The Winds of Heaven

by Monica Dickens

On This Page

Description

A novel about a 60-year-old widow who is shunted from one to the other of her more or less unwilling daughters on perpetual uneasy visits, 'The Winds of Heaven' addresses the more awkward aspects of family relationships.

Tags

Recommendations

Member Recommendations

GeraniumCat Illyrian Spring is the story of a woman "of a certain age" who feels she has become superfluous to the needs of her family, and that it is time she did something to please herself. It is a lyrical book full of lovely description, and a gentle story. Balm for the spirit.
20

Member Reviews

8 reviews
Another winner from the marvelous Persephone books, number 90 from their list. The second Monica Dickens they have re-published.
The Winds of Heaven is a beautifully constructed novel. Louise is a widow forced by financial hardship to depend on her grown up daughters to home her for half the year, while she winters at a friend's hotel the rest of the time. Her daughters are each selfish, and difficult, in different ways and Louise is never able to feel at home, or properly useful where ever she goes. Gentle and uncomplaining she has developed a lovely relationship with one of her eldest daughter's children, Ellen, a child Louise feels needs her, as she too is isolated and lonely, not quite fitting into her own family. One day when at a show more Lyons house in London Louise meet Gordon Disher, a big fat man who sells beds and writes thrillers under a pseudonym. This new friendship comes to delight Louise and confound her family who often tease her about "her salesman". As Louise moves from one daughter's home to the next trying her best to fit in to their lives, and help them with their problems, she begins to find her position more and more intolerable.

I loved every bit of this lovely book, with it's dramatic climax and a wholly satisfying ending.
show less
I was surprised by the ending of this book. I didn't quite understand how the action reached the point of the fire, and I thought that the marriage with Gordon Disher was very sudden. I had hoped that Louise would become more independent, and she definitely showed signs of it as the novel progressed, but then it turned out to be a book of it's generation in that the woman got married at it's close. I couldn't tell if perhaps Monica Dickens had intended this one as a sort of satire on a traditional comedy, where you have a series of characters blundering their way through marriage. It was a successful read and I did enjoy it, but I think I will both have to read more of her work and reread this book before I fully understand where she show more was going with this one. show less
“When the winds of heaven blow, men are inclined to throw back their heads like horses, and stride ruggedly into the gusts, pretending to be much healthier than they really are; but women tend to creep about, shrunk into their clothes and clutching miserably at their hats and hair.”

Louise Bickford had felt the force of the wind of heaven. In her early fifties in the early fifties, she found herself widowed, penniless and homeless after the death of her brutish husband.

Her daughters, three very different women, knew that they had to their duty and so she spent part of the year with each and the winter months in a run-down hotel owned by an old school friend.

It’s a far from ideal arrangement, but there seems to be no alternative. show more Louise’s suggestion that she earn a living is swiftly dismissed by her family. She is unskilled and it is not what women of her class do.

And so she tries to help out, to be unobtrusive, but sadly it is unappreciated. Louise’ daughters are wrapped up in their own lives their own concerns and give not one thought to how their mother might feel, what she might want.

The lack of understanding, the lack of communication, is horrible but it is utterly believable. That made this an uncomfortable read at times, but it was always compelling.

And if Louise could hold on then so could I.

She finds support from two of the more sensitive members of her family. And from a salesman who become a friend after a chance encounter in a cafe.

Monica Dickens writes such lovely prose and she is a fine storyteller. Characters, settings, and scenarios are all utterly believable. And she picks up exactly the right details to bring the story to life, to make it utterly real.

Eventually, inevitably arrangements break down and Louise finds herself in trouble …

More than that I am not going to say.

I will say that this is a book to engage both emotions and social consciences.

The world may have changed since the fifties, but this is still a book with a lot to say about relationships and social conventions.

Yes, a fine novel that stands the test of time.
show less
In The Winds of Heaven, a woman in late middle age is left nearly destitute when her husband dies. Forced to live off her three daughters, Louise spends her time going back and forth between the three of them. One is married to a successful attorney; another to a rural farmer; and the third works as an actress in London, having an affair with a married man.

It’s a bittersweet little story; Louise is treated as elderly, although she’s only 57, and treated as though she’s yesterday’s trash by her daughters and their husbands. On the other hand, she begins a friendship with a man who works in the mattress section of a large department store, offering her some kind of companionship in her “old age.” Dudley is the only one who show more treats Louise really well, not expecting anything back from her, but it’s not until it’s nearly too late that she realizes what a good friend he is. The other touching part of the story is Louise’s relationship with her young granddaughter, another person who doesn’t expect much from her.

I love Monica Dickens’s descriptions of the characters; although everyone seems to blend together at first, each of the three daughters quickly becomes delineated. They are all completely different, but similar in their indifference towards their mother. This book reminds me a lot of Vita Sackville-West’s All Passion Spent, a novel about a widow’s struggle to assert her own independence after her children have grown up and her husband has passed away. The story also reminds me a lot of Dorothy Whipple’s They Were Sisters, a story that’s mostly about the relationship between three sisters, but similar in describing the lives of very different people.
show less
½
Oh if only there were more Monica Dickens novels! This one is delightful, one of her best. Beautiful characterisation and description. You need to make allowances for a few non PC bits as it is written in the 1950s. Louise Bickford is the main character, mother of three daughters who she lives with in turn after her husband dies leaving her without home and money. Socially constrained and long suffering Louise soldiers on through her limited life trying not to be a burden or interfere in her daughters lives. I wish fervently that there was a sequel.
21 Jan 2011

Louise, widow of a horrible bully in a perilous financial state of his own overweening making, is thrown upon the mercies of their three very different daughters. He only allies are one grand-daughter, a lovely cat and dog, a caravan (yes, it's a character in its own right!) and a potboiler-writing, portly, bed salesman. Reminiscent of Whipple's "They Were Sisters", the family relationships and characters are beautifully drawn and the plot pulls you along in the firm hopes that something good will come to dear Louise ...

Although some of the characters are sweet, the situation they are in, and the lesson for women about (not) relying solely on men and marriage for emotional sustenance is sharp, even if the ending is show more conventional in some ways. An excellent read. show less
Not yet read - I'll review properly once I have read it. Just logging that I was prompted by this - http://rosesoveracottagedoor.blogspot.com/2011/04/winds-of-heaven-by-monica-dick...

Members

Recently Added By

Lists

Persephone
148 works; 3 members

Talk Discussions

Past Discussions

Story about a widow and her three daughters in Name that Book (June 2013)

Author Information

Picture of author.
66+ Works 4,245 Members

Series

Belongs to Publisher Series

Common Knowledge

Original publication date
1955
People/Characters
Louise Bickford; Gordon Disher; Eva Bickford
Dedication
To Pamela
First words
When the winds of Heaven blow, men are inclined to throw back their heads like horses, and stride ruggedly into the gusts, pretending to be much healthier than they really are; but women tend to creep about, shrunk into their... (show all) clothes, and clutching miserably at their hats and hair.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)He waited for them to speak, but the sisters bent their heads and would not look at each other.

Classifications

Genres
General Fiction, Fiction and Literature
DDC/MDS
823.912Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1900-1901-19991901-1945
LCC
PZ3 .D5523Language and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction in English
BISAC

Statistics

Members
224
Popularity
144,971
Reviews
7
Rating
(4.08)
Languages
English, German
Media
Paper
ISBNs
8
ASINs
12