The Deepening Stream

by Dorothy Canfield

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1930. American novelist and juvenile writer, Canfield begins The Deepening Stream: When people talked about things they could remember Matey always wondered which kind of remembering they meant-the kind that was just a sort of knowing how something in the past had happened or the other kind when suddenly everything seemed to be happening all over again. Why did time fade out some memories so that they didn't seem any more real than a story in a book? And why were others, whether you liked it show more or not, a living part of you at any moment when they come into your head? These were among the many questions for which Matey never found an answer. See other titles by this author available from Kessinger Publishing. show less

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2 reviews
St. Barts 2018 #5 - First of all, I very much loved my particular Modern Library hardcover of this book.....they just have such a good feel in your hands as you carry it about! But this was a book about which i knew absolutely nothing as i began to read......and sadly, mostly through the 1st of 4 parts, i still felt the same way. A long treatise on the main character's upbringing in a collegiate faculty family, and the perils of such on her character and emotional state, as well as those of her 2 siblings. It did create a very clear picture that mapped out her responses and reactions to what else took place in her life after that, but it was a long slog to get there. Later parts in the book lead our heroine, Matey and her husband and 2 show more children to leave the comfort of their sleepy town on the Hudson River and head to France to help with the onslaught WWI was having on Europe prior to the US involvement, and we learn much about the horrors of war on everyday citizens of both Paris and countryside. Much thought and discussion as to the morality of war and how anyone should act or react when it happens.....pride and assistance to the soldiers on your side merely enable them to regroup and go out and become killers of others, etc. Certainly a potent topic, and one that was not taken lightly. Plenty of mixed emotions as to the eventual entry of the US forces in the European conflict.....what took so long.....was it their business to be there......etc. Ultimately, though, how does one survive such horror and attempt to pick up where you left off and move on with your life, especially with none of the previous questions ever fully resolved. Again, a very thoughtful book, but slow and tedious at times for me. It gave a perspective on WWI from an American in Paris point of view, which was intriguing, delving into the cultural and religious differences. Interesting, but no swift ride....proceed with caution..... show less

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Author Information

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57+ Works 6,133 Members
Author Dorothy Canfield Fisher was born in Lawrence, Kansas on February 17, 1879. She received a Ph.D. in romance languages from Columbia University in 1904. She wrote novels, short stories, children's books, educational works, and memoirs. In 1912, she met Maria Montessori in Italy and was so impressed by the educator's theories that she wrote A show more Montessori Mother, The Montessori Manual, and Mothers and Children. She worked for many environmental, children's and education causes in the 1940s and 1950s. She died in Arlington, Vermont on November 9, 1958. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Common Knowledge

Original publication date
1930
People/Characters
Matey; Aunt Connie; Aunt Trynje; Francis; Adrian Fort; Priscilla (show all 10); Petella; the Vinet family in France; refugees; soldiers
Important places
Hamilton, New York, USA; Corinth, Greece; Poughskeepie, New York, USA; Paris, France; France; Hendaye, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France (show all 7); San Sebastián, Basque Country, Spain
Important events
World War I
First words
When people talked about things they could remember Matey always wondered which kind of remembering they meant - the kind that was just a sort of knowing how something in the past had happened or the other kind when suddenly ... (show all)everything seemed to be happening all over again.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction
DDC/MDS
813Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English
LCC
PZ3 .F53Language and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction in English
BISAC

Statistics

Members
102
Popularity
317,023
Reviews
1
Rating
½ (4.29)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
7
ASINs
10