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Betsy and the Great World / Betsy's Wedding

por Maud Hart Lovelace

Series: Betsy-Tacy (09-10)

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Betsy and the great world: twenty-one-year-old Betsy Ray goes on a solo tour of Europe and meets handsome Italian Marco, but can't help thinking about her ex-boyfriend Joe. Betsy's wedding: when Betsy returns from Europe, Joe proposes, but the young woman soon learns that married life isn't always romantic.… (más)
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This pair of books was really interesting to me as a snapshot of the period just before and during WW1 (filtered through nostalgia of the 1950s, of course), but less so as a story about Betsy Warrington Ray.

While I was happy and excited to read about Betsy growing up and finally marrying Joe, it turns out I didn't really want to read about her growing up! The travelogue elements of Betsy and the Great World are interesting, especially as Lovelace fictionalizes the early days of the war from her journal letters, but at the same time - I tend to find travelogue novels tedious as the plot is necessarily tied to, well, traveling, and a lot of time is spent describing locations and peoples.

And then Betsy's Wedding was an improvement, but it didn't linger in the little spaces the way earlier books did. It was heavy with adult responsibilities and worries and I missed the joy in youthful silliness that high school Betsy had. (But, then again, super fascinating to read about her life in 1916-1917 just for the time setting.) This book also lasts longer than earlier ones - instead of one year, it covers two years in the same space, which no doubt affects the mood and feeling.

None of my local book sources had Betsy's Wedding, though they had Betsy and the Great World, so I bought the kindle double edition for convenience. I would have been very happy to just borrow the books, but I'm also glad that I did read them. They're not my favorite series ending, but it was very satisfying to read these books, and I appreciate everything I've learned through them. ( )
  keristars | Dec 3, 2018 |
This combination book was a great ending to a wonderful series. I hated to have it end. I loved getting to know all of the characters and read the author's observations and descriptions about people and the world around her. It also is fascinating to read the information at the end of the book about how much of the book was based on the author's real life. ( )
  writerfidora | Oct 26, 2015 |
This combination book was a great ending to a wonderful series. I hated to have it end. I loved getting to know all of the characters and read the author's observations and descriptions about people and the world around her. It also is fascinating to read the information at the end of the book about how much of the book was based on the author's real life. ( )
  AdrienneJS | May 18, 2015 |
After returning to Deep Valley, Minnesota, for Betsy Ray's high-school years, I met up with her once again for a trip to Europe and the first couple of years of her married life back in Minneapolis. The final book in the series, Betsy's Wedding, is probably the Betsy-Tacy novel I've read the fewest times; for some reason, I recall it being harder to find at the library than the others. I've read Betsy and the Great World several times before, though, and as I found when I read the high-school stories again, a lot of it has remained with me.

When I took my first trip on a cruise ship in the mid-1990's, I remembered that my introduction to shipboard life came with Betsy. When she and her parents agreed that it might be best for her to quit college, they discussed the idea that travel could be at least as educational for a would-be writer; perhaps the money would be better spent on a trip to Europe than on another year's tuition. Back in 1913, of course, travel by ship really was the only means of getting from the U.S. to Europe; these days, it's a vacation more than transportation. But many of the conventions and traditions of shipboard life haven't changed all that much, and Betsy's trip - although somewhat more dramatic, and definitely more romantic, than my own - kept popping into my mind during that week on the Norway. Once she arrived in Europe, she didn't really tour it; instead, she lived in a few cities - Munich, Venice, and London - for a few months each, with shorter visits to others. That's always seemed like a fine idea to me, even though most of us probably couldn't pull it off these days.

Betsy's travels in the "Great World" are to be cut short by the outbreak of what was then called the "Great War," but what summons her home is one of the best personal ads ever:

"Betsy: The Great War is on but I hope ours is over. Please come home. Joe."

While Betsy and Joe's post-high-school romance hit rocky water after he transferred from the University of Minnesota to Harvard, they haven't really let each other go. When Betsy declines repeated proposals from a young architect she gets to know in Venice, she realizes that it's because of her unresolved feelings for Joe, and writes him a long-delayed letter before she leaves for London. She doesn't give him a forwarding address, but the London Times carries a personals column on its front page, and Joe finds a way to reach her.

Betsy's Wedding picks up just a few weeks after Betsy and the Great World ends, as Betsy sails back to the U.S.A. and finds Joe there to meet her. The wedding itself occupies only a few chapters - it happens shortly after Betsy's return, and it's a cozy event at her parents' home in Minneapolis (the family hasn't lived in Deep Valley for several years). Most of the novel concerns Betsy's adjustments to married life over the first couple of years, coming to an end in 1917, as the US gets into the Great War and Joe prepares to enter the army along with the husbands of Betsy's friends.

I remembered the fewest details about Betsy's Wedding, and although part of that's because I haven't read it as many times as some of the other books, I wonder if another part of it has to do with its subject being less meaningful to me when I was younger. Having been a newlywed (twice) myself, I definitely brought a different perspective to this novel this time around, and I was impressed by how much I really liked it. Granted, there were aspects of it that were appropriate to the time period but are a bit grating now, chiefly Betsy and Tacy's anxiety about getting Tib "married off" before she reaches her mid-twenties. (Tacy observes that "If girls don't marry young, they tend to get fussy"...as if that's a bad thing.) It was fully expected that the husbands would go out to earn money for the household, and most married women didn't hold jobs outside the home; but then again, keeping up a home was a lot more work in those days. However, writing was (and still is) a career that can be pursued from home, and I was pleasantly struck by the fact that Joe and Betsy considered both of their writing equally important. Since this book was written for younger readers, the picture it paints of the early years of marriage is mostly pretty, but it's also strikingly imperfect at times, and for the most part it's true to life.

While these last two "grown-up" Betsy-Tacy books may be less universal in their themes than the high-school ones, they also have the feeling of being both modern and timeless, with depth that escaped me the first several times I read them, but which I can appreciate that much more coming back to them as an adult. ( )
  Florinda | Dec 28, 2009 |
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Betsy and the great world: twenty-one-year-old Betsy Ray goes on a solo tour of Europe and meets handsome Italian Marco, but can't help thinking about her ex-boyfriend Joe. Betsy's wedding: when Betsy returns from Europe, Joe proposes, but the young woman soon learns that married life isn't always romantic.

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