5/31/2023 0 Comments Falling angels by tracy chevalier![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() 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. ![]()
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