Member Reviews
ARC Review ✨️
☆Must-read☆
This is the second story I've read from this author. The author is incredibly talented when it comes to writing historical fiction. The way the story unfolds and comes to life as you're reading is amazing. The Poets Daughter is a historical fiction story set in 1801. The author has some highly descriptive imagery. It easily sets each scene in the book. The characters were also very well written. I completely loved Anna. I'll definitely be reading more from this author in the future!
Huge thankyou to the author, The Book Whisperer and Netgalley for the ARC!
Heart-felt and written with attention to flow, this was an enjoyable read. It dives into the historical time period, centering around Goethe and the French invasion. The descriptions of Anna, her thoughts, and feelings come across clearly as she steers her protected life and deals with the social expectations of the time period (early 1800s). It allows the norms imposed on females of the time period to come to life, while also exposing concerns and daily struggles of people in this class. It's a slower read and keeps a bit of distance thanks to the writing style, and allows the reader to watch while developing sympathy and understanding. As I enjoy a faster-pace with closer connection to the characters, it wasn't quite my thing but still interesting.
Anna's father is Goethe, and while we see a bit about him as this tale weaves between historical facts and fiction, the details are light. This story is about Anna and her struggles, not about her father. So, details on his end are relatively light. The Weimar as well as the French invasion aren't quite as strong as I expected them to be. Instead, they set more of a backdrop to tale and offer world richness to propel Anna's tale forward. But on the historical depth end, it's also light.
For readers who enjoy sinking into a historical setting, where a woman does her best to find herself despite the expectations of the world around her, this is a lovely read in many ways.
The Poet's Daughter by C.K. McAdam tells the story of Anna, the daughter of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and Friederike Brion. Though Goethe and Friederike were indeed young lovers, Friederike later becoming a great inspiration for Goethe's work, their daughter Anna is purely fictional.
Anna has lived a quiet life in her grandfather's parsonage. As the illegitimate child of the pastor's daughter, Friederike Brion, Anna has few prospects outside of her family's home. In the hopes of giving Anna a better future, Friederike and Pastor Brion arrange for Anna to live in Weimar with her father, the great Goethe. Anna is warmly welcomed into her father's home by Goethe, his lover Christiane, and their son August, where she adjusts to her new life helping Christiane run the house. While living in Weimar, Anna is introduced to society, meets suitors, and finds love in a carpenter named Friedrich, all the while pursuing her dreams of writing. Overall, a good story with decent characters and writing.
I give The Poet's Daughter 3- out of 5 stars. Though I enjoyed parts of the story, this did not end up being a favorite. The Poet's Daughter is still a wonderful book, the author's style is just not for me.
One thing that frustrated me with this story was how time passed. Weeks, months, even years passed without detail or anything really happening. Situations and meetings felt forced and out of place. Anna and Friedrich's relationship was rushed and had nothing substantial behind it. Anna's relationship with her father felt equally rushed, and his eventual public acceptance of her as his daughter was awkward and unrealistic.
Something I enjoyed about this book were the characters. Despite other issues I had with the story, the characters all felt genuine with real emotion and depth.
Christiane was undeniably my favorite character in this story. Spunky and kind-hearted, she cares for her home and family with love and spirit. She accepts Anna into her home and the two become good friends, Christiane acting as a mother figure to Anna in Friederike's absence. Despite living as Goethe's wife, they are not officially married, which causes no small amount of pain to Christiane. But Christiane continues to hope, in spite of what the world says about her, that Goethe will defy societal expectations and fulfill his promise to marry her.
Goethe's character ended up being my least favorite. Inconsistent, proud, and self-centered, Goethe was an irritation at best. To maintain his image in society, he hides away his family, presenting Christiane as his housekeeper and Anna as the visiting daughter of a friend. His self-centered attitude wildly shapes how he views Anna. One moment he is a dotting father, and the next he calls her foolish and childlike. After discovering Anna's talent for writing, he decides she must pursue writing indefinitely, whether she wants to or not, and denies her his blessing to marry the man she loves. His unfeeling attitude towards Christiane is equally irritating. He knows the burden she carries, and despite her love and care, he denies her the security of marriage to save his own good name. Goethe continues to dig himself a hole throughout the story, and any redemption written for him was unsuccessful in making him a likeable character.
Overall, The Poet's Daughter by C.K. McAdam had some minor issues, but they do not impact the ability to read and understand the story. A good story with a valuable message, enjoyable characters, and an interesting concept. I give 3-stars to The Poet's Daughter, and recommend it readers of historical fiction or anyone interested in the concept!
The Poet's Daughter
by C. K. McAdam
Pub Date: Sep 30 2024
Here's another historical fiction by C.K. McAdam I had the pleasure of previewing.
Well-read Anna has been raised by her mother and pastor grandfather. Her mother, shunned by the village for having a child out of wedlock, never married and has never revealed who Anna's father is. Anna has grown into an exceptional young lady who has a talent for writing, which during this time, was not for young ladies. Her family feels her only chance at being well-wed is to finally come clean and send her away to her father (who has not been told about her existence until now), the respected and famous poet Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.
Anna is shocked to learn one of her favorite poets is her father but reluctantly makes the trek more for the hope of learning his trade than being wed. The French are closing in and threatening war while Anna spends time with the family she never knew. Goethe has a live-in girlfriend he has another child with but has never made her "an honest woman", meanwhile, he matches Anna with an older man who is of good social standing despite her eye for the young stagehand at the theatre he manages.
Anna, feeling as though she should return to her sick mother (and escape a marriage to man she doesn't love) runs home.
Goethe discovers her writings and seemingly passes one of her plays off as his own. Anna feels the need to stand up for herself, her work, and her heart, but in a world made by men, can she come out on top?
Interesting read. I was looking up stuff about Goethe the entire time (Yep! He had a live in girlfriend with whom we had children, but didn't marry her....something that was almost unheard of back then.)
I enjoyed The Seamstress of Auschwitz by the same author immensely (one of my favorites!) This one was still enjoyable and engaging.
#thepoetsdaughter
#ckmcadams
#netgalley
When Anna’s mother and grandfather insisted it was time for her to live with her father, whom she had never met , she resisted. They wanted her to have a better chance of a good marriage than she would have in the little town she lived in.
Her father Goeth was a renown poet and playwright. Anna herself loved to write, but always kept it a secret. While at father’s house she maintained her secretiveness by sneaking into his library later at night to write. Although father and daughter did not get along, one day Goeth decided to take Anna to the Theatre, she was excited but didn’t want to show it. Her experience there changed her life in so many ways. An excellent read.
The Poet’s Daughter is the story of Anna Goethe, the daughter of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. Growing up with a single mother and her grandfather, Anna becomes a well-educated woman for her time. She is sent away to her father, whom she didn’t know existed, to find a husband and secure her future. Based on the blurb, I expected a romantic story and some father-daughter bonding, but this book didn’t meet those expectations. The story and characters lacked depth; it felt wordy, and time passed very oddly.
I enjoyed the story but I felt disconnected from the characters. Just not my cup of tea but thank you for allowing me to read this book.
Thanks publisher and netgalley. All thoughts and opinions are my own and isn't influenced by anyone else
This was the second book I read from C.K. McAdam and just as powerful as her first that I read! The storytelling an amazing weaving together of characters and their separate lives and personalities, their choices that hurt and healed, and the beautiful and devastating consequences that came of it all. I found myself eager to get to my reading each day, rooting for characters and raging at others. In the end, I was left with a beautiful ending and a full heart, once again.
The story takes place in France during the French revolution into Napoleonic war time. Anna, the protagonist, is born to a single mother, and who's father, unbeknownst to her, is a famous French poet and playwright. After no suitable marriage proposals occur in her small town, Anna gets sent to meet and live with her father in an attempt to locate that "suitable' marriage partner. Anna previously developed a love for reading and writing, which further develops in her father's house with access to tutors and libraries. Tension develops as Anna grapples with traditional female roles and love of writing. I am giving 4 stars because I would've liked to see further development of the historical backdrop and the family of origin.
CK McAdam has done it again!! The story of Anna- the Poet’s Daughter is a must read and I could not put it down!!! The author has brought historical fiction into modern times tackling not only the relationships between a father and daughter during Anna’s coming of age, but also the challenges of a young woman finding her voice and stepping out of her father’s shadow. I can’t wait to see what time period CK McAdam’s tackles next!!
I read C.K. McAdam’s book The Seamstress of Auschwitz a little earlier this year and really liked it. So I immediately signed up for this book, it’s not getting the best reviews, but I honestly don’t think it was as bad as some of the reviews make it out to be. We follow Anna who is the bastard child of the famous poet and play writer Goethe, he lives quite the eccentric life as most artists do. But Anna was raised by her minister grandfather, because her mother never told Goethe her daughter existed. It is pretty slow going, and it kind of devolved around the 60% mark, I was really disappointed in Anna’s view of her writing once she was married. I get that this is historical fiction and women were required by society to become mothers and house wives but Anna was being set up and this non conforming woman and then just totally caved in the end. Her argument with Goethe after he published her works was a little out of left field and didn’t feel genuine or like a real problem. In fact none of the “problems” that came about were actually all that important plot wise… I also had a big problem with the pacing of this book. I would think a few days had passed when in fact it was months and years with nothing in the text indicating so. I don’t know what years this was taking place, I had to Google a lot about Goethe and his life and the years he was active to even have a sense of when I was reading. I think this book may have been pushed too quickly and definitely needs another look at and redrafting because it definitely felt like a storyboard or a first draft to me.
I love historical fiction, but unfortunately, this just wasn't my cup of tea. Writing was off and character development just wasn't that interesting.
Thank you, NetGalley, and the publisher for access to this eARC.
The story is fascinating - a young woman who doesn’t know that she is the illegitimate daughter of Goethe, living in a small village in Alsace. Raised by her mother and grandfather, the local parson, Anna is sent to Weimar to live with the father she hadn’t known about, to make a marriage that will give her the security she lacks in the village. Anna quickly becomes friends with her father’s current (and long term) live in love, Christianne, who Goethe refuses to marry in spite of their having a child together, Anna’s half brother August. The relationships between Christianne, Anna’s father, her half brother, all make up a fascinating part of the story. When a nobleman asks for Anna’s hand in marriage, she refuses it, preferring instead a love match with a local theater worker.
The story itself is fascinating, and Anna is a wonderful character.
The general premise of McAdam’s story was an interesting one discussing rather important and apropos topics still present in twenty-first century discourse when the pastor and Anna talk with one another. I also liked the general depiction of certain elements of the setting such as the families’ houses or of Weimar. I have been to Weimar before and the writing did remind me of it.
However, I must say that the writing style and plot creation of the author is rather linear and predictable. Sentences almost appear parallel which create a monotony in reading quality that I personally did not enjoy. As a stickler for grammar the repeated use of “but” or “and” to start a sentence is only one of the examples that made me interrupt my reading. Unfortunately, the conversations also appear rather forced and somewhat unnatural. An example would be the statement „Nathan the Wise. I see. Is it perhaps a matter of religion you’d like to discuss?” It is details like this that create a disconnect to the characters. Also, how did Anna turn 18 six years ago and is currently 28 years old?
Although, the depiction of Anna as well as the general setting is interesting, she seems to be depicted as a cliche while simultaneously being endowed with qualities that appear a bit removed from the period in which the story is set. The rather basic description can be applied to other characters as well such as Friederike. It appears as if the women miss any unique traits and instead are likened to a “she-wolf” when angry. Additionally, the general tone is rather modern (“he was leading her and her family on”) which does not immerse the reader in a historic setting such as the one in this novel.
Topics such as the pastor now holding his sermons in French are simply just dropped into the conversation. There is little introduction and only a rather static and basic discussion of the situation. After all the aforementioned shift in the language of sermons could do with a bit of a longer explanation of the why and how. In general, a setting of the scene regarding the role of women in the end of the 18th and beginning of the 19th century would be helpful. However, while women appear to be lacking in traits, I do like the depiction of Geist and several of the other supporting characters. Their descriptions are more vibrant and more synonyms are used to describe their quirks.
All in all, the novel feels more like a romantic Wikipedia-entry made into a narrative. I am missing a certain sense with words, a tone unique to the author as well as a sense of unpredictability.
I think this novel is for readers of romance. I wrongly expected much about the poet itself. The story really focuses on his daughter's love life which I did not find that interesting. His relationship with his daughter and her mother was for me too lightly described. The characters need a bit more refining as far as I am concerned. Overall, this is an easy, light and rather quick story perfect for romance readers.
This is a book that captures the life and times of the German poet Goethe when he was living in Weimar.
Anna is an illegitimate daughter he had no idea about, but whom he invites to live with him when she is in her late 20s.
The town, the way of life, the household and relationships (especially with his housekeeper and later wife) are well described.
So is the snobbiness of Weimar society, and the difference in education and expectations for boys and girls.
Anna has always been a writer as well as a voracious reader, but writes in secret.
But later things become very muddled, when suddenly Anna wants to be a wife and mother and forget she was ever a writer, for no reason that is ever explained.
I enjoyed the setting and obvious historical research, but the personal stories didn't quite convince me.
“The Poet’s Daughter” is a historical fiction book by CK McAdam This book follows the daughter of Goethe. First - it is not known if the relationship Goethe had with Friederike Brian resulted with a child being born - so that part is fictional. I cannot say that I learned anything about Goethe in this book - his interests outside of the theatre and poetry is hinted (such as him having a number of geological specimens) but as Goethe was, in essence, a Renaissance man, I had to do outside research to learn more about him. The French invasion is short - quite short - and the publisher’s summary makes it sound like it’ll be a larger deal than it is in this book. I think the idea of this book was fine, but I never felt connected to any other characters, though I did like Christiane’s spunk. I’ve read a previous book by this author and I think she’s just not an author whose writing style I like. I agree with the other reviewers who commented about a lot of adjectives in this book - the writing is very flowery and adjective heavy. There’s also not a lot that happens in this book for long periods of time - and speaking of time, I generally have no idea how much time passes in this book. There are some odd sentence constructs - requiring another editing pass - and I’ll admit to really pushing to get through this book. The other thing about Goethe using his daughter’s writing - he didn’t publish it under his name, so I don’t know why that is also made to sound like a larger deal than it was in the book.
When I opened the book, there was only one other review with a 1 rating which I have never seen but I have a German heritage and love Goethe and was looking forward to reading this and wondering why a 1 rating. I feel sorry to say that I agree with that review and with why that person explained it as it was written. Starting from page 1 it was full of an adjective for each noun in relatively short sentences and there was no cohesion. It felt like sentence 1,2,3,4…. on and on. After trying to continue reading , I my mind was more focused with what the adjective would be and I felt no story evolving. Very disappointing.
The book took on historical characters that were perhaps too ambitious (Goethe), but the plot had some promise. Most of all it needed a stronger hand in editing the overwrought description at the level of the sentence. I’m sorry to say it wasn’t for me.