Book Review: I Capture the Castle by Dodie Smith (Classics Club Spin #43)

Title: I Capture the Castle
Author: Dodie Smith
Publication date: 1948
Length: 351 pages
Rating:

Rating: 5 out of 5.

Seventeen-year-old Cassandra Mortmain and her family may live in a ramshackle old English castle, but that’s about as romantic as her life gets. While her beautiful older sister, Rose, longs to live in a Jane Austen novel, Cassandra knows that meeting an eligible man to marry isn’t in either of their futures when their home is crumbling and they have to sell their furniture for food. So Cassandra instead strives to hone her writing skills in her journals. Until one day when their new landlords move in, which include two (very handsome) sons, and the lives of the Mortmain sisters change forever.

I Capture the Castle has been on my to-read list for years — I actually own two different editions! — and yet it’s taken me until now, thanks to the most recent Classics Club Spin, for me to finally read it. I’m so glad that I did!

In I Capture the Castle, we spend six months in the life of Cassandra Mortmain, a 17-year-old girl whose family has seen better days. Her father was once a brilliant, esteemed author — but it’s been many, many years since the publication of his one book, and he hasn’t written a word since. In the heyday of his success, the family — father, mother, Cassandra, older sister Rose and younger brother Thomas — moving into an old, crumbling castle, with visions of a charmed, quirky, lovely life ahead of them. Between the father’s brief prison stint (over what was apparently a misunderstanding involving a cake knife) and the mother’s death, the family’s well-being entered a downward spiral. Even the introduction of a glamorous young stepmother — Topaz, a beautiful woman who’d been a famous artists’ model — can’t dispel the gloom that hangs over their lives.

With barely any money coming in any longer from the father’s book — and his utter lack of interest in his family’s daily lives — they exist on meager food in a house where anything of value, including furniture, curtains, and clothing, has long been sold off. When the landlord from whom they have a 40-year lease on the castle dies and his American heirs show up, a new chapter opens for the Mortmain family. The heirs are a pair of 20-something-year-old brothers, who immediately take an interest in the eccentric family they discover living in the castle.

Cassandra’s sister Rose sees an opportunity to escape into an advantageous marriage… never mind whether she’s actually in love or not. Meanwhile, Cassandra devotes her time to writing — I Capture the Castle is her chronicle of her family’s experiences that year — while also coming to a clearer understanding of herself, her hopes and fears, and her place in the world.

I Capture the Castle is a lovely, quirky coming-of-age story. Set in the 1930s, Cassandra is not quite so naive as we might expect from this sort of tale. She learns about love and romance, marrying for money, loyalty and purpose, and so much more. The story doesn’t go exactly where I thought it was headed, and I was charmed throughout by all the ups and downs of Cassandra’s cleverness and imagination.

I was put in mind of Anne Shirley at times, such as Cassandra’s exclamation:

“Oh, it is wonderful to wake up in the morning with things to look forward to!”

… or …

It is rather exciting to write by moonlight.

Cassandra’s imagination leads her to some truly inspired ideas and ways of looking at the world — but she is more world-weary than Anne Shirley and has seen bleak times over recent years. While the initial descriptions of her family’s circumstances have a touch of whimsy, we soon learn through Cassandra’s journals that their situation is quite dire, despite the good humor that serves as a front for hunger and going without.

She’s also rather sharp-eyed when it comes to the people she encounters, even as her coming-of-age journey brings her new understandings of relationships, motivations, and her own inner life. As one person in her circle observes:

Ah, but you’re the insidious type–Jane Eyre with of touch of Becky Sharp. A thoroughly dangerous girl.

(I wouldn’t call Cassandra dangerous… but she does go off in unexpected ways, and carries out some rash plans that are a bit batty… including locking someone in the castle tower, although it all works out well in the end.)

One of the truly excellent aspects of I Capture the Castle is the sharp character depictions. Cassandra herself is wonderful, but so are so many of the supporting characters, including Topaz, the Vicar, and the handsome young farmhand who seems fated for a career on the screen. They’re all vivid and memorable, and I’d love to spend more time with any one of them.

I truly enjoyed I Capture the Castle. It feels like a book I’ll need to read again. The first time through, I read it for the plot, eager to see what becomes of the characters and their occasionally ridiculous or complicated situations. I imagine that a second reading would let me focus more on Cassandra’s inner life, her flights of fancy, and the unique way she views the world around her.

I’m considering trying to track down the 2003 movie version of I Capture the Castle. Has anyone seen it?

Meanwhile, I’m very pleased to finally have read this book! I must say, I’ve had quite a good streak with my Classics Club Spin books. Not a bad one in the bunch! I’m already looking forward to whatever the next spin brings me.

About the author:

Dorothy Gladys “Dodie” Smith, born in 1896 in Lancashire, England, was one of the most successful female dramatists of her generation. She wrote Autumn, Crocus, and Dear Octopus, among other plays. I Capture the Castle, her first novel, was written in the 1940s while she was living in America. An immediate success, it marked her crossover from playwright to novelist, and was produced as a play in 1954. Smith also wrote the novels The Town in Bloom, It Ends with Revelations, A Tale of Two Families, and The Girl in the Candle-Lit Bath, but she is best known today as the author of two highly popular stories for young readers: The Hundred and One Dalmatians and The Starlight Barking. She died in 1990.

My Classics Club Spin book for winter/spring 2026 will be…

Earlier in the week, I shared a post with my list of books for the newest Classics Club Spin challenge (see it here), and today, this spin’s number was announced. (For those keeping track, it’s CCSpin #43, and for me personally, #15!)

Hosted by The Classics Club blog, the Classics Club Spin is a reading adventure where participants come up with a list of classics they’d like to read, number them 1 to 20, and then read the book that corresponds to the “spin” number that comes up.

For CCSpin #43, the lucky number is:

And that means I’ll be reading:

I Capture the Castle by Dodie Smith
Published 1948

Synopsis:

I Capture the Castle tells the story of seventeen-year-old Cassandra Mortmain and her family, who live in not-so-genteel poverty in a ramshackle old English castle. Here she strives, over six turbulent months, to hone her writing skills. She fills three notebooks with sharply funny yet poignant entries. Her journals candidly chronicle the great changes that take place within the castle’s walls and her own first descent into love. By the time she pens her final entry, she has “captured the castle”– and the heart of the reader– in one of literature’s most enchanting entertainments.

And here’s the synopsis from the hardcover deluxe edition released in 2017 from Wednesday Books:

Seventeen-year-old Cassandra Mortmain and her family may live in a ramshackle old English castle, but that’s about as romantic as her life gets. While her beautiful older sister, Rose, longs to live in a Jane Austen novel, Cassandra knows that meeting an eligible man to marry isn’t in either of their futures when their home is crumbling and they have to sell their furniture for food. So Cassandra instead strives to hone her writing skills in her journals. Until one day when their new landlords move in, which include two (very handsome) sons, and the lives of the Mortmain sisters change forever.

Finally! I’ve had I Capture the Castle on my to-read list for ages, and it’s been on my spin lists since the very first time I participated. I own a battered old paperback edition, and a few years ago I also picked up the hardcover deluxe edition:

Why has it taken me so long to read this book? No idea… except once I started including it on my spin lists, I’ve just been waiting for its turn to come around. And now it has!

I’m very happy with this spin! I’m looking forward to starting I Capture the Castle — probably a bit later this month. The deadline to finish this spin book is March 29th, which gives me plenty of time. I’ll be back with my reaction before then.

What do you think of my spin result this time around?

There’s a movie adaptation of I Capture the Castle from 2003 — so assuming I can find it to stream, I’ll plan to watch it before the end of March as well!

PS – Did you know… I Capture the Castle was Dodie Smith’s first novel, but she’s perhaps best known as the author of The Hundred and One Dalmatians!

Here’s my list of 20 titles for Classics Club Spin #43:

  1. The House on the Strand by Daphne DuMaurier
  2. I Capture the Castle by Dodie Smith
  3. The Ghost and Mrs. Muir by R. A. Dick
  4. This Rough Magic by Mary Stewart
  5. The Mysterious Affair at Styles by Agatha Christie
  6. White Fang by Jack London
  7. A Little Princess by Frances Hodgson Burnett
  8. The Tenant of Wildfell Hall by Anne Brontë
  9. Frenchman’s Creek by Daphne DuMaurier
  10. Pat of Silver Bush by L. M. Montgomery
  11. Peony by Pearl Buck
  12. Something Wicked This Way Comes by Ray Bradbury
  13. Frederica by Georgette Heyer
  14. The Return of the Soldier by Rebecca West
  15. The Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K. Le Guin
  16. Cakes and Ale by W. Somerset Maugham
  17. Tevye the Dairyman and Motl the Cantor’s Son by Sholem Aleichem
  18. Queen Lucia by E. F. Benson
  19. Sunset Song by Lewis Grassic Gibbon
  20. Under the Rainbow by Susan Scarlett

My previous Classics Club Spin books:

CCSpin29: The Black Moth by Georgette Heyer
CCSpin30: Cannery Row by John Steinbeck
CCSpin31: A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court by Mark Twain
CCSpin32: O Pioneers! by Willa Cather
CCSpin33: Picnic at Hanging Rock by Joan Lindsay
CCSpin34: Herland by Charlotte Perkins Gilman
CCSpin35: Cranford by Elizabeth Gaskell
CCSpin36: A Night to Remember by Walter Lord
CCSpin37: Howards End by E. M. Forster
CCSpin38: The Sound of Waves by Yukio Mishima
CCSpin39: An Old-Fashioned Girl by Louisa May Alcott
CCSpin40: Dracula by Bram Stoker
CCSpin41: The Old Man and the Sea by Ernest Hemingway
CCSpin42: My Brilliant Career by Miles Franklin

Are you participating in this Classics Club Spin? If so, what book will you be reading?