As a lover of all things Anne of Green Gables and Canadian Maritimes, I was quite eager to read this book, and very prepared to be charmed. It's been a while since I "visited" Avonlea, and I was excited to go back for a bit.
Sadly, Marilla of Green Gables was a very underwhelming read. I wasn't expecting LM Montgomery, because no one writes like LM Montgomery, but I was at least hoping for the soothing Avonlea-feels and the elusive romance between Marilla and John Blythe.
The book is divided into three parts, and I will admit that the first part was quite good. Marilla is thirteen, and she is a serious, no-nonsense child, much like you would expect a young Marilla to be. In these first chapters, we learn that her mother is pregnant, her aunt arrives to stay with the family to help, and Marilla also meets Rachel White (later Rachel Lynde) and John Blythe. The tone of the book is sweet and simple, the adventure not venturing beyond Green Gables or the White's home.
That is what I wanted. That is why I like Avonlea stories.
It's supposed to be a charming little village where people's simple lives are made interesting through the little mundane details of everyday life. Peeling potatoes, making red currant wine, gathering wildflowers, attending the Ladies' Sewing Circle and knitting shawls, dancing in the fields during the May Picnic...those are the sweet things that make stories set in this time and place so lovely.
Marilla of Green Gables had the potential to be like that, and there were many of those little details, but unfortunately, it was also very political and just...unengaging. I don't know if it's because we are currently going through rough socio-political times and I just needed a break from it and this book didn't provide the required escapism, or because the issues alluded to just didn't have their place in this book or weren't well-developed, or a combination of all this, but in the end I just wasn't interested.
I really wasn't there for the politics, and I found that events and characters kinda just swept in and out of the story a little abruptly and with very poor development. Each section of the novel isn't very well-developed before the next one is introduced, and because the story pretty much focuses on Marilla's grief at her mother's death and her politics don't really change, each section felt like a repetition of the previous, but with a slightly older Marilla.
And I'm sorry to say that Marilla wasn't exactly an engaging character. It seemed that, in an effort to stay true to the original Marilla - who is very down-to-earth, practical, and a little severe - the author made her a little uninteresting and a bit bland. I appreciate that Marilla was intelligent and occasionally spoke her mind, but there wasn't really much to her besides that. Although she's never been a favourite of mine in the original Anne series, I always did like her and found her interesting, wondering what her past had been like and how tragic it was that her romance with John Blythe had to end.
That was mostly why I wanted to read this book - I was ready for the cute romance between John and Marilla, and to be hit right in the feelz when it would inevitably end...but sadly it was the most boring, emotionless romance I'd ever read, doused with cold water for petty reasons when Marilla is not even sixteen years old yet, and in short, was just plain disappointing.
Matthew's heartbreaking romance had much more impact, and along with Rachel - who was portrayed as a fun, slightly spoilt, but great friend - he was my favourite character and I wish there had been more about him. I thought his character was incredibly well-portrayed, and I enjoyed reading about him more than I did Marilla.
The one thing I really enjoyed about this novel were the many sewing and needlework references. Those amaryllis sleeves sound absolutely divine, and I have a sudden urge to embroider some myself, just like I have a sudden urge to crochet lace cuffs. And start a Ladies' Sewing Circle.
Thus, an extra star is earned for needlework inspiration, bringing the rating up to three mediocre-doesn't-elicit-very-strong-feelings-as-evidenced-by-my-lack-of-yelling-in-all-caps stars.