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So charming and heart warming!! Gives me Little House on the Prairie vibes, but set in the 50’s.
Because I probably won't find time to write the thorough review this gem deserves, here are a few quick thoughts:I loved the story. I felt an immediate bond with the characters and was so caught up in the story. I really appreciated how the story dealt with some difficult, real-life subjects while maintaining warmth, heart and humor. I wish I really could meet the Austin family ;-) And go visit Grandpa and his amazing home--I think I'm adding The Stables to my dream-libraries list, especially si...
3.5 stars. Despite my enduring love for Madeleine L'Engle and my obsession with her lesser-known heroine Vicky Austin, for some reason I never quite got to Meet the Austins. Maybe because I knew that it didn't involve any of the scientific elements that feature in so many of her later novels, maybe because Vicky is only 12 in this novel. I'm grateful that my book club forced me to finally read it! Meet the Austins is a very sweet middle-grade, and a great introduction to the loving, warm Austin
I loved this family and can’t wait to read more of their stories. Madeleine’s writing is beautiful and this one comes without all the science and space stuff that’s a bit over my head in the Time books.😂
Madeleine L'Engle's Meet the Austins, and what can I say about this novel, but that it is a favourite, and will always be thus. I love everything about it, from the loving and episodic (but never tedious) descriptions of family life (and while some of these episodes might well and indeed be more than a bit dated, this has always been part of, or rather much of the charm for me), the nuanced and for a children's book lushly and highly developed character descriptions and yes, even the messages pr...
L'Engle's novels, especially her Austin cannon, make it very difficult on the reader to leave behind the world in which strong connections and indelible memories have been made. Usually, when I've finished a book, I'll just sit there and let myself feel warm and full and contented, and maybe just a little sad it's over. That was true as well for this time. When I was little, I used to watch The Cosby Show every day. And if any of the Cosby's had ever appeared on my doorstep offering to take me h...
Uuuu, I feel so nice and fuzzy about this book, I just hugged it and imagined I hugged each Austin in turn🌞-----------------------Another gem by Madeleine L'Engle, and again, so surprisingly unique and yet so much like her, worldview, style, prose iand all...I just love everything by her.Basically, the story is about the Austins, a family of six, parents included, pets excluded (among these there are two absolutely delightful dogs with even more glorious names, Mr. Rochester and Colette, and an
This is one of my favorite books from childhood. I first read it in 1962 when I was 9. I still enjoy the story, and all of Madeleine L'Engle's books for that matter, but I think it's probably somewhat dated; kids today might not enjoy it that much, unless they are reading it as a period piece. It's the story of a family told from the point of view of the 12 year old daughter. This is the first book about the Austin family, just as A Wrinkle In Time is the first book about Meg Murray and her fami...
My mother assured me that I had loved this in childhood and as soon as I got into it, I remembered it strongly. Good to re-read and one that I hope to continue the series (did I read those? Stay tuned for my memory.)
Written in episodic form, this is the introduction to L'Engle's second favorite family, the Austins. Unlike many of her books, this one has no science fiction elements. It is the story of a family of 4 children, 2 dogs, and a bunch of cats, living in a rambling house on a hill in small town New England. Little of consequence happens: an orphaned child joins the family and behaves badly, the narrator falls off her bike and breaks her arm, ice storms rage, meals are cooked and eaten, books are rea...
Oh dear. My friends adore this. I don't. Even in 1960 one didn't have to believe in spanking, God, and big families. I may have accepted those if I'd read this as a child but I don't think I would have loved the book.I may have liked it more then, though, what with the Grandfather's library, and the dog, and the adventures. Reading it now, as a parent looking forward to an empty nest, I'm just overwhelmed by the challenges these children inflict upon their parents. And the way Vicky's voice some...
L’Engle paints an appealing picture of a large, noisy family – doctor father, mother, four children, two dogs (one a Great Dane) plus cats – that copes with challenges large and small and is bound by love and warmth. An ice storm that takes out the electricity is an excuse to hunker down, play music and eat food cooked over an open fire. One of the children going missing is temporarily scary but reminds them to take care of and cherish each other. The biggest disruption of all is when Maggy, the...
So, so lovely. Don't read this is you are not a fan of good books, good music, good conversation, faith and examples of inspiring mentoring.... this book contains a healthy dose of all of these ingredients! I loved this even more than a Wrinkle in Time and plan to read the next books in this series!
THE SUNDAY FAMILY READ When Meet the Austins was published in 1960, Madeleine L'Engle was two years away from publishing her break out book A Wrinkle in Time. Somewhere I read that she was quite discouraged as an author at this time, even though she had been writing stories since childhood. She got published but prior to Wrinkle in Time her books had not sold well. In the long run, Meet the Austins grew into her second most well-known series.I loved this book. It has all the charm of my favorite...
This was an off-the-cuff re-read. I was in the Children's area of the library with my kids, who had become absorbed in their own books, and I suddenly had an itch for Madeleine L'Engle. So I grabbed this one off the shelf. I didn't recall reading it when I was young, but I must have, because as soon as I got into it, I realized passages of it had stayed in my subconscious. I also realized how Vicky Austin, like Anne Shirley and Emily Starr, had influenced my view of both myself and the world aro...
In my upper years of grade school, I discovered Madeleine L'Engle's Time Trilogy (at the time it was a trilogy) and my literary world changed. The sense of wonder those books awakened served as my gateway to the realms of science fiction and fantasy. At least, that's how I remember it. In any case, she was a "favorite author" and A Wrinkle in Time was the best book ever. And yet, for some reason I did not explore much of her work beyond these books. It was probably because, despite some of the t...
We really enjoyed this story. The title is apt because you did feel you were meeting and getting to know this family. We loved the detail of day to day life and relationships, the laughs and the squabbles and ups and downs of family life. We enjoyed looking into their life, the picnics on mountains and stargazing. We particularly liked the visit to their grandfather's, his house and location sound perfect, and what better use for disused horse stalls ! I started to look at a family tree at the e...
Ms. L’Engle opens with a warm and loving description of an all-American, upper-middle class, mid-century family. Dinner is cooking in the oven, the older children are doing homework or working on school projects, and the younger ones are playing, while the mother is orchestrating the whole proceeding. They are all in expectation of the evening’s climax — for Daddy to come home from work. The phone rings and the two younger children rush to be the first one “there” to answer it. This is the kind
I have a love/hate relationship with the late Madeleine L’Engle. I loved A Wrinkle in Time, but I hated the sequel, A Wind in the Door. I enjoyed The Arm of the Starfish, but I couldn’t bring myself to finish the sequel, Dragons in the Waters. But on the recommendation of a Goodreads friend, I checked out Meet the Austins, the first in yet another of L’Engle’s series.Unlike the two previous series, Meet the Austin contains no paranormal or sci-fi touches. Twelve-year-old Vicky Austin and her sis...
Reading L'Engle's memoir Two-Part Invention put me in the mood to reread this old favorite for the umpteenth time. The Austin family shaped my ideal of family life: the classical music as soundtrack, the bustling happy chaos, the spirited discussions of literature and art and religion, the homey rhythms. Little did I know when I fell in love with this book, this family, as a teenager that it was shaping the course of my future: the homeschooling ideal we strive for (and do not always achieve, ju...