leynes's Reviews > Anne of the Island

Anne of the Island by L.M. Montgomery
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it was ok

The spell is broken. You guys know how much I loved the first book in this series but its sequels annoy and bore the shit outta me. I loved Anne as a character in the first book because she has flaws, gets into silly scraps and has so much to learn. In Book 2 and 3, she is just insufferable. She has become such a Mary Sue. Everything comes natural and easy for her, every-fucking-body worships and loves her, every man she interacts with proposes to her, everyone wants to be her friend, she's everyone's favorite, she's the best in college, she's a gifted writer, her looks are captivating ... yada yada yada. I can't take it anymore.

To give you some examples of Montgomery's ridiculous heroisation of Anne: I shit you not that every fucking character loves Anne the best out of all people. "Phil adored Anne and Priscilla, but especially Anne." Ruby tells Anne on her fucking deathbed (she's dying of consumption) that she always liked her the best out of all of her school chums. When Charlotta the Fourth returns from Boston, she tells Anne: "I haven't seen anyone in Boston that's equal to you." Anne is such a special snowflake that even Rusty, the cat, who usually hates all (!) people, LOVES Anne. I cannot deal with tomfoolery like this. I am done.

On top of that, Montgomery's writing feels much more (out-)dated in Book 2 and 3 than it did in the first book. All of a sudden she has become this hyper-Christian and moralising writer. Her work reads more like Christian propaganda, and I found it insufferable. Anne has become so moralising and patronising herself, I could literally picture Montgomery sitting at her desk thinking to herself how well she did with infusing her (Christian) lessons and values into her young readers. Big yikes. Book 2 and 3 read as if Montgomery was writing a pamphlet on how a proper woman (aka wife) should be.
“Phil, you're not really frivolous,” said Anne gravely. “Way down underneath that frivolous exterior of yours you've got a dear, loyal, womanly little soul.”
Does that sound like the fun little girl we all came to love in the first book to you? Anne, what the hell? What has happened to you? Oh yeah, you had to grow up. Ugh.

Apart from Phil (WHO IS TRULY ICONIC) I also didn't enjoy any of the new characters. To give you some examples of Phil's iconic behaviour, here are some of her outlooks on life/being a woman: "I really hated the thought of being married for a few years yet. I want to have heaps of fun before I settle down." (as you should!) and "Being in love makes you a perfect slave, I think. And it would give a man such a power to hurt you." (she sure knows what's up!). The reason why I liked Phil so much is that she felt how Anne felt in the first book. Fun, independent, iconic. Funnily enough, I loved her romance with Jonas Blake ("It is impossible—but I'm horribly afraid it's true. I'm happy and wretched and scared. He can never care for me, I know.") a lot more than the shenanigans of Anne and Gilbert.

One thing I cannot excuse, however, is when the girls try to chloroform Rusty the cat and it's all played for shits and giggles, as if that's not animal torture and a literal crime?? I was so confused.

I hated how Anne let Roy Gardner on. He truly deserved better but he was a useless character bc it was clear from the start that Anne would end up with Gilbert. Didn't care for Miss Lavendar and Davy in Book 2, so no surprise that I didn't warm to them in this one. There's decidedly too little of Diana Barry in this book. And Rachel and Marilla are still my faves (I love that they are flat mates now!) but I also would've loved to see more of them. Their scenes were the best!

The last chapter was sickly sweet but it fuelled me with some energy. Gilbert is decidedly too good for Anne ("I asked you a question over two years ago, Anne. If I ask it again today will you give me a different answer.") but I am happy that they ended up together. Nonetheless, I was quite bored that the two of them were basically serving Laurie & Jo throughout this entire book (with Gilbert's first proposal and Anne's rejection of him etc.). Like, we get it. And it got so much worse when Anne only realised that she loved Gilbert when he was literally dying of an illness. Like, bestie, wake up? Where have you been for the last five years? You cannot tell me that Anne didn't have an inkling before, it is so clear that she was in love with Gilbert from the very start.

However, I hate that Montgomery basically insinuates that it is a woman's place to get married and have children. Diana gives birth to her first child, and Jane Andrews marries a Winnipeg millionaire. I feel like it would've been the bolder choice to have at least Gilbert move on to marry Christine and have Anne ending up on her own (... not permanently, but at least for the time being of Book 3 and 4). All in all, I feel like the gang grew up way too fucking fast. I'll forever cherish Book 1 and their childhood merriments, but basically straight up beginning with Book 2 it was "you're an adult woman now, so get it together and find a husband now". I'm not saying that that wasn't the reality for most women of Montgomery's time but Book 1 felt so progressive and daring, whereas the rest of the series is so mainstream/run-of-the-mill and tame. I'm afraid Anne has lost her charm.
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Reading Progress

January 25, 2023 – Shelved
February 4, 2023 – Started Reading
February 6, 2023 –
page 87
30.74% "Currently in my Anne-era. Philippa reminds me of Anne in the first book!"
February 9, 2023 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-24 of 24 (24 new)

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message 1: by Mary (new)

Mary Pagones This, 1,000%. Of course, I read the whole series as a kid, but as it wore on, I did so more for the secondary characters (which I agree are particularly weak in 2&3) than Anne. Anne of Windy Poplars is a bit better, and Anne's House of Dreams, while featuring a really treacly Anne, has an interesting subplot. Rilla of Ingleside (focusing on her daughter) is also interesting.


message 2: by Emma (new)

Emma This book is a great example of how not conforming to gender norms as a young girl is seen as “cute” and “spunky,” but continuing that behavior into adulthood is taboo. I agree with you, it sucks that Anne’s character was forced into that, but yeah, at the time that was kind of how it was. I still love this book because of the moments that remind me of my own college experience (trying to get rid of the cat and then adopting him, Gilbert having to wear a dress to get into his frat, etc.), and Phil is a queen, but your critiques are valid!


leynes Emma wrote: "This book is a great example of how not conforming to gender norms as a young girl is seen as “cute” and “spunky,” but continuing that behavior into adulthood is taboo. I agree with you, it sucks t..."

"Trying to get rid of the cat" is quite the euphemism when you consider that the girlies literally tried to kill it with chloroform... ;) but yeah, I think my underlying problem with the series is that Montgomery's writing gives me the vibe that she thinks that the existing gender norms for women at the time are proper and the right way to go. Through the first book I would've thought her more of a progressive/norm-defying woman/writer but through the second and third book she has revealed herself to be quite the conforming and pious woman, which is just ... well, dull. And the hyper focus on Christian themes and values was hard to bear in Book 2 and 3, whereas it was less on the nose and more lightly woven into the first book.


leynes Mary wrote: "This, 1,000%. Of course, I read the whole series as a kid, but as it wore on, I did so more for the secondary characters (which I agree are particularly weak in 2&3) than Anne. Anne of Windy Poplar..."

I still own Anne's House of Dreams (bc I have a box set of the first four published books), so I'll definitely be reading that but I don't have high hopes for it...


message 5: by Mary (new)

Mary Pagones I refreshed my memory with Wikipedia, and was reminded this was the one where Ruby dies. Yeah, that sequence is very offputting (and I still remember it to this day), how Anne seems to judge Ruby for being...sad she's going to die? I mean, yes, dying young of TB was more common in those days, but you really want someone to say, "fuck, this sucks, Ruby, you go girl, and enjoy yourself" (like The Blue Castle) versus accept death like a godfearing woman.

I think, of all the other Annes, Windy Poplars is best, because she's a principal of a school while dreary ol' Gilbert is in medical school, so she has a brief respite of having independence before settling down to have a million kids as a doctor's wife.

I agree this is a very conventional trajectory, although Emily of New Moon is much more independent. LMM was writing for $$$, so I wouldn't judge the Anne character arc as how the author lived her life or felt other woman should live.


Shireen I grew up reading the series and loved it. It was pretty seminal to me as a reader, i read it over and over, so by now it's just tainted all over with nostalgia for me. Being younger than Anne when I read it it was my first taste of a coming of age and i really felt that bittersweet sense of 'growing up' and leaving childhood comforts.

But i so agree with you on her growing into a Mary Sue. I wish she wasnt, but a some time ago i learned (well i read her wiki page so im not sure how accurate it is lol) that montgomery's own life was pretty miserable. She was married to an abusive/drunkard pastor (if i remember right) and that just reframed the whole series to me as escapism for her. I find that really sad, it kinda broke the spell of nostalgia for me. I do wish she had processed that more into her work though, instead of as you say, moralising and writing anne as perfect.


message 7: by nastya (last edited Feb 09, 2023 05:04PM) (new)

nastya Everything comes natural and easy for her, every-fucking-body worships and loves her, every man she interacts with proposes to her, everyone wants to be her friend, she's everyone's favorite, she's the best in college, she's a gifted writer, her looks are captivating ... yada yada yada.

Her being the most special not like other girls snowflake annoyed me in book 1! 😳 I remember her hating her "ugly hair" and then the best painter who thinks red hair is the best to paint her because of course. Reminded me of all those ya books where the heroine is so ugly because she's too skinny and her cheekbones are too prominent. 🙂


leynes Mary wrote: "I refreshed my memory with Wikipedia, and was reminded this was the one where Ruby dies. Yeah, that sequence is very offputting (and I still remember it to this day), how Anne seems to judge Ruby f..."

Yeah, Ruby's death was a low point but generally, I feel like anything Anne did was infused by Christian moral. The way she and Marilla reform Davy to be a good/proper/prim/god-fearing boy etc. It all felt so much preachy.

I'm definitely interested in reading The Blue Castle. I've heard many good things about that book!


leynes Shireen wrote: "I grew up reading the series and loved it. It was pretty seminal to me as a reader, i read it over and over, so by now it's just tainted all over with nostalgia for me. Being younger than Anne when..."

I can totally see how the series can be a literary safe heaven, especially when you grew up with it. I think that's the case for many Anne enthusiast. Up to this day, it's one of the most popular children books series.

But like you said, as an adult it's easier to see the flaws in these books, and unfortunately, the way Anne was written (whatever the reason may be) is one of the biggest one in the sequels. She's just too good.


leynes nastya wrote: "Everything comes natural and easy for her, every-fucking-body worships and loves her, every man she interacts with proposes to her, everyone wants to be her friend, she's everyone's favorite, she's..."

I agree that Anne is already portrayed as being "not like other girls" in Book 1, but I have to say that I didn't find her portrayal to be as "hey, look at this literally perfect human being in literally every aspect of her life" and more as a girl who is incredibly gifted but still has lots of things to learn. In Book 1, Anne is often in the wrong and has to learn that some of her actions are not cool. Whereas in Book 2 and 3, she's literally perfect and holier-than-thou in every aspect of her life. But I agree, she was set up to be a Mary Sue in Book 1 already.


message 11: by CR (new) - rated it 4 stars

CR oh no! i'm so sorry you didn't enjoy this. i might have to give this a re-read. i think i was way too fixated on anne + gilbert to realise some of its problems!


leynes CR wrote: "oh no! i'm so sorry you didn't enjoy this. i might have to give this a re-read. i think i was way too fixated on anne + gilbert to realise some of its problems!"

It's alright. I'm still happy I read it because I was unfamiliar with how Anne's story would turn out. And I love analysing classics in their historical context and I feel like Montgomery was decidedly a writer "of her time".


Tessy I felt exactly the same way while reading book 3 and that's when I decided to DNF the series. I know it's a "product of its time" but I can't get over how nonchalant everyone is about killing the cat. And, a few pages later, Davy tells Anne about a neighbor getting tired of his dog so he hangs it. I just can't wrap my head around those events not being, at the very least, sad. I'm glad so many people love it because it was part of their childhood but it wasn't part of mine and hence I don't hesitate to kiss the series goodbye.


leynes Tessy wrote: "I felt exactly the same way while reading book 3 and that's when I decided to DNF the series. I know it's a "product of its time" but I can't get over how nonchalant everyone is about killing the c..."

Smart choice. I would DNF at this point as well but I have a box set of the first four published books, so I have one left to go. I'm positively sure though that I will hate seeing Anne as a married woman lmao.


message 15: by Catherine (new)

Catherine I read the first book in 3rd grade (9-10 years old) and I remember vividly hating the ending of Anne giving up her dreams of going to university to care for her blind friend. I could tell it had this old-fashioned way of looking at women even back then. I never read further, thanks to your review I know I didn’t miss anything.


leynes Catherine wrote: "I read the first book in 3rd grade (9-10 years old) and I remember vividly hating the ending of Anne giving up her dreams of going to university to care for her blind friend. I could tell it had th..."

I definitely think that sticking with book one is the best choice. However, Anne ends up going to university. The fact that she postponed it to help Marilla (her mother) is actually a good reason and something I wouldn't take issue with. It's something that applies even today in family's that aren't affluent. Not everyone can afford to go to college.


message 17: by [deleted user] (new)

Read the whole series a couple of years back so I don't remember all the characters but you really captured my feelings for the book. If I am not mistaken Montgomery didn't want to write more books but the publisher made her write it. So maybe that is also why it is such a dissapointment.


message 18: by Maja (new)

Maja Pettersen Loved the first book (read it on your recommendation!), but based on this review I’m not gonna spoil it by continuing the series. Too bad!


leynes bookishbluets wrote: "Read the whole series a couple of years back so I don't remember all the characters but you really captured my feelings for the book. If I am not mistaken Montgomery didn't want to write more books..."

Yeah, I've heard that as well. It's similar with Arthur Conan Doyle. He wanted to bury Sherlock for a long time but since the series was so popular he kept writing those stories. It's a damn shame because Anne, especially, had such a potential. I was really looking forward to seeing her grow up. :(


leynes Maja wrote: "Loved the first book (read it on your recommendation!), but based on this review I’m not gonna spoil it by continuing the series. Too bad!"

It's really not worth your time. The first book is just so fantastic, imma just keep rereading that one!


Cosette De Anne grew up. she's gonna be different then when she was a child. OK.


message 22: by JimZ (new) - rated it 3 stars

JimZ Great review. I generally agree with you.


leynes Cosette wrote: "Anne grew up. she's gonna be different then when she was a child. OK."

Of course. I just don't like the woman she grew up to become, so domicile and judgemental.


leynes JimZ wrote: "Great review. I generally agree with you."

Thanks, Jim!


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