Henry Avila's Reviews > A Room with a View
A Room with a View
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The Pensione (pension) Bertolini in Florence, Italy has everything for the visiting tourists, Miss Lucy Honeychurch and her older poorer cousin Charlotte Bartlett a rather overbearing chaperon, fine food, (not really) wines not too bad this is Italy and a room with a view. Unfortunately not for the cousins, their promised accommodations went to Mr.Emerson and his quiet gloomy son George. If you can't trust the Signora Bertolini, the Italian owner of this establishment more English than one in London, the late Queen Victoria's picture is still on the wall, with a strange Cockney accent who can you? But chivalry is not quite dead, in the early 20th century the ill mannered Mr.Emerson, offers in front of all the other British tourists while they consume their dinner, to exchange rooms two for two , the men don't care as long as they have a good bed, after hearing Charlotte's complaints. Of course Miss Bartlett turned it down, the unseemly idea such a vulgar man, he is not a gentleman no English reserve . Looking around, she sees that confirmed on the faces of the other boarders. Then again, Florence is so beautiful the Arno River flowing nearby, (not too dirty ) the Apennine Mountains, Cypress trees of San Miniato, she will never be here again ... A half- hour later the two cousins open the windows, ( the British love to do this) in the new rooms... with a view. A great country to stare at the exotic attractions, if only the Italians were more civilized Charlotte thinks, but all is well with the world now. Miss Eleanor Ravish a new flighty friend, at the pension and future bad novelist, takes Lucy on a sightseeing trip of the real Italy. And promptly deserts her for an old friend, on the streets of the city, she enters the church alone, they both were to view. How is she to get back to Bertolini ? Not to worry the Emerson's are there, Mr. Emerson the old "Gentleman" quickly annoys, then disrupts a visiting British clergyman's lecture inside with his loud disagreeing voice, the unhappy perturbed flock leaves, yet Lucy does get back home safely. Feeling brave and wanting independence and excitement, she receives more than Lucy can handle, Miss Honeychurch goes out by herself. While looking at a palace tower, she is a witness to a gruesome murder, the stabbing of one Italian man against another at close range, blood on her photographs, she just had bought in a shop and faints ...George in love and in the same vicinity, spying ... Picks Lucy up, revives her and takes the lady to safety, the Arno river is near, throwing the messy photos in the stream. She can't believe he did it ... At a later date, descending a mountain road after viewing gorgeous Florence from above, the weather turns bad, the two carriages full of the British visitors from the pension, including Lucy, Charlotte and the old Mr.Emerson, even Miss Lavish. George the cad had kissed Lucy, when she fell on the ground full of exquisite violets, Charlotte luckily comes to the rescue before who knows what George would do next. He runs away the coward and vanishes, nobody knows where. But soon Lucy will meet the perfect, ideal, respectable man, Cecil Vyse... In the wet darkness, the rains heavy, lightning strikes, women scream, slowly the party travels, more flashes of lightning, the clouds coming down, the road a liquid mess, the storm gets more violent, they stop for a short rest. A lightning bolt hits the road just below them ...
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Reading Progress
October 31, 2013
– Shelved
October 31, 2013
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to-read
June 23, 2014
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Started Reading
June 30, 2014
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Henry
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rated it 4 stars
Mar 16, 2017 04:43PM
Thank you, these are fun to review,Sharon.
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My edition has an introduction from Radhika Jones. I just finished the introduction and am livid. WHO THE FUCK ALLOWED THIS TO BE PRINTED? The fucking INTRODUCTION gives away key plot points, and at one point even says “at the end of the novel...” and then goes on to describe details of the end of the novel. I am absolutely livid. WARNING to everyone, if your version includes an introduction from Radhika Jones, don’t read it.
Jones is especially stupid. As the new editor of VanFair she put Beto on the cover a year ago as the hottest Dem potus candydate.
Jason
There are a lot of introductions to classics that give away the whole plot, and I hate it as well. I know not to read Henry's reviews of books I haven't read unless I don't mind spoilers, but that's fine because he's not writing introductions, and his reviews are great reminders of books I have read, and teasers when it comes to books I haven't read but know the plot (from movies or whatever), and am wondering whether they're worth reading.
I cannot comprehend why someone writing an introduction would do that. It's like introducing two friends who don't know each other, and insisting on telling each friend the other's life story and personal opinions. When you introduce things, you're supposed to whet someone's interest in what you're introducing, not outline it and not analyze it to death.
There are a lot of introductions to classics that give away the whole plot, and I hate it as well. I know not to read Henry's reviews of books I haven't read unless I don't mind spoilers, but that's fine because he's not writing introductions, and his reviews are great reminders of books I have read, and teasers when it comes to books I haven't read but know the plot (from movies or whatever), and am wondering whether they're worth reading.
I cannot comprehend why someone writing an introduction would do that. It's like introducing two friends who don't know each other, and insisting on telling each friend the other's life story and personal opinions. When you introduce things, you're supposed to whet someone's interest in what you're introducing, not outline it and not analyze it to death.