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[B174.Ebook] Ebook Download Constance: A Story of Early Plymouth, by Patricia Clapp

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Constance: A Story of Early Plymouth, by Patricia Clapp

Constance: A Story of Early Plymouth, by Patricia Clapp



Constance: A Story of Early Plymouth, by Patricia Clapp

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Constance: A Story of Early Plymouth, by Patricia Clapp

"An absorbing historical romance."—Booklist

"Constance is an engaging, high-spirited heroine . . . A fine historical novel written with verve and fresh imagination."—Horn Book

Runner-up for the National Book Award for Children's Literature in 1969, Constance is a classic of historical young adult fiction, recounting the daily life, hardships, romances, and marriage of a young girl during the early years of the Pilgrim settlement at Plymouth.

  • Sales Rank: #64583 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-12-22
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 7.40" h x .80" w x 5.00" l, .0 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 232 pages

Review
"An absorbing historical romance." -- -- Booklist

"Constance is an engaging, high-spirited heroine... A fine historical novel written with verve and fresh imagination." -- -- Horn Book

Most helpful customer reviews

17 of 17 people found the following review helpful.
My very favorite book
By A Customer
I first read Constance last year when my 6th grade teacher recommended it. I adored it- the weekend I read it, Constance was my constant companion! I just finished reading it again and it was even better the second time through! I really feel like I bonded with Constance, and now I am doing as much research as I can on her. She was a real person, and as it says in the book, all the characters but one really existed. Through her diary, Constance tells of her journey across the Atlantic from London to Massachusetts, and gives wonderful details about the building and founding of Plymouth Colony. Through Constance I felt the pain of "the sickness" that claimed many lives during their first winter, became tangled in her complex love triangle, and felt outraged at the two men who tried to destroy Plymouth's peace. Constance was detailed, well written, interesting, exciting, and romantic. I would recommend this book to anyone, but I almost don't want to share it at all, since I feel like it's "my book"! This book found a very special place in my heart, and I wish I could thank Patricia Clapp for the many hours of contentment, excitement, and utter bliss she has given me! Constance is an exceptional read!

13 of 13 people found the following review helpful.
Adult reading experience different from preteen reading experience
By Anyechka
This was one of my favoritest books as a preteen. I read it over and over again, and even got my mother to buy a copy for a present for one of my second-cousins. There were so many wonderful historical fiction books for young people when I was still reading preteen and teen lit, before graduating to adult novels at about 14. I knew it was kind of an older book, but it didn't matter to me.

Lately I've been revisiting some of my favorite books from my younger years, and this was one of them. I was rather disappointed that it wasn't as awesome as I remembered it, and even more disappointed to realize that a fair amount of historical liberties had been taken, probably to try to make the story more appealing to young people. I still love the idea of a book in journal form, from the POV of one of the younger Pilgrims, but Constance's story should've been interesting enough without trying to turn her into some silly 20th century flirt. Her coquettish behavior is also a juxtaposition to the heavy real history interspersed throughout.

I honestly feel there were a bit too many historical liberties taken for the sake of the story. For example, we don't know exactly when Oceanus or Damaris Hopkins died, but we do know that it was before 1627. Ms. Clapp has little Oceanus dying in 1623 and Damaris dying during that terrible first Winter in Plymouth. I always believed Damaris was one of the victims of that first Winter, yet she's not on the list of victims. And while it's a historical fact that the Hopkins' servants Edward Dotey and Edward Leister, "the Two Teds," fought the first duel in Plymouth, the reason isn't recorded. Ms. Clapp portrays it as them fighting over Constance, who's led both of them on. I somehow feel that's a bit of a stretch. And John and Priscilla Mullins's first child is a girl in this book, but in real life, we know it was a boy.

During the course of the book, a total of five guys fall for Constance and compete for her affections. That's a surefire way to make a character unbelievable and unrelatable. The main romantic conflict, between Stephen Deane and Nicholas Snow, started a bit late and seemed rather rushed in its development and resolution. There was no concept of teenhood in the 17th century, yet Constance is acting kind of like a silly 20th century flirt and constantly changing her mind about which guy she wants to be with.

I know things definitely weren't as prim and proper as certain people nowadays would like us to believe, but I still have a hard time believing Constance would've been kissing all these guys when she wasn't even officially being courted by them, or had the chance to be alone with these guys so often. Breaking an engagement also seems like it would've been a pretty big deal back then, not something that's accepted and resolved so quickly and easily, with no real hurt feelings or social consequences.

I enjoyed reading about early Plymouth history, but no one wants to read a bunch of historical facts dumped into a novel. You have to weave them in naturally, make them part of the world, characters, and storyline. You never want to dump in way too many historical tidbits and details, constantly calling our attention to how a story is taking place in a certain decade or era. That's just as bad as just using history as window-dressing for some fluffy book that reads like a contemporary book that just happens to be set in the past.

A lot of times, there was historical info that seemed like an infodump through dialogue, expressed in a way that real people wouldn't talk. Were normal people really talking about stuff like their outstanding debt to England in such detail in personal conversations? It seems like Constance asks her dad, John Alden, Nicholas Snow, et al, about this stuff just to dump in some historical background, and comes across rather as the so-called "As you know, Bob" type of dialogue. Sometimes it does work to set things up through expository dialogue, but not in a way that makes it seem like characters are telling one another what they already know just to catch the reader up.

I guess that's one of the pitfalls of making a book in journal form, based on real historical events. While it's going to be episodic and talk about real historical events, you also need to have some sort of cohesive plot to hang it on.

11 of 11 people found the following review helpful.
One of the Best!!!
By Avalon
Ok, the first time I read this book was for a 7th grade reading assignment-and that was well over 20 years ago, but this book has stayed in my heart ever since. Its a very well written story about a young girl who came over from England on the Mayflower and lived through the struggles that the Pilgrims went through in their first years of Plimouth Plantation. This is for the most part, a true story, written by Patricia Clapp, who's husband is an actual descendant of Constance. The story has adventure, romance and I felt the pain that these people went through during one of the most important times of our history. This book opened in me an interest in life in Plimouth. I was lucky enough to live in New England and visited the Plantation often. I highly recommend this book to young teens, as well as older. Somewhere I still have my copy (that I bought back when I was in 7th grade), and its a book that I would read again.

See all 51 customer reviews...

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