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Gone With the Wish
(1986)(The first book in the Eileen Goudge's Swept Away series)
A novel by Eileen Goudge
Publisher's Weekly
Louise Greenspan, a flower child of the 1980s, longs for the days before she was born, when freedom of expression was in and alligator shirts were out. Through the personals, she corresponds with Sergeant Pepper, her ''kindred sixties spirit,'' with ''a tie-dyed soul just like hers.'' She scorns the advances of a boy named Ethan, though being near him has a ''weird effect on hersort of like being stung by a spark of static electricity.'' Lou uses a computer to go back in time to Woodstock, where she finds a doctor to deliver a hippie couple's baby. She travels to her own hometown, and meets her mother as a teenager. Since the boy her mother loves isn't her father, Lou has to get her parents together and returns to the 1980s in time to fall in love with Ethan (a.k.a. Sergeant Pepper, a.k.a. the hippie couple's baby, grown-up). One of two inaugural titles in the Swept Away series, this is as inane and predictable as they come. It's far too long for such a silly plot, and stuffed with platitudes besides. (12-up)
School Library Journal
ea. vol: 166p. (Swept Away Series). Avon. 1986. $2.50. A new series, this one promises a girl ''swept away by time. . .swept away by love.'' The creators deserve credit for this new twist on an old genre: historical romance with touches of Back to the Future . A computer programmed for time travel sweeps the heroines away to their chosen period in history. In the first, Ashley jumps back to her great grandmother's Civil War south and helps her elope with her true love. In the second, 1960s freak Lou goes back to Woodstock and assists at the birth of her boyfriend, as well as uncovers the latent hippie in her mother, a stiff corporate lawyer. A mess of wooden writing and plot contrivance, these are idiotic, but good, clean fun.
Genre: Young Adult Fantasy
Louise Greenspan, a flower child of the 1980s, longs for the days before she was born, when freedom of expression was in and alligator shirts were out. Through the personals, she corresponds with Sergeant Pepper, her ''kindred sixties spirit,'' with ''a tie-dyed soul just like hers.'' She scorns the advances of a boy named Ethan, though being near him has a ''weird effect on hersort of like being stung by a spark of static electricity.'' Lou uses a computer to go back in time to Woodstock, where she finds a doctor to deliver a hippie couple's baby. She travels to her own hometown, and meets her mother as a teenager. Since the boy her mother loves isn't her father, Lou has to get her parents together and returns to the 1980s in time to fall in love with Ethan (a.k.a. Sergeant Pepper, a.k.a. the hippie couple's baby, grown-up). One of two inaugural titles in the Swept Away series, this is as inane and predictable as they come. It's far too long for such a silly plot, and stuffed with platitudes besides. (12-up)
School Library Journal
ea. vol: 166p. (Swept Away Series). Avon. 1986. $2.50. A new series, this one promises a girl ''swept away by time. . .swept away by love.'' The creators deserve credit for this new twist on an old genre: historical romance with touches of Back to the Future . A computer programmed for time travel sweeps the heroines away to their chosen period in history. In the first, Ashley jumps back to her great grandmother's Civil War south and helps her elope with her true love. In the second, 1960s freak Lou goes back to Woodstock and assists at the birth of her boyfriend, as well as uncovers the latent hippie in her mother, a stiff corporate lawyer. A mess of wooden writing and plot contrivance, these are idiotic, but good, clean fun.
Genre: Young Adult Fantasy
Used availability for Eileen Goudge's Gone With the Wish