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Falling Angels by Tracy Chevalier
Falling Angels by Tracy Chevalier








Falling Angels by Tracy Chevalier

Chevalier herself writes after the story's end that "the Acknowledgements is the only section of a novel that reveals an author's "normal" voice. And while Falling Angels may be a story of women, despite, or perhaps because of their exclusion from contemporary politics, Simon's observations are the most honest and revealing. Mrs Coleman's experiences with the campaign for women's suffrage are marginalised through silence Maude and Livy tell instead of their reaction to the women's antics. Livy's little sister Ivy May is one of the most beguiling figures of the work, but is given only two sentences of her own (and those two bring a lump to the throat).

Falling Angels by Tracy Chevalier

Chevalier has chosen carefully who speaks when, and who, more importantly, keeps silent.

Falling Angels by Tracy Chevalier

The story moves swiftly, switching to multiple narratives: young but quickly maturing Maude and Livy the adult Colemans and Waterhouses their servants and Simon the gravedigger boy.

Falling Angels by Tracy Chevalier

Their choices of a monument to death seem to reflect their differing attitudes to life, but Chevalier makes clear that these two families are forever linked in their fates and aspirations. One has a large marble angel erected above it, the other an urn (an allusion more to the morbidity of a Victorian columbarium than the eternity of Keats' pre-Victorian "unravish'd bride of quietness"). Their families, the Colemans and the Waterhouses ("no relation to the painter"), meet in a graveyard beside their family graves. In 1910 they are almost young women who have experienced their own personal losses and belong to a generation who are no longer prepared to wear black for months to mark the death of Edward VII. Maude and Livy are aged six in 1901, when Queen Victoria has just died and the whole country is in mourning. In Falling Angels, Tracy Chevalier has combined a moving elegy to the lost innocence of the 21st century's grandmothers and great-grandmothers with a reminder of the strength and modernity of their aspirations and achievements.










Falling Angels by Tracy Chevalier