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Paperback Gone-Away Lake Book

ISBN: 0152316493

ISBN13: 9780152316495

Gone-Away Lake

(Book #1 in the Gone-Away Lake Series)

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Format: Paperback

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$7.69
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Book Overview

A 1958 Newbery Honor Book Summer has a magic all its own in Elizabeth Enright's beloved stories about two children and their discovery of a ghostly lakeside resort. These two modern classics are once... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

8 ratings

Loved This Book!

I absolutely loved the mystery. One of my favorite books.

A Childhood Favorite

I have absolutely loved this book since my mom did a read aloud of it for me and my siblings when we were little! Elizabeth Enright spins an enchanting summer tale of two cousins who find a old, run-down, hidden villa of Victorian summer homes. I just love the atmosphere and feel of this book! The mystery, the setting, the houses and the people they find living there, and just the wonderful adventures! It's everything you would want in a fun summer vacation to visit your cousins<3 I would highly recommend this book!

Ordered a hardcover but got a paperback?

Wasn't worth the hassle of returning it. Love the book

Desirous Of Solitude In Tolerable Quarters

A product of late fifties America, Elizabeth Enright's Gone Away Lake (1957) feels, in tone and spirit, more like a reflection of mid-forties America or earlier. Gone Away Lake, a light children's novel, is an excellent showcase for mid - century American manners and mores, the same manners which cynics today like to denigrate or deny ever existed outside of wishful thinking. The story of two cousins who befriend an isolated pair of elderly siblings living happily at a now abandoned but once magnificent lake resort, Gone Away Lake also demonstrates how those children and teenagers of the era lucky enough to escape the spell - binding pull of television entertained themselves. Nature was generally closer and more available to the average child then than it is today, and the novel is composed around the myriad ways in which Portia and her freckled, insect - collecting cousin Julian embrace the majesty and mystery of nature. Luckily, their new friends, Mrs. Minnehaha Cheever and Mr. Pindar Payton, are nature's Edward Carpenter - like custodians: each is a planter, a gardener, and a conservationist, and Mrs. Cheever is an avid canner and pickler. Mutually delighted in one another's company, the two generations meet, mingle, and become beloved friends and companions over the course of a magically described summer. Gone Away Lake also touches on aging, memory, personal history, and the importance of mentoring, as Mrs. Cheever and Mr. Payton delight the cousins with subtly ethical reminiscences and tall tales about the lake's glory days when they were children themselves. Without the slightest hint of calculation, artificiality, or political engineering, Enright also emphasizes healthy balance and tolerance, as both the siblings and the cousins are of opposite genders. In an era when both the sexes and gender roles were sharply divided, Gone Away Lake portrays Julian and Portia not only as best friends, but as never less than equals in insight, courage, stamina, intelligence, and ingenuity. In the same subtle fashion, Enright underscores the importance of family and human interaction in the life of the individual. Spanning the generations, Enright implies, is as easy as extending one's self with honesty, integrity, and faith. Unlike many of today's books written for children, Gone Away Lake is a genuinely warm, spirited, and wholesome book. Framed by ultimately superfluous plot elements such as a mysteriously - carved stone, a pit of quicksand, and a haunted house, Gone Away Lake, a Newberry honorary, will delight readers of all ages.

A gem from the 1950s

"Gone-Away Lake" is a delightful, beautifully written story, just this side of fantasy and filled with interesting, likable characters. A brother and sister from the city take the train to visit their country cousin. The children discover an old, mostly abandoned summer colony of houses near a swamp that used to be a lake. There they meet the most charming people in the book, an elderly sister and brother, Minnehaha Cheever and Pindar Payton, who are living happily in the place where they spent summers as children. The pair wear old-fashioned clothes stored away many years ago by their family, cultivate a variety of gardens, and have chickens, goats, a duck, and a cat named Fatly. Once a month, Pindar cranks up the antique Franklin car and drives into town for supplies. The children are adventuresome and imaginative, and have no need of TV to keep themselves amused. The descriptions of the country are amazingly vivid, and there's plenty of humor too. Don't miss the sequel, "Return to Gone-Away." And Elizabeth Enright's series about the Melendy family is also fun to read.

I loved this story and its sequel...

These books made me wish I'd had this perfect summer adventure. Two children come across a group of old houses, mysteriously vacant and abandoned on the shore of a swampy lake. Somebody has been there -- there's a warning and an inscription carved into a rock. Can the children keep their find a secret? Who left the houses and where did they go? What's lurking in the lake?A terrific story -- the main characters are a boy and girl who are good friends, interesting people, and respectful of each other's strengths and weaknesses. It was one of my husband's favorite books and it has become one of mine after we read it aloud to our daughter. The sequel is just as good (Return to Gone-Away). If you enjoyed Enright's books about the Melendy children ("The Saturdays" "Four-Story Mistake", etc.) you'll love these.

A Gentle Classic

How disturbing to read the negative reviews of this gentle classic. Their key complaint? A pleasant tone and a lack of "plot." This good-natured novel is filled with rich descriptive vocabulary and a subtlety of storytelling that should be admired rather than criticized. The plot? Not much, really. Just a few noble thoughts. Value the past and learn its lessons. Coexist with nature and reap its rewards. Treasure your elders, and find out about the fascinating experiences they have had. Probably not as exciting as novels heavy on conventional "plot" formulas, but skillful and eloquent writing, and enriching reading for those who are prepared to enjoy it's subtleties. Highly recommended--but not for the cynical.

THE BEST BOOK EVER!!!

I read this book as a child and fell in love with it. The characters--cousins Portia and Julian-- are introduced to eccentric older people when they discover 'Gone Away Lake' and learn to love and revere them for their wisdom and humor. The eccentric older people--Aunt Minnehaha and Uncle Pindar--treat the cousins and their friends like real people not like children.There is real magic in finding a place that has long since been forgotten, and then learning to appreciate its present beauty while learning about its history. Like another reviewer, I have never ceased to want to move to 'Gone Away Lake'. Somehow, I was fortunate enough, too, to have a copy of the sequel (many years old).READ IT! YOU WON'T REGRET IT!
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