Green Doors
Ethel Cook Eliot
Rated: 3.00 of 5 stars
3.00
· 1 ratings · 197 pages · Published: 1933
Those who responded so happily to the author’s previous novel, “Ariel Dances,” will find an even deeper and more vital pleasure here. For again Mrs. Eliot has given us a story of fresh charm and has added an authentic element of joy which is born in a richly motivated soil of character and human aspirations toward the “durable satisfactions of life.” The scene shifts between the doctor’s city office and Clare’s country home. The office atmosphere is now and again stark with human suffering. Luxury and an easy graciousness of living characterize the country home. But the final shift of scene is to the “green doors” through which Lewis and Petra and several others move toward the reality and meaning of their lives.