Over the Gate is the fifth of the Fairacre books by Miss Read or Dora Jesse Saint which are gentle yet real stories of English village life told through the eyes of Miss Read, the unmarried schoolteacher at Fairacre. In the books we learn not only of the people of Fairacre and their lives and happenings in the village but also a little of Miss Read’s life as well.
This one is a little different from the previous books in this set that I’ve read so far (I’ve read the first three but not the fourth) in that while in each of the (loosely connected) chapters we are watching daily life moving along in Fairacre (mostly in the school), someone also tells Miss Read a story from Fairacre’s past, about characters known and unknown. We hear of an interesting couple—Fred Hurst who thinks nothing of telling a tale and his strictly brought up wife; a lady who found a very unusual recipe for losing weight, and had some interesting adventures as a result; another who gets new next-door neighbour who turns out to be the queen of copy-cats; a woman whose search for love seems to bring her full circle; an interesting traveller who narrates his story to Miss Read; the time when Mr Annett met a ghost who connects with him because of their pasts; when Joseph Coggs meets the ‘king of the sea’; and also when one new resident in Fairacre gets the better of the formidable Mrs Pringle. Alongside, village life goes on as always with among others Miss Read organising a Christmas treat for her students, spring coming to the village and the harvest festival finding Miss Read and the children decorating the church (this somehow reminded me so much of Barbara Pym’s books), while Miss Read begins to wonder whether she wants to spend her life at Fairacre or should move on for better prospects—career wise, that is. The edition I have also had an additional story ‘The Fairacre Festival’, where the residents and their friends (including a celebrity or two) organise a festival to raise funds when a storm damages the beautiful village church—St Patrick’s.
I found this a delightful read as I always do with Miss Read—I don’t know how it is that she manages to keep all the realities of life, tragedies, deaths, hurts and losses and yet keep the atmosphere overall pleasant; perhaps it because alongside, we also have the big and little pieces of happiness that life brings, the changing seasons and the beauty of nature—that she captures life itself so well, or simply the way she describes it.
This book with the different stories incorporated into the various chapters reminded me a lot of the Story Girl books by LM Montgomery in which we follow the lives of a group of cousins who are together at one of the family’s farm for various reasons whilst also ‘listening’ to stories that one of them, Sara Stanley aka the Story Girl, tells them for entertainment. I found this book had a similar charm and I enjoyed it very much (more so perhaps because of the darker-themed books I’d been reading before it).
The stories that Miss Read is told are a wide range from the downright wacky to tragic, some with a touch of melancholy, and others that are just plain good fun; I found all of them to be very enjoyable indeed—like life in Fairacre, they capture a whole gamut of feelings and yet give one a great deal of comfort. Besides these, I loved how Miss Read finally decides to stay on in Fairacre, the final straw as it were, was very good fun.
As always, I also found the illustrations by JS Goodall to be lovely.
A charming, wonderful read.