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Mara Kay

Author of Masha

11 Works 146 Members 5 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: Kay Mara

Series

Works by Mara Kay

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Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Kay, Mara
Gender
female

Members

Reviews

6 reviews
My copy (Storm Warning, published by Beaver Books) has the worst cover art ever. Relevant because it took me over a year, maybe two years, to get past it and actually read the book. It's a pretty good adventure story, set in Frankfurt, Germany in 1938. A young English girl and her journalist uncle are delayed in getting out of the country when they have an automobile accident, and while Uncle Dick is recovering in hospital, Ann becomes involved with the troubles of her local host family and show more the two Jewish refugee children hiding in the attic. Sometimes a little too much fortuitous coincidence, but gives a good overview of how things were at that point in time. Still going to have to get rid of the zombie Hitler Youth cover though. show less
½
Not sure how this historical fiction, boarding school story got on my shelves. Seems interesting enough so far, as at least its setting is so different than anything else I've read (ah, maybe that's why). A little sad, but that's what juvenile HF has always been.

There are nice details, too. For example, as a new student, Masha makes a friend out of a newly planted birch tree in the gardens. Well, more like a confidant, but, yes, everyone needs someone who will just listen.

Anyway, the story show more got livelier as it went along and the nine years of education went by at an accelerated pace. The ending is just fine, too, especially for the target audience, a young girl reading it half a century ago. show less
This was one of my favorite books as a kid. I recently remembered it for some random reason and thought it was interesting that it had gone out of print. Somehow that made me want to reread it. It's actually still quite good. It's a boarding school story and I always loved those. The history is woven in rather than going off in lecture tangents, which is a mixed blessing -- you don't get dragged out of the story but you don't learn all that much of substance. It was really interesting to show more notice how they'd just finished fighting Napoleon (several of the students had lost their fathers in battle and Waterloo occurs partway through the book) but everyone still spoke French instead of Russian and hired French tailors and teachers. It was more realistic than some modern stories in that you basically just get their day to day routines, with no adventures and with plenty of petty squabbling. I don't think you could sell that now. The abrupt, left field ending could have used more explanation. Time to ILL the sequel, which I also read repeatedly. show less
Another childhood favorite. Sequel to Masha, and I was randomly compelled to re-read them both recently. They hold up well. This book has much more history than the first. It's about the 1825 Decembrist uprising (one of the lesser-known and much less successful Russian revolutions; very much like the group in Les Miserables) and includes many real-life figures as characters. Not much is known about the author, who was originally from Russia, but I'm guessing she was White Russian show more aristocracy. The sympathy is all with the royals rather than the rebels. It's an unusual angle, but still an interesting one. The love triangle is transparent but some of the friendships are remarkably layered. show less

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Janina Domanska Illustrator
Penny Carey Illustrator

Statistics

Works
11
Members
146
Popularity
#141,735
Rating
4.0
Reviews
5
ISBNs
18

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