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The Snow Goose (Essential Penguin) by Paul…
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The Snow Goose (Essential Penguin) (original 1941; edition 2001)

by Paul Gallico

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1,3592913,957 (4.2)89
Against the backdrop of World War II, friendship develops between a lonely crippled painter and a village girl, when together they minister to an injured snow goose.
Member:auntieknickers
Title:The Snow Goose (Essential Penguin)
Authors:Paul Gallico
Info:Penguin Books, Limited (UK) (2001), Paperback, 80 pages
Collections:Your library, Deaccessioned, Currently reading (inactive), To read (inactive), Read but unowned
Rating:****
Tags:Guardian 1000, Fiction

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The Snow Goose by Paul Gallico (1941)

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Showing 1-5 of 28 (next | show all)
Book source ~ Purchased ebook

This was a pick for an online book club. I had never heard of this story, but apparently it’s a Classic. I can see why. It’s a great story! The ending is sad though. Ok, so I know things can never stay the same. Life is fluid and always changing. But it’s still a sad ending. ( )
  AVoraciousReader | May 7, 2024 |
“He had mastered his handicap, but he could not master the rebuffs he suffered, due to his appearance. The thing that drove him into seclusion was his failure to find anywhere a return of the warmth that flowed from him.”

In 1930, painter Philip Rhayader takes up residence in an abandoned lighthouse on the marshlands of the Essex coast, retreating from a society that has judged him and been unkind to him on account of his physical deformities. He spends his time amid nature, sailing his small boat, painting and providing sanctuary to birds during the harsh winters. When Frith, a young girl from a local village, appears at his door with an injured snow goose, Philip cares for it, nursing it back to health and christens it “The Lost Princess”. Every year the snow goose returns in October before flying north, in the spring. Frith, drawn to the snow goose, also returns. The friendship between Philip and Frith friendship grows over the years - a friendship forged from their loneliness and a shared love for nature. But as WWII looms large, Philip is unable to remain unaffected by the events happening around him and in a selfless act of courage, decides to play his part.

Originally written as a short story in 1940 and developed into a novella in 1941, Paul Gallico’s The Snow Goose is an incredibly moving story about loneliness, kindness, friendship and sacrifice. I was directed to this story while reading a novel inspired by the same. At barely fifty pages, this is a short yet immersive read and I’ll admit that I shed more than a few tears. Though this is considered a children’s story, I believe the subject matter and the historical context would appeal to more mature readers. ( )
  srms.reads | Sep 4, 2023 |
I was startled to find this volume on a bookshelf in my mother's apartment. It had been given to her mother 70 years ago by a friend who wrote on the last page "An interesting but pathetic story."

Just a few months earlier, I had tracked down a rough online copy of the British movie made from this story that, when it aired as a Hallmark television special in 1971, deeply affected my preteen self. Lately, I had become obsessed with seeing it again, but discovered the award-winning film with Jenny Agutter and Richard Harris was never (and apparently never will be) sanctioned for reproduction. Though I do not normally condone unauthorized copying, I was grateful to have the chance to spend an hour reacquainting myself with that influential picture.

Last week, book unexpectedly in hand, I gulped down the story in a matter of minutes, tracking the video version across the pages and finding only occasional alterations.

That is all to say any rating or review I impart on this book is inextricably tied to my first and second exposures to the story. I am happy now to know the picturesque and compassionate source of the heartrending film, and appreciate Gallico's genuine accounting in the original. Next times through I'll pace myself, allowing the words to repaint my mind's eye, so I can enjoy two visions of one moving tale. ( )
  scott.r | Nov 29, 2021 |
Nice descriptions, but too heavy on the melodrama. ( )
  Petroglyph | Dec 17, 2018 |
Another perspective on how war affects those left behind, WWII Essex coast version. Mostly about two lonely people, a little about Dunkirk. ( )
  fred_mouse | Oct 11, 2017 |
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» Add other authors (8 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Paul Gallicoprimary authorall editionscalculated
Barrett, AngelaIllustratorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Peck, BethIllustratorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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Epigraph
Dedication
For my parents, Esther and Irwin Peck
-B.P.
First words
The great marsh lies on the Essex coast between the village of Chelmbury and the ancient Saxon oyster-fishing hamlet of Wickaeldroth.
Quotations
He painted the loneliness and the smell of the salt-laden cold, the eternity and agelessness of marshes, the wild living creatures, dawn flights, and frightened things taking to the air, and winged shadows at night hiding from the moon.
Her imagination was captured by the presence of this strange white princess from a land far over the sea, a land that was all pink as she knew from the map that Rhayader showed her, and on which they traced the stormy path of the lost bird from its home in Canada to the Great Marsh of Essex.
Men are huddled on the beaches like hunted birds, Frith, like the wounded and hunted birds we used to find and bring to sanctuary. Over them fly the steel peregrines, hawks and gyrfalcons, and they have no shelter from these iron birds of prey. They are lost and storm-driven and harried, like the Princess Perdue you found and brought to me out of the marshes many years ago, and we healed her. They need help, my dear, as our wild creatures have needed help, and that is why I must go. It is something that I can do. Yes, I can. For once - for once I can be a man and play my part.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
Disambiguation notice
The original short story in The Saturday Evening Post (1940) was different from the expanded book version (1941)
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Against the backdrop of World War II, friendship develops between a lonely crippled painter and a village girl, when together they minister to an injured snow goose.

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Philip Rhayader lives alone in an abandoned lighthouse on the desolate Great Marsh of Essex. One afternoon, a hauntingly beautiful child, Fritha, visits Rhayader, bringing with her an injured snow goose. At first Fritha is scared of Rhayader, with his sinister hump and crooked hand, but he is gentle and kind and Fritha begins to visit regularly.
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