Photo de l'auteur

Margaret Buffie

Auteur de Who is Frances Rain?

13+ oeuvres 621 utilisateurs 28 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Comprend les noms: Margaret Buffe, Margaret Buffie

Crédit image: Photo credit: Bob Carmichael, Posted with permission from Tundra Books.

Séries

Œuvres de Margaret Buffie

Who is Frances Rain? (1987) 148 exemplaires
The Dark Garden (1995) 103 exemplaires
Winter Shadows (2010) 63 exemplaires
The Watcher (2000) 61 exemplaires
The Warnings (1989) 45 exemplaires
Out of Focus (2006) 44 exemplaires
The Seeker (2002) 42 exemplaires
The Finder (2004) 35 exemplaires
Angels Turn Their Backs (1998) 32 exemplaires
My Mother's Ghost (1992) 30 exemplaires
Someone Else's Ghost (1992) 16 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1945-03-29
Sexe
female
Nationalité
Canada
Lieu de naissance
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Lieux de résidence
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Études
University of Manitoba (BFA)
Prix et distinctions
Vicky Metcalf Award (1996)
Courte biographie
MARGARET BUFFIE was born and grew up in the west end of Winnipeg. She began writing in 1985 and her first novel, Who is Frances Rain? quickly became a best seller. Since then, she has published nine more books for young adults. Her books have been published in the United States, Norway, Italy, Sweden, Australia, Great Britain, Germany, and China.

Membres

Critiques

This ghostly story captivated my young mind when I was only 9. It has held a special place in my heart since. The Dark Garden's Gothic tones with allusions to a modern Romeo-Juliet story and paranormal overtures are beautifully sad. It's one of the few books I can keep re-reading and never grow bored or distant from the emotion Buffie writes. It's a great read for young and old, especially those who love ghost stories.
 
Signalé
CatherineMilos | Jul 11, 2020 |
The Haunting of Frances Rain is a story about troubled families. Our 15 1/2-year-old Canadian heroine, Elizabeth 'Lizzie' McGill, has always looked forward to spending summers with her beloved Gran, her mother's mother. The old cabin on the shores of Rain Lake has been her haven. Not this year -- instead of being put on a bus with her older brother, Evan, and her younger sister, Erica, their stepfather is driving the family to Gran's.

The McGill children suffer from having two self-centered parents, who are also both lawyers. Their father walked out two years ago. Three months ago, their mother married a bear of a man, a talented and successful potter with teeth the size of sugar cubes (Lizzie thinks of him as 'Toothy Tim'). I never had a stepparent, but I don't think my late mother was a good one to my older half-siblings. Tim is such a nice man I don't know what he sees in Connie. I wanted to drag her off to counseling for the appalling way she broke the news she was getting married again to her children (see chapter 2).

Carl McGill left not long before Erica started first grade, and she eats too much when there's tension in the family. She's chubby. Evan is obviously his mother's favorite. That's not just the way Lizzie sees it. Sure, Evan is brilliant -- he's skipped enough grades to be going to college already -- but he's an obnoxious jerk. Part of that is because their dad walked out. It doesn't help that he's four inches shorter than Lizzie, who already is only two inches shorter than their six-foot Gran. The only thing that unites these older siblings is being unpleasant to Tim. That's even though Lizzie has more of a life now that she no longer has to get dinner, do the housework, and mind Erica.

From my adult perspective, Tim is a godsend to his stepchildren: he cooks, cleans, and makes time for little Erica without giving up his pottery. Thanks to Carl and Connie, though, they might be losing Tim.

Lizzie decides to make uninhabited Rain Island her refuge from her family. There is where she finds the spectacles (glasses) that enable her to see the island's ghosts. One of them is the mysterious Frances Rain, a woman who died over sixty years ago. Lizzie is afraid to talk about her experiences, especially after the reaction Tim gets when he mentions what he saw to Lizzie, Evan, and local friend Alex Bird.

Lizzie becomes very interested in the lives of Frances and a girl who came to stay with her. They certainly get along much better than Lizzie's own family. It takes a couple of crises to get Lizzie focused on the present again. (When Lizzie finally uncovers the Rain Island secret, the ghost she's dubbed 'Toad Man' proves to have been much worse than even Carl or Connie! Society has changed enough that today's teens will have to infer from the text what made Toad Man so upset.)

It's a good ghost story, a good family story, and a nice mystery.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
JalenV | 2 autres critiques | Feb 21, 2015 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
I won this book through early reviewers, and I was very pleased with it.

The mix of historical fiction, time travel, and characters that are easy to relate to make this work a great book for young adult readers everywhere.

I would definitely recommend it.
 
Signalé
dianaworldconqueror | 18 autres critiques | Feb 4, 2013 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
While Winter Shadows contains elements of stories that I normally adore (young lady protagonist, time travel, diaries, self-discovery) I just couldn't make myself love this book. I liked it fine enough, but it really took a lot of focus for me to pick up the book and keep reading after a few pages. Present-day Cass and 1800's Beatrice had similar life situations, family drama, etcetera, but the timing seemed to be a bit off to me. As an example, Cass would be reading Beatrice's diary entry, and instead of cutting to Beatrice's timeline directly after Cass's reading, it would either be a few days before or after the events we'd just read about. That's just confusing, and it happened all of the time. You can tell that Ms. Buffie certainly did her historical homework as the book is chock-full of Cree language and details, but it felt like an overload of information for me. It's certainly deserving of the awards it's won, but to call this an easy read would be a stretch. 2 stars.… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
LauraBrook | 18 autres critiques | Jan 15, 2013 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
13
Aussi par
1
Membres
621
Popularité
#40,536
Évaluation
½ 3.6
Critiques
28
ISBN
51
Langues
1

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