The family at Misrule by Ethel Turner
The Journey Back to Misrule
Ethel Turner's The Family at Misrule is like reuniting with old friends you haven't seen in years—and realizing they're just as messy as you remember. This sequel to Seven Little Australians drops us back into the Woolcot household, where life is full of laughter, tears, and door-slamming goodbyes. It's part 1890's slice-of-life, part masterclass in sibling dynamics, all served with a big dose of wit.
The Story
Things are changing at 'Misrule', the big chaotic home near Sydney. Captain Woolcot, still with his military-precision approach to parenting, gets a new housekeeper/nanny named Esther (brilliantly drawn), who tries to bring order to the madhouse. But her biggest challenge isn't just the row of messy children—it's Meg, the now young woman who feels caught between wanting a life of her own and the burden of being the 'older sister.' Then there's Judy, that firecracker whose adventurous spirit leads to a horrible turn when she's hit in the face by a cricket ball and loses an eye. The rest of the kids—Neil, Bunty, even the scary but lovable Pip—all have their own vying for attention. Every chapter feels like a new crisis squashes old disagreements, flaws new friendships, and reminds everyone that love is often hard to find, at least in the neat packages we expect.
Why You Should Read It
You won't find a handbook-title 'themes' here, but life lessons creep in softly. This book tackles coming of age amid broken systems (like weird parenting), the painful grace of forgiveness, moving on after accidents that nobody forgets, and especially grief made smaller by love. It's got emotional ferocity of Jacqueline Wilson books wrapped in Turner's lighter yet suprising depth. I especially ached for Meg—sabotaging her own potential out of duty mixed with fear? Literally felt like she was looking straight through me. That said: is it painful sometimes? The answer is a devastating YES, especially since Turner seeps real Victorian twists maybe into easier-to-serialize expectations. Just as wins feel close, disaster sparks and knocks the rug out from under you (though no one stays sad forever, promise). For readers hung up on escape (or fast plot), this might flutter but not adhere first read
Final Verdict
An absolute gem for historical fiction lovers and future angst teenagers (bright teens mostly, maybe girls aged 10 and up)—who else gets the soap-operatic joys of big Victorian families?
This historical work is free of copyright protections. It is available for public use and education.
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