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29 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent book
"The Road to Lichfield" is similar to Penelope Lively's other books in that it is a well-written, acutely observed portrait of intelligent, interesting characters. As a narrative device she listens in on or recreates snippets of the consciousness of various characters. The effect of this device for me is that the characters seem utterly real. In this...
Published on February 16, 2000 by D. Madsen

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3 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A gender-specific read
Most women will love this book. Some men (yours truly included) will appreciate the author's obvious skill, but not be persuaded by its self-referential, overly reflective style. If men can be emotionally/erotically described as blowtorches, and women as ovens, this book can be said to have a very long warm-up cycle, producing a modest, flaky little pastry, and leaving...
Published on November 5, 2006 by R. J. Fadeley


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29 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent book, February 16, 2000
By 
D. Madsen (Woodbridge VA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Road to Lichfield (Paperback)
"The Road to Lichfield" is similar to Penelope Lively's other books in that it is a well-written, acutely observed portrait of intelligent, interesting characters. As a narrative device she listens in on or recreates snippets of the consciousness of various characters. The effect of this device for me is that the characters seem utterly real. In this particular story, the main character, Anne, middle-aged, married to a priggish and uncommunicative but solid and responsible solicitor, finds her ideas about herself and her family all suddenly called into question when she learns new information about her dying father and when she falls in love with a new acquaintance. Add Anne's involvement with a project to save a decaying but historic old building from demolition, and Anne has plenty of material for exploration of her ideas about the past.

The author is a historian, apparently with an interest in old buildings. I enjoyed the descriptions of the British countryside and life style, and some minor characters were delightful.

This book is extremely well written but you won't like it if you don't like novels where the main focus is on social relationships.

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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Unusual, compelling, & politically incorrect., July 28, 2005
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This review is from: The Road to Lichfield (Paperback)
I read a lot, and can often anticipate the course a plot will take. Not this time. The central characters in this book all surprised me at important junctures, though the choices they made did not interfere with the logic of their characters. Partly for this reason, the book itself becomes very suspenseful, in defiance of its setting. It ends on a note that is both shocking and, at least to me, highly disturbing, though not sensational.

I expected to enjoy it, but did not foresee how caught up I would become. The characters still haunt me a bit. This is not your typical first novel, and not your typical genteel British lady novelist. She is ruthless. She is not politically correct.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Positive Aspects of Change, July 21, 2004
This review is from: The Road to Lichfield (Paperback)
"Anne Linton drove northward toward Lichfield. Berkshire gave way to Oxfordshire, Oxfordshire to Warwickshire and on to Stratfordshire. Her own past, too, waved a cheery hand from over the horizon." So, the beginning of the first book by Penelope Lively. I have grown to love this writer. She provides intelligence, perception and a thoroughly believable and interesting cast of characters. She breathes life into the characters, and her vivid style increases our enjoyment of her novels.

Anne Linton is a history teacher married to a stodgy, unemotional barrister. Her husband is caught up in his career and seems to take Anne for granted. Anne is caught in the middle of her life as mother to two teenagers, teacher, wife and now daughter of a man who is dying. Anne begins the fortnight drives to Lichfield to visit her father in a nursing home and to organize the house that they had lived in. The house is actually kept quite clean by the housekeeper. It is Anne's job to look at the finances and to clean out all the morass of years of things.

Within the years collected in papers, Anne discovers that fifteen pounds a month are being sent to an unknown woman. She mentions this to her brother, Graham, who tells her that yes; her father had a mistress for many years and this may be where the money goes. Anne is astounded; this information has changed her entire perception of her life.

While Anne is visiting her father a neighbor drops by. He is a headmaster of a school, and a little older than Anne. He tells her that he and her father used to go fishing regularly and formed a great friendship. Anne and David form a friendship of their own, and she meets him whenever she comes to Lichfield. The friendship deepens into something else. A startling contrast to her father? How will she resolve this affair with her present life?

At the same time, Anne is involved with several other townspeople in trying to save an old building from being torn down. She finds them much too aggressive and dashing forward without the information they need to proceed with intelligence. She tries to tell the group her views, but they hush her and move forward. She withdraws from this group, feeling slighted and out of sorts. Her family's importance to her becomes significant. Her visits to her father renew her energy with her family and her ties to her old life. She visits the daughter of the woman who loved her father. She found surprisingly enough that he father loved music and dance. He was a different person with different needs in this household; She also found that this family loved her father. How to reconcile this family she does not know and the father she thought she knew dying in his bed?

Penelope Lively has given us a refreshing validation of the positive aspects of change. This novel is a testament of confidence in human nature. We are all good people trying to do our best in this world. Another great novel about finding ourselves, change and consequence, and the generations and future we never anticipated. prisrob
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Deeply satisfying novel, November 26, 2004
This review is from: The Road to Lichfield (Paperback)
The Road to Lichfield, Penelope's Lively's first novel, is a deeply satisfying read. Anne Linton, a housewife and part-time history teacher, goes to Lichfield to visit her senility-inflicted father who is dying in a nursing home. The frequent trips down become a sojourn into the past, into discovering her father and into exploring her growing illicit relationship with a headmaster, David Fielding, who was her father's fishing partner. Lively's Booker-nominated book is an adult, intelligent, articulate novel about how relationships and history shape our past and future. At 216 pages, it paints a vivid, if concise, picture of middle-class British suburban life with full of probable, living characters.
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5.0 out of 5 stars From Very Long Ago, February 12, 2012
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This book was published in 1977, before the Thatcher Era, before the tidal wave of immigration into the U.K., and before the computer age. It is about history and secret love, written in the stiff-upper-lip tradition of the British of that time. It's a lovely read, looking back from our day, and it must have been a lovely read when it first appeared. The story includes an episode relating to an effort to save an historic building, covers the decline in the teaching of history (pretty much totally abandoned now), and describes the final illness of a very old man in hospital. Yet the writing is lively (pun intended) and aware, and very much reminds the reader of what is missing in our own environment--the colors of flowers seen from freeways, small town meetings, the attempts of everyone to get along, to tolerate, to find areas of agreement. I was inspired by this book to go back in memory more than the 35 years separating the novel from our own time, and to review my own early years. A great find.
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4.0 out of 5 stars A Woman Comes to Terms with Her Father and Her Marriage, May 6, 2009
This review is from: The Road to Lichfield (Paperback)
This English novel by Penelope Lively is rich in the language of human emotions. Different situations occur and even overlap but the human condition remains constant.

Annie is forty years old. She travels to Lichfield to visit her dying father who is in a nursing home. Over several month's time, she visits him there on weekends and comes to realize he had his own life, separate from 'being her father'. She has an affair with her father's neighbor and must come to terms with her marriage.

Penelope Lively has won the Booker award and this book is a good indication of why she was chosen.
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5.0 out of 5 stars An truly engrossing story, December 28, 2007
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This review is from: The Road to Lichfield (Paperback)
A brilliant telling of one woman's midlife self-discovery. The story is emotional without nostalgia. I couldn't put this book down.
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3 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A gender-specific read, November 5, 2006
This review is from: The Road to Lichfield (Paperback)
Most women will love this book. Some men (yours truly included) will appreciate the author's obvious skill, but not be persuaded by its self-referential, overly reflective style. If men can be emotionally/erotically described as blowtorches, and women as ovens, this book can be said to have a very long warm-up cycle, producing a modest, flaky little pastry, and leaving the kitchen warm for a short time, while the other rooms of the house remain cold.
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The Road to Lichfield
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