What do you think?
Rate this book


368 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1954
The Thames is a very twisting sort of river. It is as if it had to force its way into London, and had become bent in the process. First there is a big bend to the right, then a little one to the left, then a great bulge to the right, followed immediately by a smaller bulge to the left. In that smaller bulge to the left is the part of southeast London in which the Bells lived.And the entire book is that Streatfeild-y, too. It's a little messy - there are tons of characters - but it's warm and lively and funny. Ginny is a scream, and Jane is a believable talented person, and Paul is a great mixture of young and older than his age, and even Angus isn't overdone. Then there's Cathy, who is one of Streatfeild's warmest and most present mothers, and Alex, who's written with just the right touch, and Mrs. Gage - and Grandmother and Grandfather - and Alex's awful brother and his equally awful wife Rose - and of course Veronica, who Mumsie says looks sweetly pretty in blue.