A Company of Swans
A Company of Swans book cover

A Company of Swans

Price
$9.93
Format
Paperback
Pages
374
Publisher
Speak
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0142409404
Dimensions
5 x 1 x 8 inches
Weight
13.3 ounces

Description

Eva Ibbotson, born Maria Charlotte Michelle Wiesner (21 January 1925 – 20 October 2010), was an Austrian-born British novelist, known for her children's books. Some of her novels for adults have been successfully reissued for the young adult market in recent years. For the historical novel Journey to the River Sea (Macmillan, 2001), she won the Smarties Prize in category 9–11 years, garnered unusual commendation as runner up for the Guardian Prize, and made the Carnegie, Whitbread, and Blue Peter shortlists. She was a finalist for the 2010 Guardian Prize at the time of her death. Her last book, The Abominables, was one of eight books on the longlist for the same award in 2012.The following interview appeared in the Fall 2001 Preview Magazine Do you have any rituals? I can write anywhere if I have to because I still use a pen and paper -, but when I am at home I go to the old carved desk I inherited from my mother who was a writer too, and told some fantastic stories. The morning is best for ideas, and I have to be wearing warm clothes because when I am thinking hard I get cold. And I have to have a waste paper basket handy for all the pages that have gone wrong. Whom do your share your writing with first? I don't really share my work until it is published, I feel too uncomfortable about unfinished work. When did you know you wanted to be a writer? I don't think I ever knew, it just happened. One day I wrote `author' in my passport and that was that.. What were you doing when you found out that your first book was going to be published? Cooking supper for my husband and children. My agent phoned and I shouted and we all danced about, except my husband who saw to it that the sauce did not burn. What did you treat yourself to when you found out that your first book was accepted for publication? My first money as a writer came from a short story in a magazine. It was a very small sum, and I bought Mars Bars for everybody in the family. What was the first book you remember reading as a child? Did you have a favorite book as a child? I don't remember the name of my first book, but I know it had a picture of very bright berries, green and red in a forest- and people lived inside the berries... Perhaps that's where my passion for forests comes from! Do you read reviews of your own work? Yes, when I am sent them, but I don't go out and look. What’s the best question a teen has asked about your writing? I don't know what the best question is, but by far the most common is `Where do you get your ideas from?' - and the answer to that is very difficult (and therefore interesting). What are you reading right now? The Wizard of Earthsea , by Ursula Le Guin. Susan, your editor, tells me Journey to the River Sea is a book you've wanted to write for years. How did the idea first come to you? Journey to the River Sea was written quite quickly but it spent years and years inside my head. It started with my hearing about this fabled opera house a thousand miles from the mouth of the Amazon and I thought it was one of the strangest things I had ever heard - I meant to go there and see for myself but then I realised it would mean going back into the past because everything is quite different there now. So I went on reading and dreaming and researching and then one day, I picked up my pen to start a new book about witches and ghosts and found I had started to write an adventure story set in the jungle.

Features & Highlights

  • Ballerinas and exotic rogues abound in this charming and lyrical historical romance for fans of Amanda QuickFor nineteen-year-old Harriet Morton, life in 1912 Cambridge is as dry and dull as a biscuit. Her stuffy father and her opressive aunt Louisa allow her only one outlet: ballet. When a Russian ballet master comes to class searching for dancers to fill the corps of his ballet company before their South American tour, Harriet’s world changes. Defying her father’s wishes and narrowly escaping the clutches of the man who wishes to marry her, Harriet sneaks off to join the ballet on their journey to the Amazon. There, in the wild, lush jungle, they perform Swan Lake in grand opera houses for the wealthy and culture-deprived rubber barons, and Harriet meets Rom Verney, the handsome and mysterious British exile who owns the most ornate opera house. Utterly enchanted by both the exotic surroundings and by Rom’s affections, Harriet is swept away by her new life, completely unaware that her father and would-be finacé have begun to track her down. . . .

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(297)
★★★★
25%
(124)
★★★
15%
(74)
★★
7%
(35)
-7%
(-35)

Most Helpful Reviews

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It was wonderful. I am torn that I couldn't give it 5 stars.

There were a few scenes that were wonderfully surprising and delighting. I found myself amazed and laughing out loud when I thought about those scenes later. However, I was disappointed to find the author used one of my pet peeves. The hero and heroine made erroneous assumptions about each other that would have been cleared up if only they had communicated in a normal manner. They loved each other and wanted to marry, but each one thought the other did not. Therefore, they separated. I hate this. I wanted to rate this 5 stars due to creativity and ideas I haven't seen elsewhere, but I'm giving it a 4, due to the reasons for the separation. I was also a bit sad at the end thinking about the evil done to Harriet by her father and aunt.

CAUTION SPOILERS: Following are brief references to two wonderful scenes. Page 203, after seeing Harriet dance, Alvarez decides to do something he previously was not going to do. Page 233, Harriet's unbelievable delight in describing herself as "ruined" after she sleeps with Rom.

Sexual language: none. Number of sex scenes: none. Sexual subject matter: Although there are no specific sex scenes, there are some discussions about or references to sex. Setting: 1912 England and Amazon River in Brazil. Copyright: 1985. Genre: historical romance.
18 people found this helpful
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intelligent romance

Eva Ibbotson's early romantic books have been out of print for a number of years, so i was delighted to see this new printing of her adult novels. Perhaps due to her popular children's fiction, i have seen this book and her other romance novels listed under adolescent literature, but there are definitely adult themes. Ms. Ibbotson's novels make frequent references to mythology, classic literature, and musical arts, which set them apart from the ordinary romance genre. I have learned a lot about opera, ballet, and the classics just from reading her books.
I first read this novel almost 20 years ago. It is a warm, feel good story which i can escape into over and over again. Highly recommended
5 people found this helpful
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Great Book!!!!

I love this book. It is both well written and entertaining. In addition, it makes use of a little used (if at all) setting - the Amazon during the time when rubber plantations created boom towns on the river. The novel's heroine, Harriet, is a dancer with no outlet other than weekly classes. To escape the expectations of her pompous, professorial father and a Nurse Ratchett of an aunt, she runs away to join a Russian dance company. The company is engaged to perform at a theatre located in a boom town on the Amazon. Here she encounters the hero. I liked Harriet. The information about the dance rings true, the setting is unusual, and you have to like a hero who sends his shirts to be laundered in London. I reread this book about every 2 or 3 years, along with several other Ibbotson novels, including The Countess Below Stairs, The Magic Flutes (which seems to have been reissued under both this title as well as The Reluctant Heiress), Song of Summer, and Morning Gift. They are all excellent reads.
4 people found this helpful
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Easy, fun read

This was a quick read, interesting and enjoyable. Nice love story. Shared it with my best friend since who doesn't like a love story?! Nothing amazingly literary and there are tons of ballet references, but the love story really is worth the read. Very pleasant for a weekend reading selection.
2 people found this helpful
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Take a Trip!

Eva Ibbotson's A Company of Swans is such a great book to read. Any reader would be absorbed in this story because it so richly combines the elements that every reader wants to have in a novel. Ibbotson so smoothly combines ballet, youthful longing, adventure in the Amazon, and history that we are "there" in the moment. Her writing is so evocative that we are captured by her protagonist in the first few paragraphs of her book. We are entirely seized by the time period and able to experience the protagonists joys and pains as she takes the major step to be free of her oppressive father and aunt. The detail in this novel is magical and beautiful as it focuses upon the depressing physical demand of the ballet and the same demands that are made of young girls of this time period. Like Ibbotson's Song for Summer there is amazing texture and detailed characters that live beyond the pages of her book. A very good read that makes you long for the days that the book takes place.
2 people found this helpful
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Loved First Half... then strong heroine just needed repeated rescues

I loved the first part. A good spunky Cinderella who runs away to find mystery, adventure, and a fresh new life. I felt invested in Harriet and her future. I wanted her to find 'the Boy' and rescue the dilapidated Staveley.

Then suddenly she became merely a foil for Rom's conversion into the nice guy he really was underneath everything. Up until a whole lot of sex, which kind of spoiled the conversion. Maybe it's because I'm married and know that sex is nice but not all there is, but the amount of sex and nothing else was a little boring and a little sickening. There was an uncomfortable Romeo and Juliet style miscommunication, a little mild torture of the heroine by her family, a rescue by the hero, a tying up of loose ends.

It was a really great book with a strong heroine until she wasn't anymore. The book was still worth the read for the wonderful first half. I don't think it's something I'll want my daughter reading... if she ever found herself in a traveling ballet troupe in the Amazon at risk of being kidnapped by a man sent from her evil family (which I'm pretty sure won't happen) and gets into a relationship with a man whom she discovers may still love another (which may happen)... I want her to open her mouth and ask if he does (he didn't really) and make sure everything is clear between them. There are so many more interesting, less trite, and more powerful ways to add complexity to the plot.

I'm reminded of Catherine Airds' opinion that, "If you can't be a good example, you can at least be a terrible warning." But everything turns out just right for this strong woman turns passive.
1 people found this helpful
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Ibbotson Delights

This was my first Eva Ibbotson book and after reading it I sought out as many of her adult books as I could find. She writes within a historical background. What a treasure! A wonderful, whimsical writing style, highly literate with a delightful sense of irony and humor. Too bad she is no longer with us.
1 people found this helpful
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Started Slow

It started slow and I do believe at one point I actually asked my husband to poke out my eyes with a spoon, but goodness did I end up loving this book. Darling. The writing is quaint and lovely, and the characters perfection. I loved it. The romance was so sweet and to have a female lead with a brain? Delightful. Truly I was a bit desolate when it ended because I could no longer live in Ibbotson's world. I've read it again twice.
1 people found this helpful
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Good Read

Harriet Morton is eighteen years old (or nineteen according to the back cover copy) and her dreary life with her aunt and her college professor father is illuminated only by her ballet lessons. When Dubrov comes to her lessons, for he is a friend of her teacher, looking for girls to take across the ocean in a production of Swan Lake, he instantly sees Harriet's talent. Except, there's no way she'll be allowed to go. Not by her father, not by her aunt, and not by her equally dull college professor intended husband-to-be. But a chance encounter encourages her and Harriet will pursue her dreams no matter what.

I loved the nontraditional setting, both in time and subject matter, of this book, used as I am to reading about urban fantasy and vampires and dragons. Harriet is a delightfully plucky young woman who doesn't whine or cry about her situation; she takes everything with aplomb. And when circumstances happen, she takes her chances, knowing full well what might happen.

Though the plot does rely in several places on more "chance", something that this author and publisher found wearing towards the end of the book, it kept me engrossed and I had a hard time putting this book down. The story pulls you in and takes you along with prose that is appropriate to the time and very robust in its descriptions. So much so, that it did take me about a chapter to get into this story.

If I had any complaints about this book, it would be the "chance" encounters and things that happen, as well as the way, I felt, the story because wrapped up all too neatly in the end. The epilogue showing Harriet and others ten years in the future was a nice touch, especially given that WWI had happened in the meantime.

For lovers of the arts, lovers of a story, or young adult readers (or adults) looking for a story that teaches you that it is all right to follow your dreams at all costs, this is a highly recommended story.
1 people found this helpful
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Eva Ibbotson Scores Again!

I've read another of Eva's books, Island of the Aunts, and I have to say that after reading A Company of Swans, I am still impressed!

This book was a great tale of strength, courage, and love. The plot was great and everything tied together VERY well. I thought that the details were fantastic and I couldn't put the book down as I neared towards the end. It also had a touch of mystery and fantasy as you traveled through the Amazon with Harriet! Well done! And being a ballet dancer, I could really relate to the ballet aspects and I also thought she was very accurate in what she wrote about ballet moves and such.

Overall: Great Book!
1 people found this helpful