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A Proper Education for Girls: A Novel [Hardcover]

Elaine diRollo (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

April 14, 2009
Not since the Brontës have we seen the likes of the Talbot sisters, plucky peach growers with a peculiar upbringing and a flair for subversion. Set in England and India in the mutinous year of 1857, A Proper Education for Girls tells the story of Alice and Lilian Talbot, twins separated for the first time in their lives by their martinet father. After an affair comes to a tragic end, Lilian is banished from the Talbot mansion and married off to a sickly missionary in India. Unwilling to play the part of the demure missionary wife, beautiful, tomboyish Lilian quickly takes advantage of her husband’s hypochondria and her newfound freedom as a British expatriate, tramping off into the jungle to paint pictures of the indigenous flora and secretly learning the language and customs of her adopted homeland.

Meanwhile, the plain but sharp-witted Alice remains on her father’s isolated estate, serving as curator to his strange and vast Collection under the watchful eye of the malevolent Dr. Cattermole. The Collection, which has taken over every inch of the rambling estate, is the essence of Victorian England—antiquated and ingen- ious, austere and excessive. Twelve perfectly synchronized grandfather clocks stand at attention at the bottom of a staircase. Botanical specimens have overrun the conservatory, turning the room into a tropical greenhouse. Forgotten houseguests roam amid fossilized sea creatures, display cases of Greek pottery, and mechanical contraptions. A peach tree, inherited from their mother and planted in a wheelbarrow for portability, is a constant reminder of Lilian’s absence.

Though Mr. Talbot has cut off all communication between the sisters, a cryptic letter from Lilian manages to slip through, and hidden in the envelope is a puzzling photograph of a tiger hunt. Alice sets about cracking the code in the letter, finding an unlikely ally in Mr. Blake, the photographer hired to document the Collection. While Mr. Talbot is absorbed in the eccentric but seemingly benign Society for the Propagation of Useful and Interesting Knowledge, Alice plots her escape from both her oppressive father and Dr. Cattermole’s unspeakable plans for her future.

Intrigue is rife in India as well, where Lilian continues to defy convention. Playing her many admirers off one another, she quietly works toward the goal of reuniting with her sister. But the violent onset of the Indian rebellion against British rule threatens to derail her plans. And back at the Talbot estate, the Society’s experiments are taking a menacing turn. Will the sisters' resourcefulness and profound devotion to each other be enough to save them? Capturing the Victorian era in all of its whimsy and horror, A Proper Education for Girls is a superb debut novel about the power of sisterhood.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

British novelist diRollo's mixed debut, set in 1850s England and colonial India, tells the story of twin sisters Alice and Lilian Talbot, who were born into an aristocratic but eccentric English family and raised by their widowed father among his collected curiosities and creepy acquaintances. One of those acquaintances, closet pornographer Dr. Cattermole, assists the Talbots in their curatorial obsessions. Their quiet existence is thrown into upheaval when Lilian is married off against her will to a missionary and forced to move to India with him. The sisters struggle and rebel against their suffocating situations—Lilian slogging through the subcontinent, Alice under the cruel and exploitative manipulations of Dr. Cattermole—until Lilian sends her sister a coded letter and a photograph, setting events in motion to bring them together. The vivid and sometimes graphic details of Victorian-era obsessions are intriguing, though the prose quality is spotty and the dialogue is often wooden ( 'Release me!' cried Alice. 'You are committing a grave and punishable crime to hold me in this way' ). The premise is wonderful, but the execution doesn't do it justice. (Apr.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

DiRollo’s delightfully original debut simultaneously mocks and colorfully depicts British imperialism and the Victorians’ obsessive pursuit of scientific progress. It is 1857, and the daughters of noted eccentric Edwin Talbot are about to fight back against the strictures of their repressive circumstances. Plain Alice remains at home, charged with overseeing her chauvinist father’s huge collection of antiquities and oddball artifacts. Beautiful Lilian, forced into wedlock after an indiscretion, travels to India with her priggish missionary husband and endures the company of xenophobic military officers and society wives. As one would expect of any sensible heroine in modern historical fiction, these intelligent, independent-minded sisters have a rebellious streak. Embracing the native customs and language, Lilian journeys into the Indian countryside to paint pictures of local flora, while Alice sees an escape route in the sex-starved photographer hired by her father. Their candid thoughts on the walking stereotypes surrounding them are hilarious, but the novel resists fully indulging in parody. The sisters’ wacky adventures aside, the threats posed by Mr. Talbot’s evil doctor friend are disturbingly real. --Sarah Johnson

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 368 pages
  • Publisher: Crown (April 14, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0307408345
  • ISBN-13: 978-0307408341
  • Product Dimensions: 6.4 x 1.3 x 9.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,585,667 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "What use are men, when they bring us only pain and unhappiness?", April 14, 2009
This review is from: A Proper Education for Girls: A Novel (Hardcover)


This novel is a surprisingly clever rout of Victorian mores and pretensions, the hypocrisy of an era stripped bare as twin sisters, Lilian and Alice Talbot find themselves at the mercy of a science-obsessed father and his friend, the evil Dr. Cattermole. Talbot House filled with his "Collection", the sisters' father is an avid member of the Society for the Propagation of Useful and Interesting Knowledge, each room filled with artifacts and curiosities. After a scandalous incident, Lilian has been married to a missionary and dispatched to India, her name never to be spoken in the home again. Alice is devastated, left to care for her father's oddities as well as their deceased mother's fertile conservatory. Dabbling in photography, Alice is somewhat comforted to learn her father will soon have a new assistant, Mr. Blake.

In chapters that alternate between Alice's bleak existence at Talbot House to Lilian's adventures in India, the author excoriates the particular attitudes of Victorian England and the British occupation of India, the male hubris that dominates both societies and the restrictions females must endure, an enforced childishness that renders them helpless without a male's superior intelligence to guide their every move. While Alice submits to her father's demands, supported by the frivolous fluttering of five charming elderly aunts, Lilian thrives in India, ignoring her husband's voluble complaints. Even when Lilian is confronted with a face from the past, she barely breaks stride, shedding the shackles of society for freedom from restriction and a well-planned revenge. Alice is not so fortunate, the object of Cattermole's compulsion to wield his surgeon's scalpel. Alice's situation is dire, the young woman in great and irreversible danger.

With a vengeful eye and a sharp wit, diRollo mines the Victorian repression of womanhood in a subtly subversive novel, exposing the pomposity of men who disguise their carnal appetites in scientific research, their obsession with experimentation veiling a thirst for all things libidinous. Faced with only two options, institutionalization or marriage, Lilian and Alice are the heroines of the piece, charged with outwitting the males who dominate them and escaping the control of those who view women as objects. Crowded with sentiment, theory and bizarre curiosities, this is a novel to be savored, fools left sputtering in confusion as two sisters soar above the petty presumptions of their era. Luan Gaines/2009.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Delightful!, January 17, 2011
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I am surprised more people have not yet discovered this delightful book about twin sisters in Victorian England. The pretty one has been married off to a missionary and sent to India after a scandal while the plain one is stuck at home, taking care of their tyrannical father's collection of oddities and entertaining his guests. While Alice has to assist Mr. Blake, the photographer who has come to catalog the Collection, all the while dodging the nefarious attentions of Dr. Cattermole, her father's friend, Lillian deals with colonial bigotry and the unwanted attentions of several unlikely suitors. The story follows their plucky fight to determine their own place in the respective worlds they've been forced to accept.

The strength of the book is really the way that the writer waves the stories together. Several cliff-hangers occur, and the narrative changes to the other sister, leaving the reader wanting to keep going, even if just to make sure that the girls are OK. But the changes are not melodramatic; the twists and turns are so much fun to navigate. In this way, a book that could have been heavy and oppressive is kept fun and fresh, a delight to read.

I also very much enjoyed the way that the writer used her supporting cast of characters. Some of the best moments in the book are a result of the aunts and grandmother--these women are fantastically "real", witty women.

Perhaps the true measure of a book can be, did you want it to end? Did you want more? I really do want to see how Lillian, Alice, Mr. Hunter, even the aunts' lives turned out. It's been a while since a book did that to me. I hope to see more from this fantastic author and highly recommend the book.


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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of my favourites., April 17, 2010
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I cannot love this book more. It was such a treat to read. Twins Lilian and Alice live with their father Mr. Talbot who collects strange and rare objects. The twins themselves seem to be part of the collection! When Lilian is compromised by Mr. Hunter she is married off to a boring missionary who whisks her off to India leaving Alice with her aunts in Mr. Tablots strange world. Mr. Blake is hired as a photographer to catagorise every piece of the collection. Alice who has gone against the conventions of her time acts as his assistant. He is perplexed to find that he is attracted to her despite her obvious plainess, though Alice is unaware of his feelings. When she comes into possession of some 'racy' photographs that Mr. Blake brought with him she blackmails him into marrying her so that she can escape her father and rush off to India after her sister. To her surprise he is more than willing to agree.There are even rumours that she is a hermaphrodite! The malicious Dr. Cattermole enters the picture who claims he can 'cure' her conditon. Meanwhile Lilian is thriving in her new country while her husband does nothing but complain. She learns the language and even goes as far to wear sari's which scandalises the english population. Just as she thinks that she has settled into her life Mr. Hunter returns to her life and confesses than he made a huge mistake. Lilian is not having any of it but with revenge in mind she leads him on. The sisters ultimately struggle to be together and are strong heroines who go against convention. I absolutely love them! I was saddened when it ended.

Give this book a shot. It's unusual. I love it! It's hilarious.
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