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Confusion
  

Confusion (Hardcover)

by Elizabeth Jane Howard (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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From Publishers Weekly

Lush, sprawling escapist fiction of the first order, the third installment of the Cazalet Chronicle opens in the spring of 1942 and continues the saga begun in The Light Years and Marking Time. Set in London and the English countryside, much of the story focuses on the eldest Cazalet cousins, Louise, Polly and Clary, as they exit their teens and take their first steps into adulthood. Former acting student Louise has been swept into a brilliant but chilly marriage to Michael Hadleigh, a glamorous portrait painter and aspiring Member of Parliament whose life is controlled by his powerful mother. Best friends Polly and Clary leave the cozy confines of the Cazalet's country home to begin what they hope will be terribly grown-up lives in London. While Polly mourns the recent death of her mother, Clary keeps a journal that she hopes to give to her father, who has been missing since the invasion of Normandy. Alternating with the cousins' stories are chapters devoted to the rest of the Cazalet clan, their friends and lovers, bringing readers up to date on the doings of adulterous Edward, his dutiful spinster sister Rachel, her loving best friend Margot Sidney and others. Howard creates a nearly palpaple world, peopled with the sort of well-conceived characters that linger long in the reader's mind.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Ingram

This third volume about the Cazalet family follows the adventures of beautiful Zoe+a5, philandering Edward, troubled Louise, and the other characters from 1942 to VE day on May 8, 1945. By the author of The Light Years. 30,000 first printing.

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Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars The British family Cazalet in the midst of WWII, Jun 22 2001
By Joseph H Pierre "Joe Pierre" (Salem, OR USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Confusion (Paperback)

This is the third in the four book series about the English family Cazalet. The family consists of William and his wife Kitty, their four children, their spouses and grandchildren, as well as the servants and close friends and relations. He is always referred to as "The Brig" and she as "Duchy," short for the Brigadier and the Duchess although he has never been in military service, nor is his wife truly a duchess. Their children consist of three boys, all married, two of whom went to war (officers, of course) in the First World War. The daughter is unmarried and in love with another woman, but there is no sexual relationship.

The first book, The Light Years, begins in 1937. This one progresses from March 1942 through the winter of 1944/45. The series is not really about military action, although that is always in the background and some events are alluded to in their conversations, but rather it concerns the actions and reactions of individuals in the family--their private thoughts and lives; especially those who started the series as children. Many of the chapters are from one or another of their viewpoints. Their sexual relationships are referred to obliquely, but happily without explicit details. The daughter mentioned in the last paragraph, for instance, is in love with a lesbian, Sid, but there is no physical consummation of their passion for each other due to the daughter (Rachel's) disgust at physical intimacy of any kind, with male or female. Sid longs for such a relationship, however, and finds it elsewhere--and then is confronted with guilt and conflict as the fruits of her deceit.

One of the girls tells her lover, an American officer, that her parent's generation would be appalled at their affair, stating that their generation in England does not indulge in affairs. Of course, unknown to her, they do but are discrete about them.

This is a most interesting series. The author is obviously familiar with the environment and the people, and the resulting insight into the British character is enlightening. For those of us who lived through those years it is not only entertaining but also nostalgic.

Joseph H. Pierre
author of The Road to Damascus: Our Journey Through Eternity

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5.0 out of 5 stars One English Family's Wartime Experience Is Engrossing Story, Jun 1 2001
By Antoinette Klein (Hoover, Alabama USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Confusion (Paperback)
The story of the amazing Cazalet family continues in this third of the four-part series. Children face the heart-breaking loss of a mother, marriages crumble, affairs abound, and the Cazalets march on with stiff upper lips. Air raids, food shortages,and rationed clothing become daily occurrences as the children from books one and two pass through their teen years. Births, marriages, and deaths keep the story moving as everyone looks forward to the War's end, to what oldest brother Hugh describes as a time when new life would start, when families would be reunited, when democracy would prevail. The book ends with V-E Day celebrations and a spectacular cliff-hanger that will leave you breathless with anticipation of Book 4, "Casting Off."
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4.0 out of 5 stars Shifting Sentiments, Mar 1 2000
This review is from: Confusion (Paperback)
Generations of the Cazalet family plod through the frightening currents of WWII in England. The bombing and war work seem to reach a "normalcy" and the (huge!) cast of characters muddle through life as it has now become. Goals necessarily must shift; rationing and grim food is a constant irritation; but love and life experiences do go on. The author realistically, but not unkindly, portrays the muddles in personal relationships. The Reader should be warned: this book ends on quite a cliff hanger. You'll want Book IV handy for uninterrupted enjoyment.
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