The Blue Castle by L.M. Montgomery

The Blue Castle cover

The Blue Castle by L.M. Montgomery was first published in 1926. By 1920 Montgomery had tired of writing about Anne of Green Gables and started writing various other series and stand alone books.

I loved The Blue Castle. The main character is Valancy Stirling a 29 year old woman who has never been valued by her family. Valancy committed the terrible sin of being born female instead of the boy her mother wanted, so being a disappointment to her mother from the beginning Valancy becomes the family whipping girl, valued and loved by nobody. Her father had died when she was a baby and her mother is an overbearing tyrant who won’t even allow her daughter to have a minute of time to herself. When Valancy goes to her spartan bedroom to fetch something her mother and aunt are shouting at her to come downstairs again, she must be darning and mending all day if possible, unless she’s in town running errands (messages) for the extended family. She has no nice clothes and one of her aunts has decreed that she must wear her hair in a particular old fashioned pompadour style which does nothing for her looks. The one thing she is happy about is her name – Valancy, but the family insist in calling her Doss. Apart from being born a girl she has also failed to get a husband, unlike her pretty cousin Olive who is the family golden girl.

To begin with I was quite sure that the Stirlings must be a Presbyterian family, everything about them is miserable and harsh. So I was surprised when they were described as being Anglican, I suspect that that was to avoid any trouble from the Presbyterians as Montgomery was married to a Presbyterian minister. The setting is of course Canada.

Valancy has no life at all and the only time she is allowed any time to herself is at bedtime, so she has built a fantasy life for herself in her dream home called The Blue Castle, it’s her imaginary home in Spain and it’s the only bit of joy she has in life. ‘Everything wonderful and beautiful was in that castle. Jewels that queens might have worn; robes of moonlight and fire; couches of roses and gold; long flights of shallow marble steps, with great white urns, and with slender mist clad maidens going up and down them; courts marble pillared where shimmering fountains fell and nightingales sang among the myrtles; halls of mirrors that reflected only handsome knights and lovely women, – herself the loveliest of them all, for whose glance men died.’

For quite a wee while Valancy had been worried that her heart was behaving oddly and it was getting worse. She plucks up courage to go to a local doctor about it, not the doctor that her family normally uses. The prognosis that she eventually gets from him spurs her on to begin to live her life for herself, much to the horror of her family who think that she has gone mad when she begins to answer her mother back instead of meekly doing everything she is told.

Being true to herself turns her whole life around, which was quite predictable but for me anyway there was an unexpected twist. I’m now looking forward to reading some more of Montgomery’s non Anne of Green Gables books.

It seems that Montgomery herself had a sad life, suffering from bouts of depression and having a husband who was also suffering from mental health problems. Her Blue Castle must have been the books that she wrote, taking herself out of the difficult situation and escaping from her duties as a minister’s wife. I suspect that most of you have already read this book but in case you haven’t and you want to give it a go you can read it here.

Not for the first time I find myself being quite thankful for the rigid discipline of Scottish Presbyterianism because it does have a wonderful effect on the imagination of those who have had it inflicted upon them. Without it we wouldn’t have had Peter Pan, Treasure Island, Winnie the Pooh, The Wind in the Willows, George MacDonald’s books and many more children’s classic tales as well as Anne of Green Gables of course.

14 thoughts on “The Blue Castle by L.M. Montgomery

  1. I have plans to read this one but haven’t yet. Glad to hear you enjoyed it. I’ve heard nothing but good things about it. I think it is the only book or maybe there is one other by L.M. Montgomery that is not set on Prince Edward Island.

    • Christy,
      You could be right about that, although she does end up living on a very small island. I hope you enjoy it when you get around to it. I think she put a lot of her own feelings into it as she seems to have had quite an unhappy life, it’s no wonder she made an alternative world for herself in books.

  2. One of my all time favourite books, which I reread often, because it’s just so much fun. I mean, who DOESN’T want to stand up and say out loud all those things you’ve been keeping to yourself for years.

    Yes, according to her journals, LMM used it as a kind of outlet to express what she couldn’t say or do as a Minister’s Wife.

    (I’ve put some Blue Castle pics up on Pinterest:
    https://www.pinterest.com/dalyght/the-blue-castle/ )

    • susanintoronto,
      Thanks for the link to your Pinterest board, such lovely images and I’m now following it.
      I think she must have had a tough time coping with her husband and being the minister’s wife, never easy in those days I’m sure. I suspect I’ll be rereading The Blue Castle at some point in the future too.

    • Love the images on Pinterest, especially all the vintage covers. My edition is the Starfire paperback and it looks like a cheesy romance. I dislike the cover so much I put off reading it for YEARS which was a real shame because I loved it.

      • Karen K,
        Aren’t the images lovely. I never thought of doing a board like that, I don’t often add anything to Pinterest nowadays. Some book covers are terrible, you would think that publishers would wake up and realise they would sell more if covers were better. There are still some horrible covers around now.

  3. I LOVE her books and have many of them, including this one. I haven’t read it yet. I think you would love her diaries! Someday I’ll get to Prince Edward Island! Made it as far as Cape Breton Island which is heavily Scottish!

    • Peggy,
      I can imagine that Prince Edward Island is full of people of Scottish descent too. I hope you get there one day. I’m now looking for nice old L.M. Montgomery books, but I don’t remember ever having seen any around here.

  4. I loved this book too and want to read more L. M. Montgomery after I can make some more headway into my TBR shelves! I like your insight about the strict Scottish Presbyterianism and the impact on literature, I’d never thought about it — though I did once read that the dreary English weather impacted literature because people were forced to stay indoors and ended up writing! It makes sense when I think about it.

    • Karen K.
      Yes the weather may well have something to do with it – in Scotland our weather is quite a bit worse than English weather, which may go some way to explaining so many great writers from such a small country!

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