|
Loading... Ethel & Ernestby Raymond Briggs
LibraryThing recommendationsMember recommendationsLoading...
won't like
will probably not like
will probably like
will like
will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Raymond Briggs is well known in Britain (sadly, less so in North America) for his funny and often deeply poignant graphic novels. Possibly his best known work is When The Wind Blows, the story of an elderly couple who survive a nuclear holocaust - for a time. This later book is a biography-cum-social history of his parents: how they met while "in service", their life during the Blitz, and the many changes that they experienced after World War II. It's easy to see in Briggs's parents the seed of the elderly couple that appeared in many of his other works. I discovered Ethel and Ernest in a second-hand bookstore, where I meant only to browse it. But when a book moves you to tears after only a few pages, you know you've found something powerful. It's funny, bittersweet, and true to the bone. This is the story of Briggs's parents, how they met and eventually got married, and of Briggs's own childhood. Like much of his work, it is bittersweet, but immensely touching. Recommended. no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com (ISBN 0224046624, Hardcover)Raymond Briggs's loving tribute to his parents has an emotional power that far exceeds its deceptively simple technique. Graphic in format, the book combines vigorous but sensitive illustrations with dialogue that cogently elucidates its characters' personalities. Milkman Ernest meets lady's maid Ethel in 1928. In short order they are married, holders of a mortgage, and parents of a boy--solid members of the English working class, aspiring to more for their son. As they experience the Depression, World War II, postwar prosperity and cultural upheaval, readers come to know them intimately. Ernest is left-wing, unashamedly proletarian, and perennially enthusiastic about the great changes modernity is bringing, from unemployment insurance to highways. Ethel is a Tory, a bit of a snob, and far more realistic about how much actual improvement they can expect and what it will cost. They worry about their adored child constantly, especially after he goes to art school. She gets sick and grows senile in 1970; he dies shortly after her in 1971. It's hard to imagine a reader who won't weep when their son looks at the pear tree in the yard of the house the couple inhabited for 41 years and says, "I grew it from a pip." Plain words and plain people strike a universal chord in this touching memoir. --Wendy Smith(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:16 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
Abebooks |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The graphic novelette (only 103 pages, surely not a novel?) takes the reader from the meeting of Ethel and Ernest in 1928 to their deaths in 1971, capturing in images their life together. They are humble, hard-working, honest, naive (Ethel), canny (Ernest)...Briggs does it all with a few words and wonderful facial expressions. It is poignant and funny, bittersweet and wonderful all at once. I think this will be a gift I will be giving to people over and over again.