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Constance

par Patricia Clapp

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286992,216 (3.98)10
A young girl's diary reflects life in Plymouth Colony.
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Affichage de 1-5 de 9 (suivant | tout afficher)
I have always enjoyed this book. Particularly as the main character, Constance Hopkins is one of great-grandmothers. ( )
  xofelf | Apr 5, 2022 |
This came to mind because a neighbor was telling stories about his relation to Stephen Hopkins. I thought "wasn't that the father..." and indeed it was. My library has weeded this book, which vexed me greatly, because...

I feel like modern YA authors often borrow from that terrible interview question: "What is one of your weaknesses?" You know, the one where you say something like "I'm OCD about deadlines" and they're supposed to think that's a good thing.

So many authors often seem to think "My protagonist can't be perfect. They need a fault," so they give them a character trait like, say, being an introvert. But then, at the end of the book, it's that very "negative" trait that attracts the main guy/gets them the job/saves the country.

Constance(the character) is rude, proud, racist, vain, and negative. And I love it. Not because those are qualities that we should strive for, but because Clapp walks us on a journey of growth in a lot of those areas. She doesn't do it perfectly and, at the end, Constance is still far from perfect, but we are shown that, yes, people have nasty traits and yes people can change. There's a point where one of the settlers does something terrible. And Constance and a friend are talking about that person and they get to that event and, because of the uncomfortableness of it, essentially say "I don't know what to think and I'm just going to pretend that nasty thing didn't happen because I can't really deal with it." Clapp is very aware, not perfectly, but largely, of the way human beings behave when asked to look back at the sticky, nasty, morally-reprehensible events of life---we justify, ignore, evade it because we don't like dealing with the conflict. I thought that her portrayal was very realistic---though not at all one we should emulate.

The middle-end-ish is a bit drawn out and boring, probably because not much historically seemed to happen, though I did like the discussion about fishing tactics.

FYI:
I'm a descendant of John Cooke- the guy who didn't get the girl. And, no, that's not a spoiler. You pretty much know by the second chapter. :)

Also am very disappointed that they're marketing this (on the GR blurb) as a romance... it is, at the end, but the first half is mostly, well, not. I mean, 50 people die. ( )
  OutOfTheBestBooks | Sep 24, 2021 |
One of my favorite books of all times, omg. I try to read this once a year or so. Funny story: I had to read this in sixth grade, after which we took a field trip to Plimoth Plantation. "Constance" was on the Mayflower while we were there, and I started asking her about all kinds of stuff that happened in the book - gossip about other pilgrims, etc. She just looked at me like I had two heads....I felt really dumb. My teacher just stood there and kept prodding me to ask more - mean! ( )
  beautifulshell | Aug 27, 2020 |
My biggest regret about reading Patricia Clapp's book is that the author is no longer alive. I would have liked to be able to thank and ask many questions. I am a direct descendant of Constance Hopkins and have read the two books about her father's life and some of his own writings and short journal references to him but the information about her life is sparse and hardly anything about her children. I would have like to ask the author about more about Constance's life and her friendship with Priscilla Alden and so much more.

But I am grateful for the description of the frightening epidemic that killed so many of the people who came over on the Mayflower. I pictured the Common House tall and strong and lined with rows of pallets of those stricken with the disease. I had the good fortune of visiting the replicas of that and the small dark house that Constance lived in when I visited that area.

The author brought to life the sight, sound and thoughts of my ancestor and I an truly thankful for that. I want to encourage more people to explore their ancestry and seek article and books about their ancestors. ( )
  Carolee888 | May 25, 2020 |
I really enjoyed this, even re-reading after a decade and a half. Though I wondered about her calling it "America" way back on the first page (was the new world already called that in 1620?), I thought the facts added up. The story kept me going in ways that many newer historical fiction "journals" don't. I was rooting for Constance and the new colony throughout. I'm almost sad to swap this one, but I'm not likely to read it again. ( )
  t1bnotown | Dec 19, 2009 |
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