🚶‍♀️📕Mrs Palfrey at the Claremont by Elizabeth Taylor

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  • Опубліковано 16 чер 2024
  • What did Emily’s walking book club make of this deeply moving novel about an elderly widow’s chance friendship with a young writer?
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 10

  • @MargaretPinard
    @MargaretPinard Рік тому +2

    Ooh, love your point about letter-writing. 🤔 Enjoyed this book a lot.

    • @emilyrhodeswriter
      @emilyrhodeswriter  Рік тому +1

      Ah thank you! Such a wonderful book - worth writing a letter about in fact!

  • @enidlacob1157
    @enidlacob1157 Рік тому +2

    Thanks for this I really enjoyed listening to your review of it As you say it is a gentle read and what we all need now. It is sad but has so many moments that filled me with joy. Loneliness is so well portrayed as is friendship

    • @emilyrhodeswriter
      @emilyrhodeswriter  Рік тому

      Thank you Enid - really lovely to have your thoughts on it

  • @jackhaggerty1066
    @jackhaggerty1066 Рік тому +2

    If I had to choose just ONE post-war English novelist to take to a remote village in the Cotswolds it would be Elizabeth Taylor, who just wins out over ... Richard Hughes, William Golding, T.H. White, Henry Green, Graham Greene, James Hanley, Iris Murdoch, Gwyn Thomas, Muriel Spark, Alan Sillitoe, JG Ballard, Brian Aldiss, James Kennaway, Stan Barstow, David Storey, B.S. Johnson, Ann Quinn, Penelope Fitzgerald & Alan Garner.
    I reread them all especially *In A Summer Season* *The Blush* *A Game of Hide and Seek* *A Wreath of Roses* *A View of the Harbour*
    The biography by Nicola Beauman was worth waiting on. Her posthumous novel *Blaming* made me wish for more or her journals.
    She sat in Harrods observing Paul Bailey who worked there because she liked his first novel. Kingsley Amis was at her funeral.

    • @emilyrhodeswriter
      @emilyrhodeswriter  Рік тому

      Jack - that's quite a list of great writers! I'm so glad you hold Elizabeth Taylor in such high esteem . I agree she is the perfect companion for a Cotswolds village (although maybe Laurie Lee's Cider with Rosie would have to have a look in too?). Thanks so much for sharing your thoughts and these glorious bits of info.

    • @jackhaggerty1066
      @jackhaggerty1066 Рік тому

      @@emilyrhodeswriter As a critic you can help us see Elizabeth Taylor's genius. Readers need the help of critics.
      I think it was E.M. Foster who said that the critic follows the writer as the eye follows the bird's shadow, until it soars away.
      Who would have predicted that a woman (Frances Wilson) would write the biography of Lawrence and another (Alison MacLeod) would write the novel on Lawrence?
      Lawrence was off the grid as far as readers went. It is touching to see the dedication of the woman who looked after the small museum in Eastwood in Anthony Burgess's film, The Rage of D.H. Lawrence (UA-cam).
      Susan Sontag said she had to read everything by Paul Goodman as she had to read all of Lawrence even when both writers drove her mad with their fascist misogyny. Goodman disliked the company of women and rebuffed her on many occasions.
      Karen Blixen said the Nazi officers who were billeted at her stately home were amused by her wit and informed opinions but did not take them seriously because women were only there to be mothers ... Frau, die sich um ihren Mann kummert.
      Getting back to Elizabeth Taylor, Saul Bellow in London dismissed her novel (Mrs Palfrey) as too minor for a literary award.
      This minor-major talk irritates me no end. I ought to have included Barbara Pym & Rose Macaulay in my list. Minor? Who cares?
      Kingsley Amis said that Elizabeth's funeral was bleak in its lack of ritual. I wonder what she thought of Rose Macaulay's Anglicanism ?
      If you have not read it do get the biography of B. Pym by Paula Byrne - a book to read in Cheltenham where my sister lives.

    • @jackhaggerty1066
      @jackhaggerty1066 Рік тому +1

      Shame on me that I left out Anthony Powell & V.S. Naipaul from my list of essential post-war British novelists.

    • @jackhaggerty1066
      @jackhaggerty1066 Рік тому

      Or (there is no end to British post-war writers) Margiad Evans : read *The Nightingale Silenced* online.
      P.J. Kavanagh was instrumental in getting Margiad Evans published again.
      Kavanagh, who trained at the Old Vic, recited five of his poems for Poetry Archive online.
      The second poem Beyond Decoration alludes to the death of his wife Sally Wogan Philipps, daughter of Rosamond Lehmann and Wogan Philipps 2nd Baron Milford, the only Communist member of the House of Lords.
      *The Perfect Stranger* : P.J. Kavanagh tells of Sally's death in Java where he lectured with the British Council.
      Kavanagh read his poem *Edward Thomas in Heaven* at the Cheltenham Festival. I mention this on your Gavin Maxwell post.

    • @MargaretPinard
      @MargaretPinard Рік тому

      I loved this list, as someone coming rather late to this niche of riches!