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I Capture the Castle I Capture the Castle - Book Review - Common Sense Media Is I Capture the Castle OK for your child Read Common Sense Media's book review to help you make informed decisions. I Capture the Castle (film) - Wikipedia I Capture the Castle is a 2003 British film directed by Tim Fywell. It is based on the 1948 novel of the same title by Dodie Smith with the screenplay written by ... I Capture the Castle (2003) - Rotten Tomatoes Seventeen-year-old Cassandra Mortmain struggles to survive in a decaying English castle. Her father is desperate to repeat the spectacular success of his first novel ... I Capture the Castle - Wikipedia I Capture the Castle is the first novel by the British author Dodie Smith written during the Second World War when she and her husband Alec Beesley (also British and ... I Capture the Castle: Dodie Smith: 9780312316167: Amazon ... One of the 20th Century's most beloved novels is still winning hearts! I Capture the Castle tells the story of seventeen-year-old Cassandra and her family who live ... I Capture the Castle by Dodie Smith Paperback Barnes ... Cassandra Mortmain captures the castle not with trebuchet or battering ram but with her pen. At a low point in the Mortmains' life in their castle 17-year-old ... I Capture the Castle by Dodie Smith Reviews Discussion ... I Capture the Castle tells the story of seventeen-year-old Cassandra and her family who live in not-so-genteel poverty in amoreSynopsis from Amazon: I Capture the ... I Capture the Castle (2003) - IMDb I Capture the Castle . R 1h 53min Drama Romance 8 August 2003 (USA) A love story set in 1930s England that follows 17-year-old Cassandra ... Rank: #20672 in BooksPublished on: 2003-04-01Released on: 2003-04-01Original language: EnglishNumber of items: 1Dimensions: .32" h x .96" w x 5.44" l, Binding: Paperback343 pages 4 of 4 people found the following review helpful.... of chapters that this would become one of my favorite books. It is so charmingBy KyliI knew within a couple of chapters that this would become one of my favorite books. It is so charming, so pretty, and I adored Cassandra for everything she was and everything she wasn't. Her innocence and refreshing admiration of life (of simple things, of nature people) was so candid well-expressed that the book had me walking around in a similar mindset every time I put it down.Her father's mysteriousness kept me as interested in him as she was; just as all of the characters wondered, I found myself constantly wondering "Is he genius Is he crazy Is he good Bad"Every character, for that matter, was complex and multidimensional. There were no stereotypes, no cliches - just complicated, real people who I loved getting to know.I really enjoyed the diary format - there were moments I felt like she stole my own thoughts. She's probably my all-time favorite character actually - so much depth, charisma, and joy.As for the romance, I loved all of it - I enjoyed the interaction between Cassandra Stephen, how tense confusing it was. It was so interesting to see how everything played out ... the way, at first, to Cassandra, Simon was just an awkward-looking man in a beard and then, he quickly becomes so much more to the entire family, changing their lives - in a way they had literally sat around hoping for just moments before.Smith's writing is flawless beautiful. It flows so well. I could envision everything so vividly. It played like a movie in my mind.Be sure to read it! I wish I'd read it years ago7 of 7 people found the following review helpful.Cassandra Listens to Miss Blossom in The Ruins of GodysBy Pippin O' RohanEvery year when an American friend of mine stays with relatives in London early Spring, she pays a visit to a Mrs. Ferber in Dorset Square. They have been acquainted for decades and it has become an annual ritual which she always looks forward to with the greatest of pleasure. The elder and kindly Mrs. Ferber over time has become one of her finest literary mentors, and after they speak about news overseas at tea, they engage in a lively discussion of old and new books that are to be commended and exchanged.Maeve, for that is the name of my friend, once told me that if it had not been for Mrs. Ferber, she would hardly be able to string a sentence together in English. So out of curiosity, I asked her on her return to New York what was Mrs. Ferber's latest reading suggestion. Maeve smiled and promptly replied: "I Capture The Castle" (1948), by a British author Dodie Smith because it reminded Mrs. Ferber of some early anecdotes Maeve had relayed to her in the past, and most of all, because it is a bright and intelligent delight in itself. Never having heard of it, I naturally asked Maeve for more details as I sensed her enthusiasm, and she is a great one for the books."I'll try to give you what is known as an 'ice-breaker', or I'll go off on a rambling essay", she began. 'I Capture The Castle' is a fictional autobiographical diary, and I recognized all the people in the book because they are real, as real as could be. You and I have met them at some point along the way from past experience and roads traveled together. As for the story, two English sisters, Cassandra and Rose Mortmain, are brought up in the 30s by their flamboyant father and young eclectic stepmother, Topaz, in an old Tudor house built among the ruins of a Norman castle that was destroyed during Cromwell's time. The younger sister, Cassandra, now seventeen begins her entry: "I write this sitting in the kitchen sink", and proceeds to call her family 'The Ruined Mortmains'. Her father, a passionate lion of a man and an author, wrote a big splash that was an original and intellectual sensation pre-Joyce's Ulysses and made a fortune with it in America among its readership"."For a variety of reasons that Cassandra explains at the opening of her journal, the Mortmain Household is now in rack and ruins, hungry and cold, and her irascible and solitary father spends his time holed up in the gatehouse, reading detective novels on loan from the small village library. Rose, her older sister at twenty-one, is a magnificent and fearless beauty, trapped in what she calls a 'crumbling sea of mud'. A realist and born to spread her wings, she finds nothing romantic about their life-style. There is also in this circle a younger brother Thomas, and finally Stephen Colly adopted by the family when his mother died, a native of the village who works hard to keep them all afloat. And then as dark clouds continue to descend on the increasingly impoverished castle, two American brothers, Simon and Neil Cotton, inheritors of the neighboring Estate Manor, show up on the scene".Here Maeve paused for the longest time. "Well", I asked her, expecting more of a summary. But what Maeve knew she was not about to reveal, leaving me in literary shadows. After a slight nudge on my part, she finally added with a wry laugh: "In many ways, it reminded me of such true stories at that age, but what if I were to tell you that I have yet to enjoy a novel so similar, and yet different to 'Pride and Prejudice' before As for the two sisters, Cassandra and Rose in Dodie Smith's narrative, they are able to identify with Jane Austen's novel at once on the arrival of the brothers and inheritors of the near-by Scoatny Hall. There is also a Miss Blossom in this scenario, and she might serve as a helpful reminder to many of us when we listen to her today at a more mature age, reminding us how life at times has a singular way of falling into place. And, here I plan to tell you no more, except that it gave me a great deal to think about".'I Capture The Castle' has great elements of joy, at times sadness and growing-pains, tenderness, threads of ongoing realities that we are all faced with at a young age, sometimes later, with thoughts on how we wish to live, laced with musings on altruism, religion, romance, fortune, beauty, art and music, psychology, the difference in etiquette and ways between the British and Americans, and more. But, what makes this famous novel rare and unusual is that the young and particularly engaging bright Cassandra knows what it is to be loved and to love, with genuine passion at the conclusion of this satisfying story.With fond memories of Holly Park today now extant - all a bit of a wonderful fairy tale, while thanking Dodie Smith (1896-1990) for writing so honestly and brilliantly from her own observations, imagination and vantage point about this transitional passage of youth in our lives.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.is a lively and observant seventeen year old who would like to become a writerBy Zachary WaltersThis is a book that's stuck with me for quite some time. Cassandra Mortmayne, the narrator, is a lively and observant seventeen year old who would like to become a writer.She starts keeping a journal to record her observations of the world around her. "Lively and observant," "seventeen year old girl," and "keeping a journal" might sound like standard cliches, but they're actually closely observed character traits. At seventeen, Cassandra is just starting to see the world outside her own family and possibilities for things to be different, so the liveliness and close observations are balanced against naivete and unawareness. The teenage years are when people begin to see their family members as fully fleshed human beings, and that more than anything is the narrative driver of this book. Some comparison to Jane Austen is inevitable, but this isn't really a romance so much as a family that's been stuck in a rut finding a way out.This is also the rare novel where the audiobook might actually be an improvement on the text. Jennie Agutter's voice is lovely, she inhabits the role of a not-completely-aware narrator perfectly. There are moments where it's important to the plot that Cassandra be unaware of the meaning of things that the author understands perfectly, and Agutter plays these scenes perfectly.See all 541 customer reviews... Medieval Warfare: How to Capture a Castle with Siegecraft ... During the Middle Ages a besieging army needed manpower siege engines and more often than not patience in order to carry a fortress. HOW TO CAPTURE A CASTLE - mainlesson.com HOW TO CAPTURE A CASTLE [52] I N the times when no man was safe unless he could protect himself with his own strong arm or the arms of his followers the castle of a ... Tintagel - King Arthur Country Tintagel is situated on the North coast of Cornwall and is renowned for its association with the legend of King Arthur and his Knights of the Round Table. The Castle Studies Group's Homepage The Castle Studies Group warmly welcomes membership applications from individuals from all walks of life who are interested in the history archaeology and ... I Capture the Castle - Wikipedia I Capture the Castle is the first novel by the British author Dodie Smith written during the Second World War when she and her husband Alec Beesley (also British and ... Gwrych Castle Preservation Trust Home of the Gwrych Trust Including information about the castle how to join the Trust Trust events and all the latest publications. Capture the Castle Hacked ArcadePreHacks.com Play Capture the Castle From ArcadePrehacks.com. Prove your commander's skills in glorious battles! Your quick mind and smartness are the most important allies in ... I Capture the Castle (2003) - IMDb Directed by Tim Fywell. With Romola Garai Rose Byrne Bill Nighy Sophie Stuckey. A love story set in 1930s England that follows 17-year-old Cassandra Mortmain and ... The Castle of Mey The Queen Mother's Home in Caithness The former holiday home of the late Queen Mother is the most northerly castle on the British mainland. Includes a brief history images and visitor information. 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