably come on Mondays or Tuesdays. If you happen to follow me on Twitter, too, I’ll be supplementing that by posting some links to blog posts from previous years that could do with a second airing.

So what’s on your summer reading list? Have you read any of these books from mine?

(Updated later with links to eventual reviews.)

Filed Under: Lists, Reading, Seasons

Family In Fiction

May 31, 2013 by Elisabeth Grace Foley 5 Comments

We often speak of a family circle, but there are none too many of them. ~ Kate Douglas Wiggin

There’s no question about it: sometimes it’s a lot easier to write about orphans. I’ve observed this tendency in books and discussed it with other writers before. There’s a certain freedom in writing about a character with no family ties—they’re free to move about where they will; the decisions they have to make affect no one but themselves. In a simpler type of story, a shortcut to eliminating the complications of relationships and background is just to leave your character alone in the world! It’s occurred to me, too, that this concept may be responsible for the epidemic of motherless heroines (particularly rampant in Westerns!). A girl who has a close relationship with her mother, or at least a mother closely involved in her life, will naturally have a mother’s input and advice on difficult decisions or problems that she faces. An orphan or a motherless girl is thrown on her own resources—do authors feel that this situation is more interesting to the reader? (A rare variant on this theme appears in Louis L’Amour’s High Lonesome, where an aging ex-outlaw worries over how to best counsel his motherless daughter on the verge of womanhood.)

But anyway, the orphan or loner protagonist can eventually become cliché (quick: name a Shirley Temple movie where she has two biological parents who are both still alive at the end), or, to go a little deeper, using them too often can cause us authors to miss out on an extra level of depth that we can add to our stories simply by making our characters part of a family.

The “loner” protagonist has long been a standard feature of the Western. That freedom of the unattached protagonist works better in an action-focused story, no doubt. As I remarked once before, yes, there were certainly plenty of unattached men in the Old West, especially in the professions of cowboy, soldier, explorer, et cetera…but don’t overlook the fact that much of the settling and taming of America was accomplished by families. And they certainly had their fair share of adventure, so their experience was no less interesting! In past centuries, the family was regarded as the most important unit in society, not only in the emotional sense but in the practical. Family members relied on each other in both senses as they forged their way in new or isolated territory. Parents, children and frequently extended family members all contributed their share to making a livelihood and home life. Multi-generational families living together were much more common—foreign as that may seem to our modern society, in which, if authors of magazine articles are to be believed, it’s necessary to practically draw chalk lines down the middle of rooms for two generations to exist in the same house together. (That’s not saying that many modern families don’t need the chalk lines, but that’s beside the point…)

I think one of the reasons that I like B.M. Bower’s Westerns so much is that she did not limit herself to that “loner” type of character and plot; nearly all of her books feature family of some shape and size, and the resulting relationships add additional color and enhance the plot. She wrote several mother characters who were not only very much alive and present, but strong, positive personalities (Points West, Rim o’ the World), as well as her share of fretful or negligible ones (Her Prairie Knight). She wrote fathers who make their families miserable (Hay-Wire, The Singing Hill) and intelligent, likable fathers who have affectionate relationships with their offspring (Skyrider, Fool’s Goal). There are close sibling relationships and strained ones; a pair of novels deal with the bitter consequences of a parent favoring one child over another (The Dry Ridge Gang, Open Land). I’m not as big a fan of Zane Grey, but I do notice that the books of his I found most interesting often have some kind of family dynamic as part of the plot and conflict (Forlorn River, Raiders of Spanish Peaks, Code of the West, Sunset Pass).

Do you see the variety? And yet all of these books are very much traditional Westerns, with their fair share of outlaws, cattle, action and romance. It would apply to any type of historical fiction, though. Putting a character in a family instantly adds extra layers to their personality, in the relationships and the responsibilities that are a natural part of family life. Depending on the people involved, these can be the most wonderful, supporting relationships and improving responsibilities in their lives, or the most difficult relationships and heaviest responsibilities. Another variant would be to take that orphaned or loner protagonist and put them into a family situation—learning or re-learning how it is to live as part of a family could be another whole layer of conflict for them. The possibilities are endless—as endless as the varieties of human beings and human relationships that exist.

(And incidentally, the Shirley Temple movie I described above does actually exist. See if you can name one of the two I’m thinking of!)

image: “The Homesteaders” by W.H.D. Koerner

Filed Under: Characters, Historical fiction, Westerns

Tuesday’s Overlooked Movies: The Magnificent Ambersons (1942)

May 28, 2013 by Elisabeth Grace Foley Leave a Comment

Booth Tarkington’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel The Magnificent Ambersons has been a favorite of mine ever since I first read it a couple years ago. Since reading it I’ve been wanting to see Orson Welles’ 1942 film adaptation—the movie that is more famous for what it isn’t than for what it is. A couple weeks ago I finally got the chance, when I discovered my library system had added a copy of the DVD, to see for myself exactly what the film is or isn’t.


I went into the plot of the story more in my review of the novel, so I won’t go over it all again here. The thing that initially surprised me about the film was what it isn’t, in a literal sense. Eighty-eight minutes is pretty short even for a feature film. The result is about the same thing you usually get with a feature film adaptation of a thick classic novel: it moves pretty quickly through the story, just touching on the high points. A viewer seeing The Magnificent Ambersons film without having read the book wouldn’t be able to guess at the additional depths the novel contains, in spite of the film’s good qualities.

On the positive side, what there is of the film is very attractive—the filming is beautiful, the acting is fine, and the pivotal scenes from the novel that were chosen for portrayal on screen are often beautifully done: the ball, the sleigh ride, Eugene’s (Joseph Cotten) famous speech on the future that the automobile might bring. I appreciated the fact that a lot of the dialogue and narration comes straight out of the novel. The speech near the beginning by a neighbor woman predicting how and why Isabel (Dolores Costello) and Wilbur will have spoiled children is just perfect. (I did miss the “Riff-raff!” theme, though.) I found it interesting that Welles was attracted to that opening monologue on the fashions and customs of the time period that I found so delightful when I read the book. Usually this type of passage is the last thing that makes its way into a film adaptation. Perhaps Welles realized that the firm grounding in the historical period that it provided was vital to the whole story. It would have been even more effective, though, if he had been able to better portray the gradual industrialization of the Ambersons’ city that is a major theme of the novel. This is one of the film’s weaknesses, I think. We don’t actually get to see the changes—it’s represented mostly by a line of dialogue here and there about how much the town has changed, up until the montage of city streets and buildings near the end.

I think it also diminishes the effect of the ending that we don’t actually get to see George (Tim Holt) and Lucy (Anne Baxter) together and Eugene’s entrance, which forms the closing scene of the novel. Neither Welles’ original ending nor the released version followed the book in this way. I think I can see what Welles was going for here—he wanted to share what Eugene was thinking in this scene as well as what was said, so he adopted the expedient of having him relate it to Fanny (Agnes Moorehead). Personally, though, I wonder why he couldn’t have just said it to George during their conversation.

But you know, after seeing this film and reading a good deal about it, it’s my opinion that whatever weaknesses it has are not all owing to the infamous studio editing job. In my personal opinion, the two “porch scenes” removed by Welles himself would have strengthened it greatly, giving a better idea of the passage of time after Wilbur’s death, and especially making clearer the business of the headlight company, which kind of comes out of the blue later on. The vivid contrast between these two scenes in the novel is also a big part of the industrialization theme. There was also apparently a cut scene showing George’s fury when he discovers his grandfather has sold property near the Amberson Mansion for new buildings, which is also straight out of the novel and would have supported the theme even more.


In a purely visual sense, the movie is artistically beautiful, filmed with unusual camera angles and lighting and some striking use of silhouette shots. The scenes with George and Fanny on the enormous staircase of the Amberson Mansion are quite stunning, showing off an amazing set. Several scenes, I noticed, feature a number of characters all talking at once in a kind of organized chaos, so you take in bits of two or three different conversations simultaneously, something rather unusual for a movie of the time period. I also noticed that in the scene where George and Lucy argue during a carriage ride, the carriage is actually being drawn by a horse and filmed from the side, rather than filmed from a truck pulling a carriage, as you often see in movie behind-the-scenes shots! The costumes are also lovely and quite period-correct, which was also not always the case in older classic films.

In short, my advice to the viewer is the same I’d give for nearly every other film adapted from a classic novel: if you want the whole story, read the book, and then you’ll probably enjoy the movie.

If you’d like to read in detail about The Magnificent Ambersons’ long and chaotic journey to film, I recommend this six-part blog series at Jim Lane’s Cinedrome: Parts One, Two, Three, Four, Five, Six (caveat: some profanity quoted in the sixth part). For my own article on “The Man Who Broke the Bank at Monte Carlo,” the popular song featured in both novel and film, go here to The Vintage Reader.

Filed Under: Film and TV, Reviews

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