Time Out Of Mind
TIME OUT OF MIND
by Rachel Field
Award: National Book 1935
Date Read: March 13, 2020
Time Out Of Mind is a beautifully written novel that places you directly on the coast of New England. You can taste the salty air and feel the breeze blowing off the harbor. Field's prose is vivid and inviting.
Kate arrives in Main at Fortune's Folly at 10 years old. The Folly and its environs become enmeshed with who she is. Growing up beside her are Rissa and Nat, companions yet not exactly peers, their power balance is off even before they recognize it themselves. Kate's mother has been hired as a housekeeper, which makes Kate, by proxy, essentially a servant's child.
I found it difficult to continually experience Kate giving up everything of herself for two people who treat her as a person on the periphery. Rissa and Nat venture off to live their lives, free of the Captain's control at last, while Kate remains behind, caring for the house and those that serve it. While Rissa and Nat do like her, I felt Kate put her life on hold in service of a crush on Nat.
When she defies Jake and sets out to attend Nat's premier in New York, you begin to realize how isolated her life has becomes. She hasn't left the Folly or Little Prospect since she arrived. She hasn't experienced life but in her little corner of the world. As the novel progresses, I realize that she feels at home there, which I am beginning to understand is a difficult feeling to come by.
While some of the plot points I could see coming a mile away, I adored this novel in its tragedy and joy, its berries and quiet way of life.
by Rachel Field
Award: National Book 1935
Date Read: March 13, 2020
Time Out Of Mind is a beautifully written novel that places you directly on the coast of New England. You can taste the salty air and feel the breeze blowing off the harbor. Field's prose is vivid and inviting.
Kate arrives in Main at Fortune's Folly at 10 years old. The Folly and its environs become enmeshed with who she is. Growing up beside her are Rissa and Nat, companions yet not exactly peers, their power balance is off even before they recognize it themselves. Kate's mother has been hired as a housekeeper, which makes Kate, by proxy, essentially a servant's child.
I found it difficult to continually experience Kate giving up everything of herself for two people who treat her as a person on the periphery. Rissa and Nat venture off to live their lives, free of the Captain's control at last, while Kate remains behind, caring for the house and those that serve it. While Rissa and Nat do like her, I felt Kate put her life on hold in service of a crush on Nat.
When she defies Jake and sets out to attend Nat's premier in New York, you begin to realize how isolated her life has becomes. She hasn't left the Folly or Little Prospect since she arrived. She hasn't experienced life but in her little corner of the world. As the novel progresses, I realize that she feels at home there, which I am beginning to understand is a difficult feeling to come by.
While some of the plot points I could see coming a mile away, I adored this novel in its tragedy and joy, its berries and quiet way of life.
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