Author picture

Michelle Cooper (1) (1969–)

Author of A Brief History of Montmaray

For other authors named Michelle Cooper, see the disambiguation page.

3 Works 1,258 Members 88 Reviews

Series

Works by Michelle Cooper

A Brief History of Montmaray (2008) 683 copies, 44 reviews
The FitzOsbornes in Exile (2010) 334 copies, 25 reviews
The FitzOsbornes at War (2012) 241 copies, 19 reviews

Tagged

1930s (32) 2012 (14) 2013 (11) 20th century (10) alternate history (25) castles (14) coming of age (18) diary (30) ebook (22) England (50) epistolary (14) Europe (13) family (52) fiction (104) historical (42) historical fiction (183) history (11) library (11) Montmaray (12) Nazis (21) read (13) read in 2012 (11) royalty (50) series (27) teen (21) to-read (142) war (22) WWII (136) YA (81) young adult (112)

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1969-01-18
Gender
female
Nationality
Australia
Associated Place (for map)
Australia

Members

Reviews

92 reviews
As the title to this sequel to A Brief History of Montmaray suggests, the FitzOsbornes - the royal family of the tiny kingdom of Montmaray, an island lying midway between Britain and Iberia, in the Bay of Biscay - had gone into exile in Britain, driven from their ancestral home by a Nazi invasion. Living in the lap of luxury provided by their Aunt Charlotte, whose marriage to a wealthy Englishman had established her in that nation's high society, our narrator Sophie, her brilliant cousin show more Veronica, tomboyish younger sister Henry (Henriette), flippant older brother Toby (now King Tobias!), and (unacknowledged) cousin and friend, Simon Chester, all struggle in their separate ways to adjust to the dramatic turn that events have taken. As Sophie and Veronica endure the "Season," during which Aunt Charlotte attempts to fix their matrimonial prospects, Toby struggles at Oxford, and Simon undertakes a number of projects of his own, they must all of them grapple with the fact that Montmaray has been lost, and, coming together again, begin to plan how best to retake it. Quarreling as much amongst themselves as ever, the FitzOsbornes in exile, whether confronting deranged assassins or evading Nazi agents, are still a force to be reckoned with...

After my somewhat ambivalent feelings regarding Michelle Cooper's first foray into the world of Montmaray's royal family - I enjoyed A Brief History of Montmaray, but not quite as much as I'd expected - I wasn't sure how I would like this second installment. I'd hoped, given the fact that I found the conclusion of the first book stronger than the beginning, that I would like this sequel even more, and I was not disappointed. I raced through The FitzOsbornes in Exile, and enjoyed every minute of it! Yes, Cooper does sometimes feel as if she's doing a bit of an info-dump for the benefit of her readers - "see children? this is why fascism might have appealed to people..." - but it is never so pronounced that it takes away from the excitement of the story, or my involvement with the characters. And it is the characters - from Sophie herself, who suddenly seems so much more mature, to Simon and Toby, whose relationship is anything but simple - that really make this book worthwhile. I felt, in the first book, curiously distant from FitzOsbornes, and I struggled to work up much interest in their lives. Here, by contrast, I was completely wrapped up in their story, and dead to the world, while reading. I will definitely be keeping an eye out for the third and final installment, The FitzOsbornes at War!
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A Brief History of Montmaray and The FitzOsbornes in Exile are lovely... but it's hard to say that about a book set during WWII.
Heartbreaking is more appropriate. If I was the sort of person who cried over books, I would have sobbed my way through sections of The FitzOsbornes at War. As it was, I was just numb.

Sophie's journal is evocative; a perfect balance between personal and global, domestic and political, humorous incidents and horrible realities. Her portrayal of war-torn English is show more vivid and insightful. Her own emotional growth is subtle but convincing; it was lovely to see her grow up into an independent young woman.

And then there's the growth the rest of her family go through. Because the FitzOsbornes are passionate, unconventional, occasionally infuriating and delightful. They're determined to do all they can for the war... but their wartime experiences drag them in different directions (and generally try to put a damper on the the FitzOsborne wonderful-ness). It is impossible for them to be unchanged and unscathed by their experiences.
However, they haven't forgotten Montmaray...

One of the things which really impressed me is that this is one woman's journal covering years of war, and so it tends to be episodic (Also, as Sophie says: The trouble with keeping a record of the war is that either nothing whatsoever is happening in the world, which makes one's journal entries very boring, or else so much is going on that one doesn't have time to comprehend it, let alone write it down.) and yet it manages to be, very successfully, the final book of a trilogy.

I heart The FitzOsbornes at War so much and forgive it for breaking my heart.

Veronica is quite wrong when she claims there is no value in reading novels such as Pride and Prejudice. Of course there is. They provide one with the exact words one needs when one is speechless in the face of extreme provocation.
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½
A Brief History of Montmaray is the diary of sixteen year old Sophia FitzOsborne, a princess of the (sadly fictional) island kingdom of Montmaray.
It has an I Capture the Castle feel to it - a coming-of-age story, a delightful narrator, an impoverished, eccentric family and a crumbling castle. It's 1936 and the island's population consists of Sophie, her uncle - the mad King John, her cousin Veronica, her younger sister Henry, their housekeeper, and four villagers. Sophie's older brother, the show more king's heir, is at school in England and the housekeeper's son, who spends most of his time in London, appears occasionally.

Sophie's account of life on Montmaray is charming and compelling, making growing up in a cold castle on a small island seem wonderful somehow despite the impoverished circumstances, absence of reliable parents, challenges of running a household, loneliness and isolation. The FitzOsbornes' indifference to certain social conventions is delightful, and the girls are independent and resourceful; their passion for their home and homeland readily apparent.
A Brief History of Montmaray has a bittersweet quality, because this existence is precarious. Princesses inevitably leave Montmaray upon marriage, and while Sophie dreams of being presented to Society in London, she's reluctant to go without Veronica, and Veronica is determined never to leave Montmaray at all. Montmaray's isolation also makes it vulnerable - it's difficult to seek help when there are accidents, crises or German trespassers...

This wonderful story left me quite impatient to read the sequel, The FitzOsbornes in Exile (which in turn has left me waiting eagerly for The FitzOsbornes at War. I'm terrified about what World War II will do to these characters - but I also think it would more than a war to stop them from being wonderful and individual.) I'm very glad to have made the acquaintance of the FitzOsbornes!

"[we're] quite alone on a small island [...] two hundred miles of storm-tossed sea between us and civilisation, a house-hold that consists of:
1. One middle-aged man of indifferent health and intermittent sanity
2. One middle-aged housekeeper, who prefers not to housekeep too much as it interferes with her worship of the man previously mentioned
3. Two girls, neither of whom can cook very well, although between them they have adequate skills in the areas of book-keeping, plumbing, dusting, historical research, laundering and story-telling
4. One ten-year-old tomboy, able to fish, swear and trap rabbits, but unable to write, make her own bed or remember to brush her teeth
5. One dog, several mad cats, numerous chickens, a dozen pigeons and far too many rats.
"
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After finished the second Montmaray Journals, I'm still in love with this series. It's compelling and delves a bit deeper into WW2. Sometimes it seems a bit flighty, but as someone who overdosed on straight up WW2 fiction when I was a young adult, I don't mind the slightly detached view. I'm curious about the third book (The FitzOsbornes at War), because I want to know where this is going. I find Cooper's characters to be compelling, though sometimes ridiculous (not that that's a bad thing). show more What I liked best about the book was the fact that Sophia's character keeps growing throughout the books and I love it. show less

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Statistics

Works
3
Members
1,258
Popularity
#20,396
Rating
4.0
Reviews
88
ISBNs
40
Languages
1

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