Young Renny takes us even further back in the Whiteoak family saga to 1906. Renny, the young master of Jalna, is just eighteen. His twenty-year-old sister Meg is engaged to marry the young man next door, Maurice Vaughan Uncle Nick and Uncle Ernest, now in their fifties, have squandered their inheritances abroad on high living and reside again at Jalna. But the plot thickens further, when two outsiders join the A gypsy woman, who seduces Renny, and a distant cousin from Ireland, who befriends Gran, moves into Jalna, and spies on the family…
Mazo de la Roche, born Mazo Louise Roche, was the author of the Jalna novels, one of the most popular series of books of her time.
The Jalna series consists of sixteen novels that tell the story of the Canadian Whiteoak family from 1854 to 1954, although each of the novels can also be enjoyed as an independent story. In the world of the Whiteoaks, as in real life, people live and die, find success and fall to ruin. For the Whiteoaks, there remains something solid and unchanging in the midst of life's transience--the manor house and its rich surrounding farmland known as "Jalna." The author, Mazo de la Roche, gave the members of her fictitious family names from gravestones in Ontario's New Market cemetery, and the story itself balances somewhere between fact and fiction. Critics think events in the novels reflect de la Roche's dreams, moods, and life experiences. As the daughter of a traveling businessman, she may have seen the Jalna estate as the roots she never had, while the character Finch, from Finch's Fortune, is thought to be a reflection of herself.
YOUNG RENNY is set in 1906 and therefore qualifies as a "flashback" novel, featuring Renny Whiteoak in his young (pre-Alayne) days. He's not yet twenty years old. He's handsome and virile and arrogant. He has his first roll in the hay with a gypsy woman, but afterwards he has to deal with major fall-out from the family. He's also feuding with Irish cousin Malahide Court, who competes with him in a local horse show. Malahide is a nasty, treacherous, lisping sychophant who attaches himself to the old grandmother. Much conflict is generated by Renny's dislike for this man, upon whom he (Renny) and sister Meg play a number of mean-spirited pranks. Malahide, in turn, takes real pleasure in evening the score...
As an added bonus there is Meg's broken engagement, which we first heard about in JALNA. Meg cancels the wedding after learning that her betrothed, Maurice Vaughan, has fathered an illegitimate child. This baby, of course, will grow up to be Pheasant, who plays a prominent role in the rest of the series. There's some humor, too, for readers who have already read JALNA, in knowing that Meg will wait twenty years before forgiving poor ol' Maurice! So much for the Whiteoak stubbornness. It's fun, too, to see Eden and Piers as tiny boys, already showing traits that foreshadow the men they will become.
In my opinion, YOUNG RENNY is the best "flashback" Jalna novel. It's well-written and fast-paced. Cousin Malahide in particular is a memorable character that you'll love to hate. Don't miss this one.
Book #4 in the Jalna series. This is a fun book in the Whiteoak family saga. The family has a supercilious visitor from Ireland, and young Renny, the oldest of Philip's children, becomes interested in a local gypsy woman. There was a lot of humor in this book, with Philip's children often interacting with their grandmother Adelaide. I loved the scenes with Boney the parrot. A very enjoyable read!
Part four of the series and oi, with the drama! There's mysterious older women teaching younger men about love, there's cheating and heartbreak and babies and a really annoying cousin with a hilarious name (Malahide!). Needless to say I loved it and Adeline is just one rocking' grandma!
Dacă ești fan Bridgerton atunci îți va plăcea si seria de cărți,,Jalna" a lui Mazo de la Roche. Publicata pentru prima data in 1935, cartea se intoarce in trecutul familiei Whiteoak, pana la anul 1906. Renny, tanarul stapan de la Jalna, are doar 18 ani. Sora lui mai mare, de 20 de ani, Meg este logodita cu un tanar vecin, Maurice Vaughan. Unchii Nick si Ernest, care au in jur de 50 de ani, si-au risipit mostenirile in strainatate traind pe picior mare, iar acum s-au intors sa locuiasca la Jalna. Si lucrurile se complica si mai mult, cand acestui amestec de personaje li se alatura doi straini, care fac mai picanta viata familiei : o tiganca, care-l seduce pe Renny, si un verisor indepartat din Irlanda, care devine cel mai bun prieten al lui Gran. Aceasta este a patra carte din saga familiei Whiteoak de la Jalna Nu te poți plictisii, chiar și detaliile sunt plăcute la cartea aceasta🥰 (Când am cumpărat o nu știam ca este o serie ,aceasta este cartea a 4 a, dar btw recomand)
Young Renny is the fourth chronological book of the series. Published in 1935, this book takes place in 1906. Renny and Meg now have two younger half-brothers: Eden, aged 5 and Piers, aged: almost 2.
This book examines the thwarted engagement between Meg Whiteoak and neighbor, Maurice Vaughn.
We also get to know irresistible Renny, who women of all ages adore. Renny meets an older woman who becomes enamored of him. They have a brief affair and then go their separate ways. Renny also meets and woos a young woman, Vera Lacey. They become engaged, but she returns to England and nothing comes of it.
The reader is also introduced to Malahaide Court, a distant cousin of who figures prominently in Wakefield’s Course.
This entire series is probably the most fast, fun, and enjoyable one I have ever tackled. The books just roar along and I come to the last page unexpectedly every time. Young Renny, Adelaide's grandson, now aged nineteen, is learning about his own sexuality and the women are glad of it. The other predominant character is Malahide Court, a thoroughly distasteful visitor from Ireland who gets his comeuppance when he is attacked by a trumpeter swan! Really, you couldn't make this stuff up -- except that Mazo de la Roche did!
Another enjoyable read. Continued used of great characters, good scene and nature descriptions, good pace, humor, action. Next . . . #5. I find I can't leave this series alone. They are fast, fun reads so I am easily able to mix in other reading. I continue to marvel at how Ms. De la Roche was able to achieve writing the chronological narrative years and years apart over 15+ years!
Ciężka sprawa mieć taką rodzinę, ale trzeba sobie jakoś radzić. Waśnie, zatargi, antypatie, ale też miłość, przyjaźń czyli przepis na udaną sagę rodzinną.
There is a freshness in style that is so unique. I think it is a great gift to write a story without intriguing twists and turns and still keep the reader engaged.
I always feel with this one that we begin the saga properly. We meet Renny as a young man, we see at first hand the events that led to the marriage between Meg and Maurice to be cancelled, we meet Eden and Piers for the first time. The family are gathered together to celebrate the wedding of Meg and coming from England the Aunts and Uncles bring with them a cousin of a cousin of Adeline. He is not a success and there are a several wickedly funny things done to him in an effort to get him dislodged. This book feels more plot driven than the previous ones which strengthens it a lot.
I am reading my dad's favorite series of books. It took me months to get this one from the library. I enjoyed reading it, but I wish the author would show me more and tell me less. I love the characters, especially the title one Renny. I guess I'm saying that I would like more substance--this narrative seemed a bit thin. However, I'm ready to move on to the next novel--and I'm hoping for some more depth!
Fourth in the Jalna series, by order of events. Young Renny takes place in 1906 and is a real coming-of-age book. Quite humorous in places. Written in 1935, there's a subltety about one of the characters(Malahide)that I was surprised to find. Adeline remains a force to be reckoned with. Don't miss this book if you're reading the Jalna series!
I really quite like Phillip and am sorry he is only in a couple of books. Meg is still likable in this book--at least to a point, although I know she becomes one of my least favorite. The whole storyline with the cousin from Ireland was amusing, with all the ways they use Wakefield and the parrot to annoy him.
J'avais dévoré tout Jalna quand j'étais adolescent, et si je suis incapable aujourd'hui de me souvenir de chacun des tomes qui composent cette saga gigantesque, je me souviens tout de même que j'avais pris beaucoup de plaisir à découvrir cette famille et ce domaine familial que l'on suit pendant presque un siècle.
Again, a good, decent novel, although Renny's and Meg's unkind treatment of their distant and rather deplorable Irish cousin and matriarch Adeline's overbearing treatment of most everybody were a bit wearying. On to Jalna #5!