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The Most Hilarious Books I Have Ever Read or Book Reviews: French Letters and French Leave, by Eileen Fairweather

1st December 2010 By Julianne Leave a Comment

Photo by Linzi Clark

If I remember rightly, I got my copy of French Leave: Maxine Harrison Moves Out! in a sale at New Cross Library for about 5p. When it comes to library sales, I will pretty much buy anything teen/YA, fantasy, sci-fi, or combinations of the above. At the time I didn’t realise it was the second in a pair, so I had to track down French Letters: The Life and Loves of Miss Maxine Harrison before I could get on with the reading, but once I did I fell deeply in epicly entertaining love.

Both books take the form of letters written by Miss Maxine Harrison, mostly of Hornsey, London N8, to her best friend Jean Olgethorpe, who has gone to live Up North with her family.

In French Letters the plot revolves around Maxine’s lack of money and her attempts to impress her other penpal, also called Jean, but male and French. She tells him about her glamorous life as the daughter of the Head of London Transport, but then he decides he wants to visit, and she has to somehow cover up the fact that her Dad’s actually a bus conductor and that she sent him a photo of girl-Jean instead of herself. She also has to deal with fashion, snobby girls at school, and her parents’ political arguments.

By French Leave, things have taken a turn for the serious and Maxine has decided to leave her parents’ home because they can’t afford to let her carry on at school after her GCSEs. Her dad has lost his job and started reading The Sun, her boyfriend seems to be more interested in his motorbike than her, and her sister is getting married and excited over a potato masher. Meanwhile Jean starts going out with the ‘local Tory’ in a town ‘where even the police vote Labour’ and is surprisingly reluctant to commit to moving into Maxine’s bedsit.

If I give you any more detail I will spoil the plot and okay, only a tiny fraction of the jokes which are piled onto every page, but you’ll appreciate these books best if you just buy them and read them! I am normally someone who doesn’t even find books with seven quotes on the cover declaring them ‘laugh out loud funny’ amusing. But when reading these I just kept laughing, and laughing, and laughing. The most incredible thing about these books is that they are consistently funny from start to finish. I really enjoyed Diary of a Chav: Trainers V. Tiaras but I’ll admit that the first few chapters are the most humourous, and that the plot and the sympathy I felt for Shiraz is what kept me reading. The laugh-out-loud funniness just isn’t sustained throughout the book. In French Letters and French Leave, it is. These books are not just pure comedy, however, as they feature serious issues – finance, politics, sex, employment, exams, education, abuse – along with the laughs.

French Letters and French Leave are a little bit dated, teenagers today will probably find it slightly weird that the girls write to each other using snail mail and rarely phone, and that there aren’t any mentions of all the 21st Century mod cons. They’re not full of 1980s cultural references or mentions of old technology, but historical/political context is fairly important to the story, so older teens and adults will probably find them more accessible than younger teens. This also means that readers in other countries than the UK might want to check Wikipedia a few times whilst reading. You won’t struggle to follow the story by any means, but you might miss out on some of the humour and just not get some of the references unless you know or learn about the cultural context.

These books are published by the Women’s Press under the Livewire imprint, I’m not sure whether they are still in print. I really think they need reissuing with new covers in any case, the covers they have at the moment are definitely dated and will probably put some would-be readers off!

If you’re looking for truly hilarious fiction, you’ve found it. I also recommend these books to anyone who is studying or interested in ‘teen/YA through the ages’, as they are some of Livewire’s bestsellers.

The BookDepositoryThe BookDepository

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: 80s, 90s, book review, books, Eileen Fairweather, Livewire, Maxine Harrison, review, teen fiction, teenage, teenage fiction, The Women's Press, working class, YA, young adult

Book Review: Nobody’s Family Is Going To Change, by Louise Fitzhugh

5th October 2010 By Julianne Leave a Comment

Today is the birthday of one of my favourite childhood authors, Louise Fitzhugh (October 5, 1928 – November 19, 1974). She is most famous for writing the children’s classic Harriet the Spy, however, I haven’t re-read that recently, so I decided to review it next year. Today I am going to review Nobody’s Family Is Going to Change, which I read for the first time last year and mentioned in my guest post on Once Upon a Bookcase for Body Image and Self-Perception Month.

Nobody’s Family Is Going to Change has two main characters, Emma and Willie, an eleven year old girl and seven year old boy from a middle-class African American family. Louise Fitzhugh was writing ahead of her time with this novel, which was published in 1974 – their father is a lawyer and the family cook is white. Emancipation ‘Emma’ Sheridan (what a fabulous name) is passionately in love with the idea of being a lawyer, like her father, but he doesn’t approve of women lawyers. Emma’s mother tells her that she needs to lose weight and grow up to be beautiful so that she can marry a lawyer. Emma watches court programmes on television, reads law textbooks, and fantasises about being older, taller, and winning cases against her father. Whilst wearing a large, dramatic hat.

Willie wants to be a dancer, like his uncle, Dipsey, his mother’s brother. One day he goes to an audition, and gets a part on stage. He is delighted, but again, his father disapproves. Mr Sheridan wants Willie to be a lawyer – he believes that dancing is demeaning. At his age, all Willie can do is beg his mother to intervene on his behalf, but Emma looks elsewhere. One day she finds out about the Children’s Army, an activist group for children, and goes to a meeting, reluctantly hoping to find a solution there.

The title of this book is its own spoiler, in a way. This isn’t a story in which the parents are proved wrong, and everybody ends up all happy and close at the end. Nobody’s Family Is Going to Change is about self-acceptance, and finding other sources of encouragement and support, if those you look to first aren’t willing to give any. The Children’s Army helps Emma, but not in the way she hoped and expected.

I think it’s a great read because the characters are so fantastic yet also flawed. Emma is intelligent and funny but like Harriet M. Welsch, she isn’t sweet, nice, or stereotypically girly. Emma is very angry about her situation, and she takes that out on her brother. She is very critical of herself but also other people, which I think is very true to life. If you are constantly judged by other people and found wanting, it’s likely that you will take that on board and become very judgemental yourself. Willie is more innocent and good-hearted, but his energy and enthusiasm are tiring and annoying for the other people around him.
 
I think every child should read Nobody’s Family Is Going to Change, because even if their family is perfectly lovely and supportive of who they are and what they want to do, most people will at some point in their lives have to put up with friends, classmates, co-workers or other people, with fixed opinions about what they should be.

If you need more encouragement to read Nobody’s Family Is Going to Change, a one-star Amazon review called it ‘a dangerously subversive book’.

You can find out more about Louise Fitzhugh and her books on Wikipedia and at the fansite Purple Socks.

The podcast This American Life has an episode inspired by this book. You may want to read the book first though, because the podcast includes a quote which I think will have more impact if you read all that’s leading up to it.

The BookDepository

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: American, book review, books, childrens, family drama, Louise Fitzhugh

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Hi! I'm Julianne and this is my book blog. Click my picture to read more about me.

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