La's Orchestra Saves the World: A Novel
La's Orchestra Saves the World: A Novel book cover

La's Orchestra Saves the World: A Novel

Hardcover – December 8, 2009

Price
$8.25
Format
Hardcover
Pages
304
Publisher
Pantheon
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0307378385
Dimensions
5.23 x 1.6 x 7.56 inches
Weight
12 ounces

Description

Amazon Best Books of the Month, December 2009 Fans of Alexander McCall Smith's female sleuths Precious Ramotswe and Isabel Dalhousie will find just a few mysteries punctuating the story line of his new stand-alone novel. The story is mainly concerned with the day-to-day life and concerns of a young widow named Lavender ("La") Stone, a promising Cambridge student who, like many women of her class and generation, finished school, married well, and led a comfortable and respectable life. In La's case, things go awry when her philandering husband unexpectedly leaves her, and dies shortly thereafter in a freak accident. In 1939, she retreats to her in-law's country house to sort out the emotional wreckage of her failed marriage and premature widowhood. In this self-imposed exile, she finds solace in contributing to the war effort--tending to the hens on a neighbors farm, cultivating a victory garden, and conducting an orchestra composed of local amateur musicians. In this quiet and intimate book, La’s rural life might seem inconsequential or perhaps even quaint, but her predicament and pathos are moving. And, her daily battles represent important generational and social struggles among women to lead independent and dignified lives in the face of hardship, moral ambiguities, burdensome class and social conventions, and isolation. La Stone may be rendered with softer lines and contours, yet she bears many of the memorable and inspiring qualities of McCall Smith's well-known heroines. --Lauren Nemroff Amazon.com Exclusive: Alexander McCall Smith on La's Orchestra Saves the World I wrote La’s Orchestra Saves the World because I wanted to pay tribute to rather brave people. I wanted to say something about how ordinary people managed to get by during the Second World War. Most of them would not have regarded themselves as heroes and heroines, but they were. La (short for Lavender) was one of these. She worked on the land, helping a farmer with his chickens, and also started a little orchestra for British and American airmen. Music, she felt, helps. And it does--it inspires and heals. The other group I wanted to pay tribute to was the Poles. Polish servicemen played a major role in the war. Their airmen, for example, participated in the Battle of Britain, that crucial battle that decided the fate of Europe. At the end of the war the Poles were betrayed and the contribution of their forces largely ignored. In the victory parade in London, the Poles were not allowed to march with everybody else (Stalin insisted on this). So those brave men stood at the side of the road and wept. This book is about them too. --Alexander McCall Smith (Photo © Chris Watt) From Publishers Weekly Set mainly during WWII in England, this quiet story about a woman who makes a new life for herself falls short of bestseller Smith's best work. After La Stone's husband leaves her for another woman in France, La retreats to a small cottage in Suffolk given to her by her mortified in-laws. The isolation and peacefulness suit La, who joins the Women's Land Army soon after the outbreak of war. When Feliks Dabrowski, an attractive Polish ex-pat, is assigned to the same farm where La is assisting with chores, La is attracted to him, despite her suspicions that Feliks hasn't been fully truthful about his past. La's idea to launch an amateur local orchestra to boost morale proves an unexpected success and helps give her purpose during the war's darkest days. While the understated prose appeals, La just isn't as interesting a creation as the author's two female sleuths, Precious Ramotswe ( The No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency ) and Isabel Dalhousie ( The Sunday Philosophy Club ). (Dec.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. "Delightful . . . McCall Smith once again creates unforgettable characters and a story that will resonate with readers across generations . . . A fresh and unforgettable story about the power of human kindness. Highly recommended."— Booklist (starred review)"The evocation of war-torn England, with its palpable mood of defiance, determination and survival, is beautifully caught . . . An excellent recreation of a woman of her time."— The Scotsman "Unlike anything else in McCall Smith's work." — The Independent "Alexander McCall Smith writes about the enduring, patient qualities of love . . . The novel pays heed to our national yearning for a story to chew on."— The Times (London)xa0"A gentle and uplifting read."— The Daily Mail Alexander McCall Smith is the author of The No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency series, the Isabel Dalhousie series, the Portuguese Irregular Vers series, and the 44 Scotland Street Series. He is professor emeritus of medical law at the University of Edinburgh and has served on many national and international bodies concerned with bioethics.xa0 He lives in Scotland. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. One Two men , who were brothers, went to Suffolk. One drove the car, an old Bristol drophead coupé in British racing green, while the other navigated, using an out-of-date linen-backed map. That the map was an old one did not matter too much: the roads they were following had been there for a long time and were clearly marked on their map—narrow lanes flanked by hedgerows following no logic other than ancient farm boundaries. The road signs—promising short distances of four miles, two miles, even half a mile—were made of heavy cast-iron, forged to last for generations of travellers. Some conscientious hand had kept them freshly painted, their black lettering sharp and clear against chalk-white backgrounds, pointing to villages with names that meant something a long time ago but which were now detached from the things to which they referred—the names of long-forgotten yeoman families, of mounds, of the crops they grew, of the wild flora of those parts. Garlic, cress, nettles, crosswort—all these featured in the place-names of the farms and villages that dotted the countryside—their comfortable names reminders of a gentle country that once existed in these parts, England. It still survived, of course, tenacious here and there, revealed in a glimpse of a languorous cricket match on a green, of a trout pool under willow branches, of a man in a flat cap digging up potatoes; a country that still existed but was being driven into redoubts such as this. The heart might ache for that England, thought one of the brothers; might ache for what we have lost.They almost missed the turning to the village, so quickly did it come upon them. There were oak trees at the edge of a field and immediately beyond these, meandering off to the left, was the road leading to the place they wanted. The man with the map shouted out, “Whoa! Slow down,” and the driver reacted quickly, stamping on the brakes of the Bristol, bringing it to a halt with a faint smell of scorched rubber. They looked at the sign, which was a low one, almost obscured by the topmost leaves of nettles and clumps of cow parsley. It was the place.It was a narrow road, barely wide enough for two vehicles. Here and there informal passing places had been established by local use—places where wheels had flattened the grass and pushed the hedgerows back a few inches. But you only needed these if there were other road-users, and there were none that Saturday afternoon. People were sleeping, or tending their gardens in the drowsy heat of summer, or perhaps just thinking.“It’s very quiet, isn’t it?” remarked the driver when they stopped to check their bearings at the road end.“That’s what I like about it,” said the other man. “This quietness. Do you remember that?”“We would never have noticed it. We would have been too young.”They drove on slowly to the edge of the village. The tower of a Norman church rose above a stand of alders. In some in?explicable mood of Victorian architectural enthusiasm, a small stone bobble, rather like a large cannonball, had been added at each corner of the tower. These additions were too small to ruin the original proportions, too large to be ignored; Suffolk churches were used to such spoliation, although in the past it had been carried out in a harsh mood of Puritan iconoclasm rather than prettification. There was to be no idolatry here: Marian and other suspect imagery had been rooted out, gouged from the wood of pew-ends and reredoses, chipped from stone baptismal fonts; stained glass survived, as it did here, only because it would be too costly to replace with the clear glass of Puritanism.Behind the church, the main street, a winding affair, was lined mostly by houses, joined to one another in the cheek-by-jowl democracy of a variegated terrace. Some of these were built of stone, flinted here and there in patterns— triangles, wavy lines; others, of wattle and daub, painted either in cream or in that soft pink which gives to parts of Suffolk its gentle glow. There were a couple of shops and an old pub where a blackboard proclaimed the weekend’s fare: hotpot, fish stew, toad-in-the-hole; the stubborn cuisine of England.“That post office,” said the driver. “What’s happened to it?”The navigator had folded the map and tucked it away in the leather pocket in the side of the passenger door. He looked at his brother, and he nodded.“Just beyond the end of the village,” said the driver. “It’s on the right. Just before . . .”His brother looked at him. “Just before Ingoldsby’s Farm. Remember?”The other man thought. A name came back to him, dredged up from a part of his memory he did not know he had. “The Aggs,” he said. “Mrs. Agg.”She had been waiting for them, they thought, because she opened the door immediately after they rang the bell. She smiled, and gestured for them to come in, with the warmth, the eagerness of one who gets few callers.“I just remember this house,” the driver said, looking about him. “Not very well, but just. Because when we were boys,” and he looked at his brother, “when we were boys we lived here. Until I was twelve. But you forget.”His brother nodded in agreement. “Yes. You know how things look different when you’re young. They look much bigger.”She laughed. “Because at that age one is looking at things from down there. Looking up. I was taken to see the Houses of Parliament when I was a little girl. I remember thinking that the tower of Big Ben was quite the biggest thing I had ever seen in my life—and it might have been, I suppose. But when I went back much later on, it seemed so much smaller. Rather disappointing, in fact.”She ushered them through the hall into a sanctum beyond, a drawing room into which French windows let copious amounts of light. Beyond these windows, an expanse of grass stretched out to a high yew hedge, a dark-green backdrop for the herb?aceous beds lining the lawn. There was a hedge of lavender, too, grown woody through age.“That was hers,” said the woman, pointing to the lavender hedge. “It needs cutting back, but I love it so much I can’t bring myself to do it.”“La planted that?”“I believe so,” said the woman.“We played there,” said one of the brothers, looking out into the garden. “It’s odd to think that. But we played there. For hours and hours. Day after day.”She left them and went to prepare tea. The brothers stood in front of the window.“What I said about things looking bigger,” one said. “One might say the same about a person’s life, don’t you think? A life may look bigger when you’re a child, and then later on . . .”“Narrower? Less impressive?”“I think so.”But the other thought that the opposite might be true, at least on occasion. “A friend told me about a teacher at school,” he said. “He was a very shy man. Timid. Ineffectual. And children mocked him—you know how quick they are to scent blood in the water. Then, later on, when he met him as an adult, he found out that this same teacher had been a well-known mountaineer and a difficult route had been named after him.”“And La’s life?”“I suspect that it was a very big one. A very big life led here . . .”“In this out-of-the-way place.”“Yes, in this sleepy little village.” He paused. “I suspect that our La was a real heroine.”Their hostess had come back into the room, carrying a tray. She put it down on a table and gestured to the circle of chintzy sofa and chairs. She had heard the last remark, and agreed. “Yes. La was a heroine. Definitely a heroine.”She poured the tea. “I assume that you know all about La. After all . . .” She hesitated. “But then she became ill, didn’t she, not so long after you all left this place. You can’t have been all that old when La died.” Read more

Features & Highlights

  • From the best-selling author of The No.1 Ladies' Detective Agency series comes a delightful and moving story that celebrates the healing powers of friendship and music.
  • It is 1939. Lavender—La to her friends—decides to flee London, not only to avoid German bombs but also to escape the memories of her shattered marriage. The peace and solitude of the small town she settles in are therapeutic . . . at least at first. As the war drags on, La is in need of some diversion and wants to boost the town's morale, so she organizes an amateur orchestra, drawing musicians from the village and the local RAF base. Among the strays she corrals is Feliks, a shy, proper Polish refugee who becomes her prized recruit—and the object of feelings she thought she'd put away forever. Does La's orchestra save the world? The people who come to hear it think so. But what will become of it after the war is over? And what will become of La herself? And of La's heart? With his all-embracing empathy and his gentle sense of humor, Alexander McCall Smith makes of La's life—and love—a tale to enjoy and cherish.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
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(136)
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★★★
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★★
7%
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23%
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Most Helpful Reviews

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A quiet book about momentous time

In his new stand-alone novel La's Orchestra Saves the World, Alexander McCall Smith tells the story of La (Lavendar) Stone, a Cambridge graduate who marries her sweetheart because it's the thing to do and subsequently finds herself falling in love with him. But her life doesn't unravel quite as she might have expected. World War II intervenes, for one thing, and La finds herself living in a small village in Suffolk, tending hens as part of the war effort and conducting an amateur orchestra by way of keeping up morale in the village and on the nearby RAF base.

I had every intention while reading the book to express surprise in my review that the author should have tacked onto his story such an unnecessary and uninteresting first chapter: it's set probably in the present day, or close enough, and introduces La as someone already dead, her orchestra a distant memory. Her life story, then, is a reminiscence. I dislike having a story framed in this way as it distances one from the main narrative. And I suppose it's an unwelcome reminder of the ephemerality of a single life. It tells you the end of the story--she's dead; it's all finished now one way or the other--before it even begins. That said, when you get to the last pages of the book, the first chapter suddenly makes sense, so it is not just an unnecessary appendage after all. I still don't like it, though, and I don't like the last chapter, either. It would be a slightly different book--but quite possibly a better one--if the first and last chapters were simply cut from it and the rest left as it stands. The last sentence of the book's penultimate chapter would even serve very nicely as this revised story's conclusion. Still, La's Orchestra, a quiet book about momentous times, is yet another worthy addition to McCall Smith's extensive oeuvre.

-- Debra Hamel
28 people found this helpful
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Another time, another place, another kind of novel for the prolific Alexander McCall Smith. And I loved it.

Alexander McCall Smith has a magical way with heroines and his new stand-alone novel is no exception. I'm sorry some reviewers here seem to think otherwise. I'm guessing their disappointments result from comparisons to the author's fiercely independent 21st century heroines Mma Ramotswe and Isabel Dalhousie. Which is understandable, but perhaps unfair.

This novel is set in the gray and worried world of World War II England, a whole 'nother time to be a woman. La (short for Lavender) Stone is a faithfully rendered woman of her time and, within that context, an unusually independent and admirable one. I dunno, maybe you have to be over-the-hill to recognize and appreciate the bravery of La's "you go, girl" moments and hard won triumphs over loneliness and longing. I thoroughly enjoyed my time with her and the novel's depiction of a place and people now gone. And I can't help but imagine what a delightful black and white movie it might make.

I was at a book fair last year where McCall Smith was asked which was his favorite character. "Bertie," said he. But from the kindly way he treats her--particularly considering that he gave her an orchestra (he has one of his own, you know)--I'm guessing he loves La nearly as much. So do I. And I wish the same to you.
12 people found this helpful
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A Big Life Led In An Out-Of-The Way Place

This is the quiet and gentle story of La (short for Lavender). She has moved from London to the country in 1939 after she finds out her marriage is over, "to remove herself from the physical space that her marriage occupied" and to forget about her previous life. Not long after, war is declared, and all citizens are called upon to do their part to support the war effort. La volunteers to assist with the care of chickens on a farm, and is also asked to organize an orchestra as a morale booster for troops and citizens alike. It is through La's work on the farm that she meets Feliks, a Polish airman who was badly hurt in battle, and lost the use of one eye. La and Feliks develop a friendship, and he is eventually encouraged to join the orchestra. After the hurt that La's heart has been through, will she be open to finding love again?

I did enjoy reading this book about La and her world. It is a gentle reminder about how even the seemingly smallest of lives can have an impact on others. I really like the way in which Alexander McCall Smith writes. His books are more character driven than plot driven, and because of this, his stories seem so real. I like to think that La did live at one time, and her orchestra really did play!! This book is highly readable and recommended!
6 people found this helpful
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an understated gem

No, it's not like his other books and it shouldn't be. It's a well-written old-fashioned novel that brims with life, drama and emotions, in an understated way. I loved it and the ending left me spellbound.
6 people found this helpful
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La's Orchestra Saves the World...A "nice" novel

Alexander McCall Smith's novel is what I would call a "nice" read. It's not particularly challenging and it was a very smooth read. It is nothing momentous in any sense, but is just an enjoyable, feel-good read. With elements of drama, humor, and suspense, the novel uses a wide variety of literary elements to engage the reader.

La is a heart-warming character, who somewhat captured my heart in her ability to overcome the challenges she could and could not forsee on the horizon. Her independence and innovation create a small sense of hope during WWII, a time when people were assured the world was on the verge of the end. Through La and her relationships with others, and the contrast of life in London and country life in Suffolk, Alexander McCall Smith successfully develops what I think can best be described as a charming novel.

La's Orchestra is just the kind of hopeful creation readers need to realize that in life we must place more weight on the little things. Optimism is what saves La from the world and herself. It is through her coping with change that the story can resonate with readers.

This novel is not particularly earth-shattering or life-changing but I think this is what is so enjoyable about it. It was just a nice, comfortable book to curl up and read. I flew through it and enjoyed La as a protagonist. You can read this without challenge and just appreciate it as a good story.
3 people found this helpful
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Review of La's Orchestra Saves the World

It's no secret that I love Alexander McCall Smith. I think his No.1 Ladies Detective Agency series is pretty darn near close to perfection.

In La's Orchestra Saves the World he writes with the same simple, pure style that he does in his other books and it works so well. I always feel as if life slows down and I can, figuratively speaking, smell the roses when I read one of his novels. I love the feeling of peace and calm I get and how he always finds the gentleness and kindness in people, no matter their nationality or circumstances.

Despite living in heart-breaking times and having a life that isn't filled with perfect scenarios, Lavender (La) crafts a corner out of her small world in Suffolk and lives through the horror of WWII doing what she can to help. I found it fascinating that, in reading through the book, the little things she was doing seemed .. somewhat small and inconsequential to me, the reader. That's not to say I didn't appreciate them, they were just things that seemed normal and things I would hope I would have done if I had lived during that time period. After putting the book down and thinking about it for a bit though, those small, seemingly inconsequential things start to grow and I started to realize how much the story of La meant. I always think that my small actions won't make that much of a difference and sometimes get discouraged - but every little thing does help. And I think that's what this story is all about.

Over the last several months I've read quite a few WWII books dealing with the Polish and I know this ranks up there as one I'll read again.

I'd recommend this book to anyone, just as I have with Smith's other books. It doesn't take long to read and it's worth every minute invested.
3 people found this helpful
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NEW VIEW OF WWII

Very good and interesting book. A tale of a small piece of England during WWII. La (short for Lavender) leads an ordinary life in London and eventually ends up in Suffolk. She helps the war effort by tending hens on a neighbor's farm. Through a fellow (Tim) she places Feliks into the same farm to assist the arthiritic owner. She grows very fond of Feliks and also suspicious of his "Polish" background. Her orchestra, thrown together from the RAF base nearby and several towns nearby, help the morale of the whole area during this time of woe."
3 people found this helpful
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A Personal Story

La's Orchestra Saves the World (2008) is a standalone novel. It is the story of a young British woman who started an amateur orchestra during World War II.

In this novel, Lavender Ferguson grew up in Surrey. Most people call her La. Her mother died when she was fifteen and her father never remarried.

Richard Stone is an athletic type who attended Cambridge. His family imports wines to England.

Mrs. Agg is a farmer's wife in Suffolk. She and Mr. Agg had a son named Lennie.

Percy Brown is a rural constable in Suffolk. He is very suspicious of gypsies.

In this story, La attended Girton college at Cambridge. Her tutor -- Dr. Price -- is a misanthrope. She thinks that women would be better off ignoring men. La has to agree with some of her comments, but not all.

Then La meets Richard. He is a very charming man who proposes to her within a month after their first meeting. La likes him, but doesn't want to marry him while she is attending college.

After graduation, though, La and Richard are married. He takes a position in the family firm and buys a nice house. La grows more and more fond of him, but she is still not sure whether she loves him.

Then Richard runs off with another woman. His father is very ashamed of the situation. When La does not want to stay in the house, Gerald gives her another in Suffolk.

La moves to the rural village. She finds the house well tended, although a bird has recently got in through a broken window. Mrs. Agg -- who has cared for the house while the Stones are in London -- visits shortly after La arrives.

La purchases a car from a local mechanic. One day, she drives to Bury -- the nearest town -- to purchase some items. When she arrives back home, La notices that someone has moved her tea caddy. She locks up and goes out to ask Mrs. Agg if she has been in the house.

Upon her return, she notices that the front door has been forced open from the inside. She drives over to the home of Percy and reports the incident. At first Percy is sure that the door must have been forced from the outside, but he rides to the house and finds everything as she had said.

Percy gives her some advice about burglars. Later, she goes outside and notices someone in her yard. She remembers Percy's advice and says "boo" loudly. The skulker runs away from the house.

Then Britain goes to war against Germany. La grows a vegetable garden and volunteers to work for a local farmer. Later she starts the orchestra with amateur musicians from Bury, the nearby base and her village.

This tale starts with two brothers returning to their childhood home. They meet a woman living in the house where La had lived. She tells them about La, beginning in an earlier time before World War II.

The flashback portion follows the life of La from her childhood to the mid 1960's. She always had a determination about her life, but lost her ambition after Richard left her. Then she gradually regained her determination with the establishment of her orchestra.

This story shows La's thoughts and the incidents that developed her character. Although she had disappointments and loneliness, La finds that she had good friends and a mostly contented life. The tale ends in a reunion with an old love interest.

This novel is clearly a work by McCall Smith. It has the phrases, moods and style of his later fiction. Read and enjoy!

Highly recommended for McCall Smith fans and for anyone else who enjoys tales of rural England from the parabellum period to the end of World War II.

-Bill Jordin
3 people found this helpful
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A New Direction

Soooooooo happy to find that McCall Smith has taken his talents in a new direction. I am encouraged that he may well have plans to write enough to keep me busy for many more years. This novel, almost an "Austenesque" story, was captivating without being cloying. The La character was well developed, and McCall Smith's usual, beautiful descriptions of the place and people of Scotland was most satisfying.
2 people found this helpful
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A woman who lives a simple life yet touches the lives of many

After losing her husband, La (short for Lavender) goes to live in a small house in the English countryside owned by her in-laws. The time is the late 1930s and when WWII begins, La occupies herself by helping a local farmer with his chickens and leading an amateur orchestra made up of locals and men from the local airbase.

This is a quiet story about a woman who lives a simple life yet touches the lives of many.
2 people found this helpful