The Rainbow and The Rose

by Nevil Shute

Paperback, 2000

Status

Available

Call number

823.912

Collection

Publication

House of Stratus (2000), Edition: New Edition, Paperback, 312 pages

Description

When Johnny Pascoe attempts to rescue a sick girl from the Tasmanian outback his plane crashes leaving him dangerously injured. Ronnie Clarke, who was trained by Pascoe, endeavours to fly a doctor in to help but this proves more difficult than he imagined. As he waits overnight at Pascoe's house in order to try again the next day Clarke revisits the past of this unusual man - and reveals the shocking and tragic secrets that have influenced his life.

User reviews

LibraryThing member MarthaJeanne
Vintage Shute. It combines both the English and Australian flying themes, as well as dream sequences that pull different time frames together.
LibraryThing member thorold
A good, mature Nevil Shute, with a reasonable mix of emotional interest and aviation technicalities. The story takes us from France in the Great War to Tasmania in the fifties, via an interlude in 1920s England and an extended stopover in Fiji, and all the settings are handled with plenty of
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convincing detail.

If Round the bend should have been God and the art of aircraft maintenance, then the flippant title for this one would surely be Biggles and Lady Chatterley (even if the frame story has more resemblance to an episode of Flying doctors). At the centre of the story is a Doomed Love Affair between the Lady of the Manor, whose husband is in the loony bin, and the ex-First World War pilot who runs the local flying school. Sounds corny, but Shute just about manages to get away with it. What's a bit more difficult to live with is the very awkward narrative device he uses to present the story through two separate first-person narrators. This is a bit messy, and makes it look as though he changed his mind about how to present the story partway through.
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LibraryThing member JenneB
Strangely constructed story, but still enjoyable in that Nevil Shute way!
LibraryThing member Meredy
Six-word review: Pilot's life passes before friend's eyes.

Extended review:

Oddly titled novel of aviation and doomed romance, with more than a touch of what we'd now call "magic realism," something I've seen in other Shute novels: one consciousness sliding into another to reveal a hidden narrative.
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Here it occurs through the medium of dreams and the effect of environmental proximity. The author achieves a nice balance between the plausible and the impossible.

Shute's fascination with the mechanical, and especially with aircraft and piloting, takes central focus as every event somehow wraps itself around that core. Even though I have no particular knowledge of this field, other than the lore that comes through culture and fiction, I could feel the way the subject gripped him and dominated his story. Some of his fervor was contagious enough to hold my attention even after it began to wear on me.

The story itself is one of personal drama, love and loss, and eventual reconciliation with life as it is. The predictable ending is nonetheless moving and in its own way satisfying.

I chose this novel because it is one of the few Shutes that are available at my library and just about the last one that I hadn't already read. I still fail to see the significance of the title, a line from a poem by Rupert Brooke, which by the marketing practices of today would signal an entirely different type of reading matter. If it weren't for the author's name, I would never have touched a book with a sentimental-sounding title like this.

I'm giving it only three stars because the technical content does overwhelm the story, but it's still a good Shute treatment of unknown private lives that run deep.
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LibraryThing member Bridgey
I am a massive fan of Shute ever since reading 'On the Beach' a number of years ago. Since then I have worked my way through most of his catalogue and always enjoyed the softness of his works and captivating storylines. I suppose it had to happen one day, but this is the first of his books I really
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just couldn't get into.

The book follows Johnny Pascoe, a brilliant pilot who has has crashed his plane in an attempt to rescue a sick girl in a remote Australian location. He is seriously ill and although being looked after by the girls mother if a real doctor does not get to see him it is obvious he has little time left. An old pupil of Johnny's by the name of Ronnie Clark offers to fly a doctor to the site in the hope of providing treatment, but hampered by bad weather and a landing strip no better than a small clearing it is much harder than imagined. Whilst waiting for the doctor and in between attempts Ronnie stays at the Johnny's home where he is able to look at the ailing pilots belongings and build a picture in his mind of the life he has led. By way of a series of dreams Ronnie lives through some of the major events and lost loves of Johnny's youth and allows the reader to understand the events that have shaped the man.

Where I enjoyed the almost supernatural element shown on 'In the Wet' here I felt it really distracted me. The book seemingly drifted from Johnny's life to Ronnie's with no warning which made it really difficult at time to know who was speaking. I am sure this must have been quite an innovative way of writing at the time, but I just found it annoying. I suppose if I had to sum up the book I would say that as an introduction to Shute it may be worth starting elsewhere, as if this was my first novel by the author it would have also been my last, and I would have missed out on some brilliant stories.
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LibraryThing member jjmcgaffey
Good, in standard Shute style. Outback Australia, injured pilot, connections - the boy he taught to fly is a commercial pilot now and wants to go rescue him, but the weather isn't cooperating. Two very different doctors, two very different women with their own connection to the injured pilot - and
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some very strange dreams. It's not a happy ending, but it's not a sad one either - very rich. Worth reading, probably worth rereading in a few years.
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LibraryThing member kslade
Good story...it would make a pretty good movie too. An older pilot trying to rescue an injured veteran pilot in Tasmania and reflecting on his own past.
LibraryThing member DeltaQueen50
I usually enjoy Nevile Shute’s stories but I have to admit that The Rainbow and The Rose, originally published in 1958, will not go down as a favorite. The book tells two stories and while I was quite interested in the one about the various attempts to rescue a severely injured pilot from a
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remote location, the second story, told through dream sequences, was a series of flashbacks through the pilots’ life.

Although an interesting concept, having one story frame another, I found the style of the flashback portions was very confusing, and it didn’t make a lot of sense that his past would be revealed in this manner. The survival story was more interesting but again there were a number of strange coincidences that the reader had to accept that were pretty far-fetched.

I will continue to read this author as The Rainbow and The Rose is the first of the many books of his that I have read that I didn’t really like. My enjoyment of A Town Called Alice, Pied Piper and On the Beach offset this one disappointment.
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LibraryThing member edwinbcn
When it comes to fiction, readers are willing to accept the most fantastic and supernatural, but this willingness has a lot to do with the genre. We can accept almost anything in Fantasy or Science-Fiction that we could not accept in psychological fiction. This is more or less the case with The
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rainbow and the rose.

Like many of Nevil Shute's novels The rainbow and the rose is set in the world of aviation. More than other novels, The rainbow and the rose describes a lot of bravoura and daring-do, even to the point where endangering others is discussed by characters in the novel. To see what people are willing to do for others, the true test of friendship and loyalty, are an important theme in the novel. Some of the norms and values in Shute's work are now quite distant to us, and start feeling quaint. Although The rainbow and the rose is one of Shute's final novels, first published in 1958, Shute's moral framework belongs firmy to the 1920s - 40s. Still, unlike much other fiction from that period, the novels of Nevil Shute are still very readable because they are so well-written.

What is a bit difficult about The rainbow and the rose is the jumping perspective. The narrator who for the most part is the main character sees the past through they eyes of another character. When this first happens, the circumstances seem very natural, as the narrator, Ron Clake, is deadly tired and stays the night in the home of the other character, John Pascoe. However, throughout the novel this happens a few more times, really stretching the reader's willingness to go along in this. Toward the end of the novel the narrator even has a moment that by the end of the novel is explained or supposed to have happened around the time Pascoe died. Still all in all this is a powerful and memorable novel.
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Original publication date

1958

Physical description

312 p.; 8 inches

ISBN

1842322834 / 9781842322833
Page: 0.7577 seconds