About this item
Highlights
- The last novel in the beloved Fairacre series finds Miss Read with important decisions to make.
- Author(s): Read & John S Goodall
- 224 Pages
- Fiction + Literature Genres, Literary
- Series Name: Faircare
Description
About the Book
Suddenly taken ill, the beloved Miss Read must consider leaving her long-timepost at the school. But through the changing seasons in this humorous, gentledrama, Miss Read's problems are gradually resolved.Book Synopsis
The last novel in the beloved Fairacre series finds Miss Read with important decisions to make. Gradually worsening health forces her to consider an early retirement. John Jenkins, a handsome newcomer, competes for her affections with the newly widowed Henry Mawne. However, Miss Read has more on her mind than men. Orphans living in her former house have bolstered the village school's roll, but these new students seem to be having problems with their adoptive family. In the midst of all this turmoil, readers can rest assured that FAREWELL TO FAIRACRE boasts all the elements they have come to love: eccentric villagers, gentle humor, and a verdant rural landscape teeming with lambs, larks, and blackthorn bushes.
Review Quotes
"With an influx of new students, Miss Read's worries about the future of her beloved school can finally be set aside. In their wake, however, come concerns about the head mistress' own health. Two small strokes spur her decision to retire, and she spends her final months in her usual busy fashion, tending to her students at Fairacre, fending off the surprising attentions of two suitors, and becoming ever more comfortable with thoughts of a new life ahead. Nostalgic without being sentimental, this is a fitting conclusion to a delightful series, recalling old friends and pleasant times in a tranquil English village. Author Dora Saint, "the real Miss Read," fashions no grand exits for her beloved character's thirty-third appearance, choosing instead to say farewell with the same graceful, quiet charm that has endeared Miss Read to so many for so long. Once again, John Goodall's quaint pen-and-ink sketches give face to Fairacre's populace, from Miss Read's grumpy antagonist, Mrs. Pringle, to the honorable, warmhearted Miss Read herself." Booklist, ALA --