I just love the way Pym describes characters and her writing.
At a book sale Leonora Eyre meets Humphrey and James Boyce, uncle and nephew. They get entangled in each others lives, while we also meets other people close to them.
I just love the way Pym describes characters and her writing.
At a book sale Leonora Eyre meets Humphrey and James Boyce, uncle and nephew. They get entangled in each others lives, while we also meets other people close to them.
The first part of this sentence reminds me of the first sentence in Pride and Prejudice
Not your typical Pym- his one is darker and more cutting but still marked by her keen eye and wit. I honestly didn‘t like it at first, the main character is vain and manipulative and the love triangle she gets involved in wasn‘t especially interesting at first. Then the triangle becomes a square and as the players switch around and the winners become losers, it all became both comedic and tragic. Unexpected but still so good. #24in2024
A lovely story with some interesting characters.
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/6842995044
#vintage
#oxford
#midcentury
#england
#fiction
#historicalfiction
#BookReport
Lots of comfort reading in June. It‘s hard to pick a favourite. The Sweet Dove Died or The Masqueraders, I think.
Barbara Pym joins the permissive society😳 No anthropologists, Anglicans or excellent women in this one, and the entanglements between the characters are as much sexual as romantic. Pym‘s wit is as entertaining as ever, but I have to take issue with her on one point. “Books as presents were somehow lacking in excitement and romance.” What rot!
https://youtu.be/S6mUjBFrZBk
RIP, Tina
Happy 80th, Mom!
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Weekly Highlights
Tainna: The Unseen Ones, Short Stories by Norma Dunning
Prancing Novelist: In Praise Of Ronald Firbank by Brigid Brophy
Crampton Hodnet by Barbara Pym
Pymworld seems to consist almost exclusively of anthropologists, librarians and functionaries of the Anglican Church and I am so here for the delightful ways in which she puts them through their paces. Near the end an anthropologist suggests (facetiously) a study called “The Wiles of Nice Women in Civilized Society” which would fit this story nicely if we added “and the Self-Absorption of Men”.