I Capture the Castle by Dodie Smith
I was delighted to find that the novel easily outstripped the film. Dodie Smith, known primarily for her children’s book Hundred and One Dalmatians, also wrote prolifically for adults in a variety of novels and plays.
Narrated by the charismatic 17 year old Cassandra Mortmain, this bildungsroman style novel is in the form of a journal that she keeps during a particularly turbulent time for her family. The Mortmain family, in spite of their living in an ancient moated castle, are destitute. The father, a brilliant and groundbreaking author, has not written a word in many years, becoming ever more withdrawn from his family and his young wife Topaz as his shame and frustration deepens. The three women attempt to make ends meet, but Cassandra and her sister Rose dream of the day when they will leave their poverty behind.
With almost painful realism, and insights into the pitfalls of growing up and falling in love, Cassandra records her often painful, and yet endearingly amusing transition out of childhood. I found this book immensely enjoyable because of the combination of the vivid characters and the dilapidated castle which draws them all together.