
La Società Letteraria e delle Torte di Buccia di Patata di Guernsey
4.19
813,230 valutazioni·66,323 recensioni
Una straordinaria storia ambientata sull'isola di Guernsey durante l'occupazione tedesca, e di una società tanto straordinaria quanto il suo nome. "Regalatevi questo libro, per favore, non posso raccomandarlo abbastanza." (Elizabeth Gilbert, autrice di Mangia, Prega, Ama) "Mi chiedo come sia arrivat...
- pagine
- 277
- Format
- Hardcover
- Pubblicato
- 2008-07-29
- Editore
- The Dial Press
- ISBN
- 9780385340991
Sull'autore

Mary Ann Shaffer
100 libri · 0 follower
Mary Ann Shaffer worked as an editor, a librarian, and in bookshops. Her life-long dream was to someday write her own book and publish it.The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Societywas her first novel. Unfortunately, she became very ill with cancer and so she asked her niece, Annie Barrows, the author of the chil...
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Valutazione e Recensione
What do you think?
Recensioni della comunità
66,323 recensioni4.2
813,230 valutazioni
5
45%
4
30%
3
15%
2
7%
1
3%
emma·5 years ago
I don't know why I started reading this, and I don't know why I continued reading this, and I don't know why I finished reading this.For starters, I don't know why I picked it up, because although I have heard of it approximately 47382947 times, it has never once sounded interesting to me. Not even the movie version with Lily James. (And I mean, have you seen Lily James? If she can't lock my interest down, nothing can.)Secondly, when I inexplicably picked it up, reading it did not make it any mo...
MarilynW·5 years ago
The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Societyby Mary Ann Shaffer, Annie Barrows, John Lee (Narrator), Juliet Mills (Narrator), Paul Boehmer (Narrator), Susan Duerden (Narrator), Rosalyn Landor (Narrator)Two years ago, I watched the film, The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, and my memories of the film made me want to experience the audio version of the book. I enjoyed the film but feel like it was much more "fluffy" than the book, leaning more on the romantic side of the story ...
Zoë·7 years ago
Although the abrupt ending frustrated me, the rest of the book was so soothing. This is probably due to the fact it was written in letters to loved ones and not the subject matter itself, as it focuses heavily on the atrocities of WWII. Also, it's a book about books! Nothing makes me happier than reading a book about why reading is wonderful.I read this because I watched and loved the Netflix adaptation (yes, I'm that monster who sometimes watches adaptations before reading the source material)....
Melissa·7 years ago
*3.5 stars*
“Perhaps there is some secret sort of homing instinct in books that brings them to their perfect readers. How delightful if that were true.”
Believe it or not—as shallow as this may sound—the stunning movie tie-in cover was the catalyst, goading me to take a hard look and commit to a book that’s done little more than float along my periphery for years.What do you get when you combine a roast pig dinner, an unavoidable lie and the most unappetizing pie? A mouthful: The Guernsey Lite...
Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽·12 years ago
I loved this book - it's on my favorites shelf. So obviously I recommend it!In my March 2018 buddy read with Trish (which kind of disintegrated because she raced ahead and finished the whole book in like one day :p) I was impressed with how well the authors melded actual historical facts about the island of Guernsey during WWII, and people's wartime experiences, with the novel's storyline. I could see the seams a little - interesting true stories and anecdotes tend to show up in the book as rand...
Will Byrnes·16 years ago
Annie Barrows and Mary Ann Schaffer - image from from chrestomanci.over-blog.com - Schaffer wrote most of the book, but was terminally ill so called in her niece, Barrows, to help her complete it. The GL&PPPS tells of Nazi occupation of this Channel Island during WW II. The story is told via a series of letters exchanged between residents of the island and a writer attempting to learn about their experiences. We are offered a wide range of characters, some warm and charming, some extremist ...
Megha·16 years ago
Dear Mary Ann Shaffer,I recently read your book 'The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society'. It brought a few questions to my mind.Juliet writes in one of her letters: "Dear Sidney, What an inspired present you sent kit - red satin tap shoes covered with sequins" Didn't Sidney know what present he had sent?If you had to resort to sentences like these to speak what you wanted to, didn't you realize that the letter format and your writing didn't go well together?Learning from your bad exam...
Alisa·17 years ago
I'm in favor of:
-pig farmers as romantic leads
-parrots named Zenobia who eat cuckoo clocks
-women who do the asking
I'm not in favor of:
-strong silent types as romantic leads
-adorable children
-parrots getting more page time than goats
-pig farmers as romantic leads
-parrots named Zenobia who eat cuckoo clocks
-women who do the asking
I'm not in favor of:
-strong silent types as romantic leads
-adorable children
-parrots getting more page time than goats
Emma Kaufmann·17 years ago
Once again I find myself reading ten pages of a book which is meant to be 'great' and wondering why it is just rubbish. I was meant to read this for a book club but it was about as palatable as a potato peel pie so I spat it out uneaten.Now, I'm sure there are American authors who can write in an authentic British voice (no one springs to mind, and Elizabeth George is terrible at it but at least her plot is not clunky) but Mary Ann Shaffer isn't one of them.This book has an epistolary plot that ...
Linda Sexauer·17 years ago
Several years ago, I worked at an art gallery here in Anchorage. Though I loved the art, I wasn’t much good at selling it. More often than not, I just chatted up the customers, who were from all over the world.One night, four elderly people wandered in. They told me they were from a tiny island off the coast of southern England called “Guernsey”. I’d never heard of it, so they proudly explained it was the only part of British soil that had been occupied by the Nazis during World War II. The isla...