
Emma Drummond
Author of At the Going Down of the Sun
About the Author
Disambiguation Notice:
Emma Drummond has published under her own name and the pen name Elizabeth Darrell.
Series
Works by Emma Drummond
Associated Works
Reader's Digest Condensed Books 1984 v01: The Children's Game / Beyond All Frontiers / The Incredible Journey / From This Day Forward (1984) — Author — 32 copies
Reader's Digest Condensed Books 1985 vM: The State of Stony Lonesome / Find a Safe Place / Callanish / At the Going down of the Sun (1985) 8 copies
Reader's Digest Condensed Books: Longshot • No Harp Like My Own • Trial • The Flight of Flamingo (1991) 7 copies
Reader's Digest Condensed Books: Goldenrod • Surprise Party • This Time Next Week • At the Going Down of the Sun (1985) — Author — 5 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Drummond, Emma
- Other names
- Darrell, Elizabeth
- Birthdate
- 1931
- Gender
- female
- Occupations
- author
writer - Disambiguation notice
- Emma Drummond has published under her own name and the pen name Elizabeth Darrell.
Members
Reviews
After finally - finally - finishing this book, the first in a trilogy about the Sheridan family, I am torn between wanting to learn more about the author and her research, and demanding my money back for being conned into reading a family saga novel. The gist of the story - first published in 1984, and you can tell, despite the repackaging for Kindle - is the same three scenes over and over again, interspersed with actually quite realistic and haunting scenes from World War 1 (the only show more reason I downloaded a copy). Those same three scenes revolve around the reason I want my money back - the main characters, three self-obsessed brothers called Roland, Rex and Christopher Sheridan. Roland is the eldest, responsible and handsome, sort of a watered down Mr Knightley. He runs the family estate in Dorset, since Papa Sheridan moved abroad to grieve for his wife, and also acts as a surrogate father figure to his younger brothers, God help them. This, I think, is the problem with the three of them - until they find perfect wives and girlfriends, romancelandia style, they have only known each other. So Rex, the middle brother, is dashing, brave and handsome, and Chris the youngest is 'immensely intelligent' and handsome, with long-lashed violet eyes like a girl's. I am not kidding - if you regularly swallow this stuff and enjoy reading about a family of men who bemoan how damn good-looking they are, and drive through the village for the yokels to tug their forelocks in salute, then this is the stuff of dreams. I only felt ill, and took two weeks to finish reading.
A précis of the book runs as follows: Chris with the violet eyes and genius-level IQ gets a local girl pregnant and is forced to marry her. He spends a good few chapters bemoaning his fate - his life is ruined, he will never go to university, how very dare this girl get herself pregnant - before joining up almost as soon as war is declared, despite being blind as a bat without his glasses. Amnesia follows Gallipoli, ad nauseum. Rex is already a dashing and handsome pilot, so of course he joins the RFC and becomes a national hero with the unimaginative nickname of 'Sherry'. What does a dashing hero require but a flame-haired actress for a wife, so of course he finds one, and they are supposed to read like star cross'd lovers, but I wasn't convinced. They reminded me somewhat of Sir Percy and Marguerite Blakeney from The Scarlet Pimpernel, only with copious amounts of sex instead of the self-sacrificing romance. Rex divides his time between risking his life in France and throwing big jealous tantrums in London, because his wife refuses to give up the stage. Boring old Roland holds off going to war at first - shock horror! - because he feels he that running the big house is duty enough, but a drawerful of white feathers finally packs him off into the medical corps (because of course he's a talented but unqualified doctor in his spare time). And that's the story - Chris, war, Rex, war, Roland, war, rinse, repeat. Three hundred pages fewer would have told the same tale in half the time.
I started placing bets on which of the brothers would die - or rather, who I wanted to kill off quickest - and almost got my wish. Only two out of three. Elizabeth Darrell - or Emma Drummond - writes the war scenes really well, which she would, given her background, although WW1 starts to sound like WW2 in places (also understandable). But I doubt she could have created three more irritating heroes had she tried. Why are they all handsome, rugged men? Why does everybody love them? I get the imagery about the effect of war upon English society, but lines like 'Deep within his soul he knew it was women who had ruined both Rex and Chris' and 'He is ruled by the fear that his mind is ridiculed and his body coveted by everyone in sight' tested even my reading stamina! show less
A précis of the book runs as follows: Chris with the violet eyes and genius-level IQ gets a local girl pregnant and is forced to marry her. He spends a good few chapters bemoaning his fate - his life is ruined, he will never go to university, how very dare this girl get herself pregnant - before joining up almost as soon as war is declared, despite being blind as a bat without his glasses. Amnesia follows Gallipoli, ad nauseum. Rex is already a dashing and handsome pilot, so of course he joins the RFC and becomes a national hero with the unimaginative nickname of 'Sherry'. What does a dashing hero require but a flame-haired actress for a wife, so of course he finds one, and they are supposed to read like star cross'd lovers, but I wasn't convinced. They reminded me somewhat of Sir Percy and Marguerite Blakeney from The Scarlet Pimpernel, only with copious amounts of sex instead of the self-sacrificing romance. Rex divides his time between risking his life in France and throwing big jealous tantrums in London, because his wife refuses to give up the stage. Boring old Roland holds off going to war at first - shock horror! - because he feels he that running the big house is duty enough, but a drawerful of white feathers finally packs him off into the medical corps (because of course he's a talented but unqualified doctor in his spare time). And that's the story - Chris, war, Rex, war, Roland, war, rinse, repeat. Three hundred pages fewer would have told the same tale in half the time.
I started placing bets on which of the brothers would die - or rather, who I wanted to kill off quickest - and almost got my wish. Only two out of three. Elizabeth Darrell - or Emma Drummond - writes the war scenes really well, which she would, given her background, although WW1 starts to sound like WW2 in places (also understandable). But I doubt she could have created three more irritating heroes had she tried. Why are they all handsome, rugged men? Why does everybody love them? I get the imagery about the effect of war upon English society, but lines like 'Deep within his soul he knew it was women who had ruined both Rex and Chris' and 'He is ruled by the fear that his mind is ridiculed and his body coveted by everyone in sight' tested even my reading stamina! show less
Elizabeth Darrell's first Ben Norton Aviation mystery paints a wonderful portrait of the early days of flying and some of what was required to bring an idea from the drawing board to the assembly line. These aviation scenes truly bring The High Flyer to life.
The author has also created a solid mystery with a very satisfying solution to the test pilot's death. I always like closing a book and thinking, "I never would have thought of that!"
Not all the questions surrounding Ben Norton are show more answered in The High Flyer, which means more unveiling in future books in the series. He's very complex, and I would like to peel back more of his layers, but keeping all these secrets made Norton's character an aloof one. I always felt as though I were on the outside looking in, never to get a decent idea of what sort of man he is. He also had an annoying habit of changing his mind daily about the identity of the saboteur, and that got very old very quickly because he always seemed ready to hang the newest suspect up from the highest yardarm. At least Ben isn't indecisive....
If you're in the mood to put on your scarf and goggles and experience some of the early days of flying, and if the gradual revealing of a mysterious man's secrets are what you hanker for, I'd say you need to read Elizabeth Darrell's The High Flyer. show less
The author has also created a solid mystery with a very satisfying solution to the test pilot's death. I always like closing a book and thinking, "I never would have thought of that!"
Not all the questions surrounding Ben Norton are show more answered in The High Flyer, which means more unveiling in future books in the series. He's very complex, and I would like to peel back more of his layers, but keeping all these secrets made Norton's character an aloof one. I always felt as though I were on the outside looking in, never to get a decent idea of what sort of man he is. He also had an annoying habit of changing his mind daily about the identity of the saboteur, and that got very old very quickly because he always seemed ready to hang the newest suspect up from the highest yardarm. At least Ben isn't indecisive....
If you're in the mood to put on your scarf and goggles and experience some of the early days of flying, and if the gradual revealing of a mysterious man's secrets are what you hanker for, I'd say you need to read Elizabeth Darrell's The High Flyer. show less
The cover and description of this were misleading to me. I thought this would be a historical fiction novel with the Boer War figuring strong in the novel. In reality it is a very well written Historical Romance. Not really my type of book but it does give one the sense of what it might have been like to live in Victorian England. This is a novel that is more to a woman's taste than a man's.
We get in the heads of the 3 main characters as they agonize over love's problems. Alex, a tortured show more youth forced into a proposed marriage to Judith, a spinster whom he thinks is only after his money and status which he will have when he becomes 25 and Hetta, a young Boer woman who goes against her culture to fall in love with Alex, a hated englishman. The Boer war is very much a backdrop to this drama. In reading her background elsewhere it seems she is of a military family and I had hoped for more in the battle scenes such as they were...but that was not to be.
It was a not a bad read, but I doubt I will read more of her writing as romance is not my cup of tea,even though the few intense scenes were tastefully done. show less
We get in the heads of the 3 main characters as they agonize over love's problems. Alex, a tortured show more youth forced into a proposed marriage to Judith, a spinster whom he thinks is only after his money and status which he will have when he becomes 25 and Hetta, a young Boer woman who goes against her culture to fall in love with Alex, a hated englishman. The Boer war is very much a backdrop to this drama. In reading her background elsewhere it seems she is of a military family and I had hoped for more in the battle scenes such as they were...but that was not to be.
It was a not a bad read, but I doubt I will read more of her writing as romance is not my cup of tea,even though the few intense scenes were tastefully done. show less
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