Eleven year-old Maria Foster talks to inanimate objects. She has conversations with cats and trees, too. It is clear she is curious and smart and the conversations she begins with her parents, based on what she has observed in the world or something she read leave them bewildered, as if they just don’t know what to do with a girl so serious and deep. So only-child Maria has created a world where objects listen and engage, give her advice and solace in ways her family cannot.
We meet the Foster family on their summer holiday to Lyme Regis. They are staying in an old Victorian house for a month. It has a resident cat, furniture that has seen decades of wear and an old tree in the backyard perfect for Maria to sit in and ponder. Next door is a small hotel where families of holiday makers are spending the summer and from her perch she notices one particular family with one particular boy. Once they meet Maria and Martin, after some initial hesitation, find in each other kindred spirits interested in the larger questions of life. They roam the hills and beaches picking up fossils, observing the varied geology of the land, which leads to a discussion of evolution when they visit a nearby museum.
In a complementary story line, Maria has become obsessed with a girl her age named Harriet who lived in the house Maria’s family is renting a hundred years ago. A photograph of a piece of Harriet’s embroidery with an ominous signature has captured Maria’s imagination. She is convinced Harriet died young and is determined to find out her story. She keeps most of her thoughts to herself until she makes a small attempt to share them with Martin. Mostly, though, she is content to have found an exploring buddy who shares her new found interests in the fossils and geology of the hills and cliffs they wander.
There are wonderful supernatural elements in the story that affect only Maria besides the cat, the petrol pump and the tree that she has conversations with: there is an insistent sound of a barking dog and the creaking noise of a swing in motion. Maria scours the neighborhood for physical evidence of these to no avail and as this part of the story unfolds they play an important part in the mystery of Harriet.
As Maria explores both her inner and outer worlds she grows in confidence and acceptance of herself and can acknowledge that what she thinks about and what interests her are genuine and noble. She has become communicative and expressive with her mother who is finally able to see and understand this daughter who had always seemed so shut up within herself.
A really wonderful book about a smart, serious, curious kind of girl that should be celebrated!
And thanks to Simon and Karen for creating these various clubs that have helped me find books and authors I may not have discovered otherwise.
The cat sat down beside her, disposed, it seemed, for a chat.
“No,” said Maria, “I don’t think I’m going to let you talk any more. Sometimes you say uncomfortable things. Though actually I think I am getting a bit better at not being made uncomfortable.”
“P’raps” said Maria, “they turn into the kind of people they are because the things that happen to them make them like that.” Like I’m shy and I talk to myself because of the sort of family I live with and Martin’s like he is because he’s got a different kind of family.
“You are a bit peculiar sometimes,” [Martin] added, “You were talking to that tree yesterday. I heard. You were sitting in it and you suddenly said, ‘Oh, Quercus ilex…'”
Title: A Stitch in Time
Author: Penelope Lively
Publisher: HarperCollins Children’s Books
Date: 1976
Device: Trade Paperback
Pages: 221
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Oh this sounds so wonderful! I have always meant to read it, and now so more than ever. (Sounds much more up my street than A Wrinkle in Time was!)
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So many books…🙃 But I do hope you get around to reading this sometime.
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A wonderful writer who had slipped from my mind. Thank you so much for your review introducing me to her children’s fiction. I love the sound of this book.
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Hi Gert and thank you for the comment. I think the message of this book, in the character of Maria, is very important.💐
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Lovely. I read this one too and loved it. I really took to Maria and felt for her. Will be sharing my review in a day or two as well.
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It’s so good isn’t it? Thanks for stopping by. I’ll look for your review.
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Oh, I really loved this when I read it a few years ago, and think if I’ve still got my copy that it, may be worth a reread. https://wp.me/s2oNj1-stitch
I also read a couple of other time-related children’s novels around the same time, A Traveller in Time and A Wrinkle in Time, all very different despite the linked theme.
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I’ll take a look at your review, Chris. I may be in the minority, but I could not get into A Wrinkle in Time, as much as like Madeleine L’Engle.
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‘Wrinkle’ is the only L’Engle I’ve ever read but it was altogether a strange piece, not one I’d be in a hurry to revisit.
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I’m that child too! I’ve not got along with the few adult novels I’ve read by Lively but this sounds perfect. Great review, Laurie!
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Thank you, Sandra. It was a very good read for me and I hope for others as a bit of vindication 🙂
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Ahhh you have just cleared up a childhood mystery for me! I thought I had read A Wrinkle in Time as a kid, but when I reread it as a young adult, I remembered nothing about the story at all. But reading this, makes me see that it was A STITCH in Time that I had read and loved as a child, not a WRINKLE!!!!!! As a shy child, this book spoke to me. Thanks for the memories 🙂
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Oh my gosh this is great! That has happened to me, too 🙂
I really liked this story. The quiet, smart girl with the rich inner life is such a relatable character type to many of us, I think. ❤
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An absolutely wonderful review, Laurie! I hope I enjoy the book just as much. I’m going to seek it out as well as any other books I can find by Lively.
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Yes, I want to read more. I’ve only seen her in connection with her adult novels, so this surprised me and then I found out she wrote a lot of children’s books!
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Ah, lovely! Firstly, so glad you can join in and if you’re finding new books and authors that’s exactly what the Clubs are for. Thank you for choosing this one, as I haven’t read it in decades and wanted to revisit it this week but have run of out time. I loved all Lively’s children’s fiction and one day will re-read them! 😀
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I am seeking out more of hers. It always amazes me how many “children’s’ books read very well for adults!
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