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Ayrton Family #2

Summerhills

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Summerhills continues the story of the lives and loves of the Ayrton family, in particular that of Major Roger Ayrton M.C., his brother, and three young half-sisters.

Roger has made the Army his career. Anne has settled down as housekeeper to old Mr Orme, the rector. Nell looks after the old house, and it is upon her that the comfort and well-being of the family depend.

A new generation is growing up. The story begins as Roger flies home to Amberwell on leave, full of plans for his family and home.

This is the glowing story of the Ayrton family’s loves and triumphs at Amberwell, their beautiful estate in Scotland, in the years after World War II.

“Finding a re-issued novel by D. E. Stevenson is like coming upon a Tiffany lamp in Woolworth’s. It is not ‘nostalgia’; it is the real thing.”— The New York Times Book Review

D. E. Stevenson was born in Edinburgh, the daughter, granddaughter and great-granddaughter of civil engineers who designed many Scottish lighthouses. Her father was a first cousin of Robert Louis Stevenson. She was educated privately and travelled widely in France and Italy with her parents. She married a major in the Highland Light Infantry and moved with the regiment from place to place gaining valuable experience of life and people. Her first really successful novel, Mrs Tim, was published in 1933.

264 pages, ebook

First published January 1, 1956

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About the author

D.E. Stevenson

67 books630 followers
There is more than one author with this name

Dorothy Emily Stevenson was a best-selling Scottish author. She published more than 40 romantic novels over a period of more than 40 years. Her father was a cousin of Robert Louis Stevenson.

D.E. Stevenson had an enormously successful writing career: between 1923 and 1970, four million copies of her books were sold in Britain and three million in the States. Like E.F. Benson, Ann Bridge, O. Douglas or Dorothy L. Sayers (to name but a few) her books are funny, intensely readable, engaging and dependable.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 92 reviews
Profile Image for Julie Durnell.
1,162 reviews137 followers
February 8, 2018
A beautiful sequel to Amberwell. All the loose ends are nicely woven together and tied in a bow! The Summerhills school was a great idea, maybe a little unrealistic, but we can only imagine how it impacted all the boys who would attend. What a lovely place Amberwell would be to spend time at!
Profile Image for Teresa.
755 reviews214 followers
March 26, 2017
This is a sequel to Amberwell. It continues the story of the family of that estate.
While a very good read, it isn't up to the standard of the first book. Nothing really happens in it until three quarters of the way through. It kind of meanders along and then things start getting tied up. There was an episode with Aunt Beatrice that seemed rather pointless. It was as if the author had suddenly remembered she had been in the first book and had to 'epilogue' her.
Anne, one of the daughters, who keeps house for Mr Orme, had a very open ended story. I would have preferred to have some definition for her.
There's also a governess, Miss Glassford, who I couldn't see the point of at all. She added nothing to the story. She was there and then she wasn't and you were hard pushed to remember what she had added to the story.
It was a funny kind of book really. Parts of it were good, other parts you could do without and while the ending was ok, I would have liked a little more.
However, I'm still enjoying D E Stevenson and have two more of hers lined up.
Profile Image for Elizabeth.
1,593 reviews181 followers
June 21, 2022
I love DES’s romances, and I also love how she describes other kinds of relationships: siblings, parents and children, surrogate parents and children, household staff who are like family, friendships of both genders and of all ages. Summerhills has all of the above. I love the relationships between Nell and Roger, between Mary and Poppet, between Nannie and Mrs. Duff (they are a hoot!), between Anne and Mr. Orme. I think this is something at the core of how comforting DES’s books are for me: she shows the wonderful ways that people belong to each other and care for each other through good times and bad. The characters' struggles are real and relatable and in the midst of it all there is immense goodness.

The interesting thing about this book is that we get much more from Roger, Mary, and Dennis' perspectives than we do from Nell's. This is a departure from Amberwell, but I liked it. I enjoyed getting to know these characters more than in Amberwell. The first part of the book focuses on Roger's leave home from the army and how he's grappling with the effects of the war, particularly the loss of his wife, Clare, and how he can be a good steward of the fortune he inherited from her, and his role as the head of the family.

The British have such a funny preoccupation with sending boys to boarding school. (And so often the school experience is miserable!) Roger tells Nell that he plans to send his eight-year-old son Stephen to a prep school. Stephen has been mostly under Nell's care and, true to form, she protests that he's too young and sensitive. Luckily, Roger is by no means a tyrant, so he comes up with a scheme to start a local boarding school for boys called 'Summerhills' using money from Clare's inheritance. Stephen will go to the school, but he'll be close to home. This works very nicely in the plot for a number of reasons: it gives Roger's local friend Arnold a job as headmaster, it gets the Stark Place estate off the Findlaters' hands, and it brings people together for potential romance...

Meanwhile, Roger is trying to convince Anne to move back to Amberwell. In the first book, we learn all about Anne's disastrous marriage and how she finds a refuge as housekeeper to the elderly vicar Mr. Orme. Anne sticks to her guns. She loves caring for Mr. Orme, her daughter Emmie is happy there, and Anne herself is happy there. She's been irrevocably changed by the trauma of her first marriage, and I like that she doesn't give in to Roger and that he listens to her and lets her go her own way. I thought Anne's story would get more page time, but it's a side plot and it's left open-ended. I half like that and half don't like it. I think I lean towards the liking it, though, because it gives Anne's suffering legitimacy instead of the naive idea that it could be easily "fixed".

It's so fun to have Dennis back in the story in the second half, along with his mother, Mrs. Weatherby. And the many side characters make the story feel so wonderfully rounded out. We have some domestic crises in the second half of the novel and a couple whirlwind marriages and it all winds up happily. The last chapter is the first School Sports' Day at Summerhills and it is so funny...imagine 20 small boys trying to carry potatoes on spoons and tumbling all over each other. It's a delightful and heart-warming way to bring the world of Amberwell to a gentle and hopeful close.
Profile Image for Susan in NC.
1,084 reviews
February 8, 2024
4.5 stars. I read book 1 “Amberwell” before the holidays to be ready to read book 2 as part of a book pool - I’m so glad I did. The characters made an impression on me, and it was such a touching story, I wanted to check back and see what happened to everyone!

The first book dealt with five children growing up at their family estate in Scotland, and takes the reader up to World War Two. This book opens eight years later; I don’t want to give any spoilers to the first book, but it’s a lovely, charming,old-fashioned story.

Stevenson has become a favorite author among the 20th-century fiction writers I’ve read over the last couple years, largely thanks to my groups here on GR. Stevenson’s books were considered “light fiction”, often concerning the activities of a handful of families in rural settings. I don’t know why such a lovely writer is damned with faint praise as “light fiction” when that’s the same subject matter Jane Austen wrote about!

Anyway, this book continues the story of the Ayrton family after WWII, and like another of my favorite writers of the period, Angela Thirkell, there are characters who become like old friends, love, weddings, illnesses, new ventures (in this case, a school for boys, but with a difference- the children of veterans can attend for lower fees), all told in a charming, warm and humorous tone. Very enjoyable, and if you’re interested, I’d recommend reading Amberwell first if you can find it, I enjoyed the Kindles and Audible recordings of both books.
Profile Image for QNPoohBear.
3,589 reviews1,564 followers
July 24, 2018
Roger Ayerton is returning home to Amberwell, the estate in Scotland he has inherited from his father who inherited from his father and so on. Since the war ended something has been on Roger's mind. He has a grand plan to start a prep school for boys near Amberwell. It should be one his son can attend but also the sons of the middle class and servicemen. His friend Arnold is to be the Headmaster. Arnold was injured in the war and has difficulty finding work. He jumps at the chance to take on this new role; a role that will allow him to fulfill his dreams of hopefully marrying Roger's sister Anne. Anne fled an abusive marriage back to the Scottish countryside where she grew up. She refuses to return to Amberwell for several personal reasons. Her sister Nell keeps house and looks after their mother who now has dementia. Nell is also defacto mother to Roger's son Stephen. Once Roger can find the right place to start his school everything will run smoothly once he returns to Germany and his military work. His childhood friend Mary suggests her family's estate they can no longer care for. The final piece of the puzzle in place, Roger can now relax. He doesn't count on eccentric Aunt Beatrice, a pushy governess or the confusion of women and servants. Before the winter comes, Amberwell and its inhabitants will be forever changed.

This is a nice gentle sort of story. It's extremely similar to Angela Thirkell without the jingoism and pre-war nostalgia. Give the age of the novel there is some casual sexism and racism. The racism is mild for the time. There's also some prejudice against foreigners - "dirty" Italians, strange Frenchwoman. The sexism bothered me more. Of course there's no question about making the school co-ed or starting a girls' school. Anne's daughter Emmie desperately wants to go to Summerhills but she can't. Why can't she? No good reason. She will have to go away to school when the time comes. That made me so mad. Also Roger is "allergic" to women in trousers . UGH! We really shouldn't be nostalgic for the 1950s. The romance plots were predictable with the usual love triangles but sweet and mildly funny. You don't have to read Amberwell and know the characters. They stand better on their own as adults. I liked this book much better than Amberwell in spite of the sexism.

Roger is a decent fellow. He's rather bland and boring. He still carries a torch for Clare -no spoilers on who she is and what happened but it's in Amberwell and recapped several times here. He does his duty both in the military and at home. He's drawn to the peaceful way of life at Amberwell but yet it's not enough to keep him busy. He's not a super great Dad. He comes home with a suitcase full of presents but he hardly spends any quality time with his kid. They don't discuss anything important. Stephen is a nice little boy thanks to Nell. Nell is so sweet and caring that I couldn't help but like her even if she is the complete opposite of me. I was a little surprised she got in a plot of her own but happy. The domestic drama was funny and probably satirical. Anne is also gentle and nurturing but more headstrong than her sister. I disagree with her decision yet agree she should be independent. She seems like a loving mother. I'm not sure what I'm supposed to be reading between the lines about her marriage that's too "delicate" for ladies to hear-perhaps marital rape? It's so hidden that it's not even there but I'm guessing that's what she meant. Cynthia is still annoying and shallow. Her kids are utterly horrendous and while some of her child psychology methods are fine, she's spoiled her children into being so unlovable not even their grandparents enjoy their company.

My memory of the Ayerton seniors from Amberwell is that they were terrible parents. Marion is still awful to her children and completely selfish. She's only slightly more sympathetic now because she has dementia. I much preferred Aunt Beatrice. Aunt Beatrice is so funny. She's eccentric, tyrannical but also fun to read about. The "pincushion" was also funny in an odd sort of way. I wonder what actually happened in Italy? That was so weird. Mary Findlater is another old-fashioned woman, much like Nell. She is the spinster daughter caring for her aging parents. She's an only child since her brother was killed in the war and that has affected her parents' mental health and to a certain extent her own well-being. She's tired. She also has a secret the reader can guess quickly. I liked the way her plot concluded but not that it happened so quickly or so meekly. I was expecting a bit more. Arnold, Roger's friend, is a nice young man who is VERY much like Robin in Thirkell's Barsetshire series. I feel sorry for him and I hope he gets what he wants in the end. I like how he deals with the architect -also satire. Nannie and Mrs. Duff are the two old faithful servants. They fight a lot but they're like an old married couple. They know each other too well to be anything other than friends despite their outward rivalry. Mrs. Corner is hilarious in a horrid sort of way. I'm guessing she's also satirical. I loved her horrendous accent and her stories about her previous places of employment. Dennis Weatherby is a major character in this novel. He's my favorite of the men. He says what he means, means what he says, is a Mama's boy and seems to understand women. I liked his friendliness and willingness to help out even without promise of reward.

New characters I don't remember meeting in Amberwell are "Poppet" and Mr. Lamton. Their son Gerald is married to Connie Ayerton. Poppet is one of those perpetually young woman, a social butterfly and unflappable. She can handle anything. I wasn't enamored with her because I sensed that she was somewhat selfish and cared mostly about herself. I didn't like how she teased Mary. Her husband is a dear or should I say a lamb? They're such a cute couple. There's also Georgina, Stephen's governess. She's meant to be the butt of the joke in this novel. A woman who wears trousers! A woman who runs distance for exercise at ungodly hours of the morning! She's naturally portrayed as unsympathetic and not someone the reader will like because she's the opposite of Nell and Mary. I didn't like her for being grasping but yet I'm sure I can't blame her for trying.

This book is worth a read for those who like gentle, simple stories about English country life.
Profile Image for Judy.
444 reviews118 followers
August 13, 2017
After thoroughly enjoying the first Ayrton family book, Amberwell, I was keen to read this sequel. Unfortunately Summerhills is not on Kindle and out of print, and secondhand copies are expensive, but the good news is that it's available on audible, beautifully read by Lesley Mackie.

The book carries on soon after Amberwell leaves off, and is full of references to the previous book, so I'd definitely recommend reading Amberwell first. The story returns to the family's country house in Scotland, and follows events after older son Roger comes home from World War Two to take over the estate. He decides to set up a boys' school where his delicate only son can be educated. Roger was a rather peripheral character in the first book, but here he takes centre stage. The book also looks at how the lives of his sisters, Nell and Anne, develop, as all three of them face romantic dilemmas.

I enjoyed meeting all these beloved characters again, but would have to say the story isn't quite as good as the first book, since it is a bit slower and not so much happens. This could be partly because it is set after the war rather than during, of course, when the country house era was fast fading. There is also less about Anne, who is my favourite character. Another problem is that there is a governess called Georgina who isn't a very consistent or believable character.

I was also a bit frustrated that there are a few loose ends - originally I'd thought this was the second book in a trilogy, as listed on Goodreads, but in fact there are only two books in the Ayrton family series. However, I understand that family members do make a brief appearance in the book GR describes as the third in the series, Still Glides the Stream, so I've treated myself to a secondhand copy of this one and will hope it answers my remaining questions!
Profile Image for Mela.
2,027 reviews271 followers
April 14, 2024
It was a charming follow-up to Amberwell. And I liked it a bit more than the previous part.

I watched as Ayrton siblings without a firm footing of love and affection from childhood struggled farther on to find love and a sense of security (protection).

I think that Anne's experience of an abusive marriage was a new topic at that time in such novels. I only regret that the ending for her wasn't more clear (of course we can assume, but still).

Some parts didn't age well, but one just has to keep in mind when it was written.
Profile Image for Sarah.
909 reviews
September 9, 2016
This is a delicious sequel to "Amberwell", in which we find ourselves once again amongst the well-loved members of the Ayrton family and staff. Nothing really extraordinary happens, but it's so very comfortable to accompany them in their various destinies. I could imagine a 3rd book to conclude a trilogy, because Anne, Arnold and the not-very-nice Georgina are left without a tidy life conclusion, but who cares? It's a sweet (but not sickly) easy read. And I'm a D E Stevenson fan for life!
Profile Image for Brenda.
233 reviews41 followers
August 12, 2021
Having read ‘Amberwell’ I moved right on to ‘Summerhills’. By now I was invested in the characters and wanted to see what happened to them. Again, the plot was a bit contrived or forced but subtly so. Not enough to annoy me so that I would stop reading.

Another good ‘read before bedtime’ book.
Profile Image for Rebekah.
666 reviews55 followers
February 13, 2022
**Spoilers for Amberwell**
I still love Clare. I haven’t forgotten her. For years I was utterly and absolutely miserable, but now it seems as if it had all happened in another life—or as if it had happened in a dream.” Dennis nodded. “I think I . . . can understand. But life is real, isn’t it? We can’t go on living in dreams. Look here, Roger, supposing you’d been killed in the war would you have wanted Clare to go on being miserable all her life?” “Goodness, no! What a horrible idea!” exclaimed Roger. Then he saw what Dennis had in mind. “Oh, I see,” he said slowly. “I never thought of it that way.”
I can’t imagine that this book would have much of an appeal unless one had read Amberwell. I think the Ayrton family would probably only be interesting in the context of the earlier book. Of course, having seen the Ayrton children through their troubles and triumphs in Amberwell, I was very interested indeed. The fact that Roger, Nell, and Anne, the characters we are most concerned with in this book grew up to be so happy and healthy is a major accomplishment considering their disturbing upbringing, and, in the case of Anne, her horrific marriage. It is a testament to the resiliency of children.

We meet all of our old friends to a greater and lesser degree and meet some new characters as well. Most are friends, but some are not. The book centers around Roger and Nell mostly. Roger is home from the war but still in the service. He has decided to set up a school for boys primarily so his son Stephen, so beloved by his beloved sister Nell does not have to be far from home, but can be toughened up, make friends, and cease being the center of the universe. His ambition is to include the scions of the privileged who can pay well to send their sons there but also to include the sons of less well-off servicemen. Much of the book concerns how the school takes shape. While Roger comes and goes, we meet Arnold who lost a foot in the war and will become the headmaster of the school, and re-meet Mary who sells Roger her old estate that she and her elderly parents can no longer take care of.

Intertwined with the building of the school are the love stories of Nell and Roger. There are also parties, an emergency trip to Italy, and an accident which puts a key member of the household out of commission. We see that Anne is happily and determinedly unmarried and ensconced with her Mr. Orme, the elderly vicar. Will she remain that way? One man is hopelessly in love with her. Poor guy. Along the way, we are treated to entertaining and thoughtful characterizations of everyone we meet. I was impressed with the author’s treatment of Roger, for example. He is somewhat of a stick in the mud and very traditional and somewhat stuffy. But though he may start off wrongheaded and mistaken in his opinions, when presented with evidence that contradicts his first instincts, he sees his way clear to wisdom and change. Another interesting character is Georgina, Stephen’s governess. She starts out to be a breath of fresh air and is certainly good for Stephen. But she changes into a manipulative and very foolish woman who is inadvertently responsible for bringing about the happiness of two couples. Poor Georgina. She was born a couple of decades too early. Poppet Lambert is back and is a delight. But I couldn’t help but think of a shocking interlude that took place in the first book. It is obliquely kind of explained in this book, but I always thought it was a very strange incident for the author to include in the first place.

So many deft sketches of so many characters I haven’t even mentioned. Not every loose end is tied up neatly and happily, but this is a dear gentle book with no darkness in it. And so it is a fitting and satisfying sequel to Amberwell
**3 1/2 stars**

https://rebekahsreadingsandwatchings....
Profile Image for Alisha.
1,234 reviews141 followers
September 17, 2020
Very recommended. Best to have read Amberwell first so as to know who all the family members are and why they behave the way they do, but Amberwell is not quite as much a comfort read as this one. Highly domestic and full of really, really loveable people.
Nell Ayrton has been running her brother's household for years while he's been off in World War II. In this book he (Roger) is able to come home regularly on leave, which gives him time to develop his plans for a boys' school. He and his sister share a deep fondness for their family home, but they both are beginning to wonder what else life holds for them. Roger is a grieving widower with a young son, and Nell is a homebody who has truly found her niche in taking care of the family estate. Yet they are both aware of new/old relationships that add lovely new dimensions to life. Many endearing side characters.
D.E. Stevenson at her best.
Profile Image for Robin.
442 reviews4 followers
July 23, 2017
The continuing story of the Ayrton family and their home, Amberwell. A very enjoyable audiobook!
Profile Image for Jeanette.
339 reviews76 followers
November 5, 2017
An enjoyable enough read but in many ways it just seemed like a really long post-script for Amberwell. Nothing much happens but we get to see the happily ever afters for several characters.
Profile Image for Katherine.
928 reviews97 followers
June 30, 2020
I loved this! It's charming, sometimes humorous, completely enjoyable.

5 stars
Profile Image for Bookworman.
1,091 reviews137 followers
July 30, 2018
Right up there with “Celia’s House”. I loved it and will read it again in the future.
Profile Image for Gina House.
Author 3 books126 followers
February 15, 2023
An enjoyable second story in this lovely D.E. Stevenson duology. After reading Amberwell, I was intrigued by the family (and, especially, the home) and I knew I had to continue with the series. Although these books are not my favorite D.E. Stevenson books, they were still comforting to listen to and I liked following along with the family line.

The children from the Amberwell book are now grown up and living out their lives. I felt much more in touch with Roger, Tom, Nell and Ann than I did with their parents in the first book. Reading about their hopes, dreams and plans in this follow-up novel was lovely. It's hard not to get attached to these four down-to-earth siblings and their day-to-day activities.

I have to admit that I didn't enjoy the beginning of either book very much. But, once I got 25% into the story, I became really interested in everything about them. I would definitely choose about 10 books before both Amberwell and Summerhills as my DES favorites, but I would still recommend them both. There is a level of quiet calm and satisfaction that you get from each, even though they aren't dazzling or dramatic.
Profile Image for Michelle.
1,069 reviews29 followers
July 2, 2020
4.5
Sometimes all you need is a pleasant little book with real enough characters and nothing too dramatic but just enough to keep you happily turning the page.
Profile Image for ValeReads Kyriosity.
1,490 reviews195 followers
February 11, 2022
Better than the first book, but perhaps a little too bland.

ETA: I found myself wondering if Stevenson was aware of A.S. Neill's Summerhill School, or if the name of her fictional one is just a coincidence. The real Summerhill was founded in 1921, though Neill's book about it wasn't published till 1960, Stevenson's in 1956. Hers is cut from a different (saner) cloth, and she clearly disapproves of the sort of newfangled permissive childrearing (as represented by Connie) one might expect to find practiced at the real Summerhill. (I'm not the only one to suspect that Eustace and Jill's school, Experiment House, was based on Summerhill. The Silver Chair was published in 1953, and while Stevenson mightn't have been aware of Summerhill, surely Lewis was. So in case it's not familiar to you, Experiment House will give you a good enough picture.)
Profile Image for Jessica Perteet.
258 reviews4 followers
May 7, 2023
This was a library book sale find. It’s the story of a little town in Scotland that is trying to heal from WW2. The main character Roger decides to turn an ancestral home into a lovely boarding school. A lovely, relaxing novel. DE Stevenson is one of a handful of authors (CS Lewis, Jane Austen, etc.) that I read every year.
Profile Image for Dani.
215 reviews10 followers
October 14, 2025
Stevenson itches just the right spot for me. Easy to read, interesting characters, engaging but not overly gripping (so I don’t neglect my real life 😏). Her endings are always happy, but not every end is neatly tied. In fact, they often feel rather abrupt. But I’m still happy with how things go.

In this book, I particularly enjoyed the establishment of the boys’ school and the temporary replacement cook.
Profile Image for Classic reverie.
1,856 reviews
August 4, 2021
I love this series about the Ayrtons which continues from book one, "Amberwell" years later, "Summerhills" concentrates mostly on Nell, Roger and Anne; Connie's family is mentioned more than Tom, but both are not the focus of this story. Tom is a doctor in the Navy and Connie has three troublesome children. I look forward to seeing what happens in book 3, "Still Glides the Stream", with the Ayrtons even though it seems it is not a story about them but maybe something is told more about Anne and Arnold. I absolutely love D. E. Stevenson's stories.

Story in short-Roger comes home to start a school for boys, Summerhills but Nell is nervous about her nephew leaving home.

Reading these books in order is really important, in grasping as a whole.


❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌spoiler alert ❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌❌


I did not like Georgina but kind of felt sorry for her, she was beautiful but could not capture the men she wished to hook, she actually helped foster to marriages with her designs which caused jealousy and worry, unfounded.
I was really hoping that Anne and Arnold marry, maybe book 3 mentions them.
I felt sorry for Anne but she was able to persevere, the closeness of the sisters, Anne and Nell, though they are close would never be the same after Anne left, Anne had lived a very hard life that Nell, though she worked hard would never know, things Anne could never tell her sister or anyone else but the one person she could tell the most was Mr. Orme.
Roger seems more distracted and not really feeling, just doing, it seems Mary will change that and they will be happy. I wonder when Tom will find his mate. I loved Nannie and Mrs. Duff. Aunt Beatrice is quite a character, she really did Anne a disservice when she left Martin call on her. Mr. Ayrton being engaged to Poppet Lambert long ago was interesting and shows how a marriage can possibly change a personality. The kiss in book one makes sense, there was not an affair but some feelings left.




It was eight years since Claire died and Major Roger Ayrton is coming home. Roger comes home but Nell is not there and he talks to Mrs. Duff and Nannie about the house. Roger is not happy that Anne is working at Mr. Orme and is trying for her to live at Amberwell. The governess for Stephen and Emmie is Miss Glassford, Roger tells her that Stephen will be going away to school next year. Miss Glassford is disappointed and Roger seems smitten with her. Arnold Maddon was injured during the war and has an artificial foot, he is looking for a school master job and needs Roger as a reference. Roger was thinking of starting a school for boys and having Arnold in charge. Nell is worried Stephen is too weak to go away. Roger tries to convince Anne to come home to live but he refuses and tells him that Mr. Orme needs her. Anne does tell him about Roger being married again and the fear of being turned out of Amberwell, like aunt years ago. Arnold is told about the boy's school and that he would be headmaster. They needed to get everything together before Roger goes back to Germany. Arnold will be in charge of overseeing it. Mary Findlater is back home to take care of her parents. Her brother Ian died in the war and her other brother wants to remain active duty, he is not as devoted to his family as Ian was. Mary and Nell are friends; the subject of money and repairs brings some hard feelings to Mary because her family is struggling and Roger has so much especially from Clare. Mary had known Clare, Mary avoids Roger. I have a feeling Mary and Roger will be an item. Mary tries to avoid Roger but it is too late. Roger tells Mary about the school and she is interested. Since he was looking for houses, why not Stark Place, her parents can not afford the expense nd really care little since Ian died. Mary and Roger talk about the time when they were kids. After Mary talked to Roger, she felt better and understood his reasons for starting the school. Arnold and Roger are talking to the architect who is to change Stark Place into a school. Mr. Strow looks to spend more money, since he thinks he has found a sucker in Roger but Arnold will keep him in line. Bob Grainger in book 2 but in Book 1; the boy that saved Tom was Bob Graister. Mr. Gray is getting old and Bob will take over when Mr. Gray can no longer. Bob is one of the Gray family. A picnic with the kids and Nell, Roger and Georgina, who asked Roger to call her Georgina. Anne and Mr. Orme have a wonderfully loving father daughter relationship and Anne tells him, she has never felt so loved and secure in her life. Mr. Orme worries because he is almost 80, I thought he was in his 40's and knowing Anne would never live at Amberwell again, to be banished, he has money saved that will be hers after he dies. Dr. Maddon comes to see Mr. Orme for check up and visit, Arnold comes along and has been for awhile. A friendship which has continued from their younger years but it seems Arnold would like something more. He tells her about the school's name being Summerhills, Stark Place's name long ago. Anne is happy for Arnold but she wishes someone could look after the his father and him. Arnold had seen Anne's children's book and knew she wrote it. She tells how that book brought her home, which he did not know Nell and Mr. Orme went looking for her. Arnold does not know about Anne's life away and he sees that by what she tells, she has suffered. Stephen has been wanting more of his dad's attention but the school has taken up a lot of time and Aunt Beatrice is very ill in Rome. Roger will go see her and the family is not too happy. Georgina seems to have designs on Roger. Roger attends church and is glad he sees things clearer after instead of asking Georgina to be a teacher after Easter, he will let Arnold decide. After talking to Bob Grainger, Roger thinks he would do if Mr. Gray became ill. Mary is looking over Stark's place by herself and Roger sees her and they begin to talk about improvements. Mary is staying at the Lamberts and Roger suggests she help Arnold and Mr. Strow get along. Mary talks to Mrs. Lambert who comments on Roger's looks and his father years ago, they were engaged but kept it secret, after a girl flirted with William, it made Poppet mad that she broke off the engagement and married Lambert. Poppet sees Georgina's designs on Roger and is trying to get Mary to stop it and marry him herself. Roger is enjoying the helping with the new school but needs to see Beatrice. When he arrives he is told his aunt is doing better and he should go, he can not understand why this woman would not want him to see his aunt, and she says maybe it would make her angry to see her nephew and make her sick again. Roger would like to talk to the doctor but he does not speak English. At his hotel Roger is told his brother is looking for him, he looks just like him but Tom looks nothing like him. Dennis is the man looking for Roger, Nell and him correspond. It is clear to Roger that Dennis loves Nell. Dennis has family in Italy and has offered to help with Aunt Beatrice since Roger could not communicate with the doctor or the Madame of the pension. He had called up Nell when he was visiting his family and she told him about Beatrice. Madame Le Brun does not want Roger to see his aunt but the doctor is worried about liability if he does not let him see her. Aunt Beatrice is as disagreeable as ever and though she had a stroke, she feels she can leave in a couple days besides Madame Le Brun was rude to her and she feels a prisoner. Even though Beatrice says she does not want to go to the hospital, Roger is thinking of taking her there but Dennis has sense and reason, tells he cannot force her to go and the likelihood of dying on a plane not probable, more likely if she stayed at the pension. Roger sees how sick Beatrice is while on the plane but she is feisty too and during the second plane of the trip, she was very disagreeable and embarrassing. Tom had visited Beatrice on and off over the years, so Tom can pick her up next time. Mary has gone of to visit cousins and will be back next week, Roger wanted her to be part of the group to look over Summerhills. Roger is cross and Nell notices but doesn't understand, I think it has to do with Mary. Arnold has invited a group to come which includes Anne and Nell would like to come now. Roger suggests Georgina for the matron and Arnold shoots that down saying there will be trouble, they need a mother type woman, is he thinking of Anne? Arnold would like Anne's opinion about painting and wallpaper but Anne tells him he should ask Nell. He is upset because I think he wants her to marry him and live there. Anne is worried that Arnold will ask her to marry her and she does not want to marry him or anyone else. Martin had ruined it for her and she just could not marry again. She asks Mr. Orme what should she do, she does not want to be unkind and she could never tell him why. Mr. Orme will think the matter out. I have a feeling she will marry him in the end. Mary has gone to Summerhills but Rogers says he has only 10 minutes because he has to time Georgina's mile which Mary is about to be upset but then she remembers Poppet telling her about her being angry and then her engagement being off, so Mary tells him she will wait and then Roger sees how silly it is and calls Georgina up, she reprimanded him and he is only to worried she will ask again. Mary tells Roger that the headmaster's room is too small and it needs a bow window, he agrees. It is rainy so he drives Mary to the Lamberts and Poppet talks about a party but Roger does not want Georgina to come. Nell called up to see if Georgina could come to the party and has a flock of men around her. Mr. Orme to Dr. Maddon about Anne's worries and Arnold's father told him that she needs a friend and maybe in the future more but don't think about that which might not happen. He tells Anne he just wanted to be her friend which was a lie. Roger talks to Mary and asks about him settling down at Amberwell and she thinks he is too energetic and too little at home to do. Dennis is becoming like one of the family, Mrs. Duff had fallen and Nell goes to Dennis for help. Mrs. Duff is injured but she will be okay. Dennis is helping Nell and he writes to his mother about his delay and his love for Nell. Mrs. Corner is the temporary cook until Mrs. Duff is well and she complains about everything. Nell is treating Dennis like a brother and it is starting to bother him, he goes outside and Georgina talks to him and basically tells him to time her running in the early morning but he had not agreed. She will call for him in the morning. Georgina knocks on Dennis' door for him to time her running, he can not believe he is hooked into this and decides he will not do it again. She is very friendly but Dennis is not interested in her. Dennis sees Nell cooking breakfast looking upset and he tries to see why she is so different. He calls her darling and they kiss, he proposes to her and tells her that she can stay at Amberwell while he is at sea and let things work themselves out. She tells him that she was upset because she thought he was starting to like Georgina, which he tells what happened and that he has loved her for 3 years and she said she knew she loved him after thinking she might lose him. Everyone is happy except Georgina. Dennis' mom receives the telegram that all is well but he mentions ignore the last letter which he wrote when he thought he had no hope. Mrs. Ayrton wants a Christmas wedding but Nell would like a quiet affair next week for Roger will give her away. Nell says they can not leave Amberwell for a week for their honeymoon but Dennis says they will go. Poppet and her committee are discussing the wedding and plans since the young couple has nothing to do with it, they only see each other. Dennis' mother comes and the house is very busy. Mother-in-law and Daughter-in-law are happy with each other. Dennis and Roger talk and Dennis mentions that Clare would want Roger to be happy. Roger says it is hard for the girl he likes was a friend of Clare's, Dennis tells him she will understand your feelings. Mary seems out of place at the wedding and starts to feel faint which Roger helps her. The wedding lunch went well and the couple wished well. Poppet tells Mary she must stay awake until they return and answer the door. Mary is upset feeling strange and then Roger comes to tell her his feelings and love for her and she loves him. The school has just opened, Arnold is doing well as headmaster but lonely at night, it seems that Anne has not changed her mind, I am hoping in book 3 that there is something that ties them together. Connie is finally seeing her kids unruly and they are sending young Gerald to Summerhills. Gerald and Connie are really back stories since they seem besides their kids to be happy. Dennis is back off leave and Nell is watching the Sumerhill games, it seems she is pregnant. Georgina has left Amberwell. Mary and Roger are married quietly in Rome, she was the mind set the wedding all or nothing (elopement basically) they live in London for his service work but Anne will not visit London because of her aversion since Martin.
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