Lavinia R. Davis,
1943, The Junior Literary Guild and Doubleday, Doran and Company
The summer visiting Aunt Helen up at Rye had been a flop. Aunt Helen hadn't known any of the younger crowd, and though Bitsy had tried to make friends she had stayed an outsider. She had comforted herself with the thought that at Sea Cliff she was one of the gang, but now, after two days, she wasn't at all sure. Bitsy felt cold and apprehensive as it occured to her that maybe she was the one who had changed. She had been something of a leader in the old rough-and-tumble, kid days, but maybe from now on she would always be on the outside.
When 17-year old
After a series of inevitable misunderstanding and awkward moments as the
"Wait until you meet my cousin Bitsy," he said proudly. "She's some looker and she works like a man."
Then her old life rears its head in the form of Byrd Gaylord (and here I pause in appreciation of such a name), the smoothest and most desirable of those older boys who'd dismissed her months earlier as a kid. Now, though, Byrd is in the Air Force and, lonely for his old world, latches onto her as a familiar face. Flattered and newly confident by her success in
A well-written story with an engaging heroine and atmospheric surroundings. Bitsy's a tad too adaptable; she tends to quickly grasp what she's doing wrong and correct it without trouble, and her social success is a bit overdone, if satisfying. Unusual book, in that she doesn't struggle much with the typical teen stuff, but cuts to the chase with the big issues - who to marry, what life to live, the survival of the farm, etc. Maybe because this is a war book, Bitsy's focused much more on adult issues than on teen ones.
A few things rankle or stand out. Bruce's casual dismissal of the Polish immigrant farm hand Steve as a dumb Pole, and the confusion whether he's mildly retarded or just a foreigner with limited English and emotional problems from WWI. The creepy trick Steve plays with a dead dog. The use of the word 'terrific' as a synonym for 'terrible.' The cool evaluation of a neighbor boy upon meeting Bitsy for the first time, as he sums her up as a nice piece. Tim's bluntness, which is meant to be natural but which seems to afflict him mostly around Bitsy; he's plenty smooth and courteous around a major from the nearby air base, for example. And finally, one character uses the phrase 'squaw winter,' apparently a regional term for the first freeze of winter, and which I've never heard before; Indian summer, yes, squaw winter, no.
About the author
(1901-1961) Lavinia Riker Davis also wrote as "Wendell Farmer."
Other books
Young Adult
Come Be My Love
Hearts In Trim
A Sea Between
Children's
Plow Penny Mystery
Pony Jungle
Hobby Horse Hill
Melody, Mutton Bone and Sam
Janey's Fortune
The Secret of Donkey Island
Donkey Detective
We All Go Away
Americans Every One
Adventures In Steel (NF)
It Happened On A Holiday (SS)
Round Robin
Spniney and Spike and the B-29
Easy
Roger and the Fox
Danny's Luck
The Wild Birthday Cake
Summer Is Fun
Adult
Evidence Unseen
Threat Of Dragons
Barren Heritage
Short Stories (children)
"Champion Fire ’n Feather" in the anthology Great Stories About Dogs
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