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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
35 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A marvellous book.,
This review is from: Excellent Women (Paperback)
Spinsters, vicars, and anthropologists. It doesn't sound very promising material, but this is one of the best Pyms. While being quietly funny (for instance, the moment when the heroine, having tasted beer for the first time in a pub, is disappointed because it tastes like dishwater), it nevertheless conveys the pathos of the lives of ordinary people like the vicar's unmarried sister, terribly distressed at the spite of his fiancee.Mildred, the heroine, tells her story in the first person. She is a pillar of the parish who is drawn into the more exciting and dramatic world of her neighbours in the flat below, and then into anthropological circles. This last gives rise to a great deal of humour, as BP makes anthropology sound so ridiculous, if worthy. One of the great things about BP is the way major charcters in one novel appear as minor characters in another; so, for instance, Allegra Grey is going to move to the parish of, so to speak, "A Glass of Blessings."
12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
"I was not really first in anybody's life. I could so very easily be replaced.",
By
This review is from: Excellent Women (VMC Designer Collection) (Hardcover)
Sly and subtle, this comic novel by one of England's most under-recognized novelists depicts the life of its main character so poignantly that readers will find themselves as close to tears as they may be to chuckles. Mildred Lathbury, at thirty-one, already regards herself as a spinster, a woman who has completely repressed her inner self so that she can lead an "excellent" life. Working for the Society for the Care for Aged Gentlewomen during the day, she also helps Fr. Julian Malory and his sister Winifred at the rectory and in church during her spare time. Except for these activities and a few outings with similarly "excellent" single women, she has no social life, except for her once-a-year dinner date with a male friend.Set in 1952, the novel follows the life of Mildred as it suddenly becomes a bit more "exciting," at least by Mildred's standards. A married couple, the Napiers, move into the house where she lives, and she makes an effort to get to know them. Rockingham Lathbury (Rocky) has been an officer (and playboy) in Italy during the war; his wife Helena is an anthropologist who has been working on a project in Africa with a male anthropologist, Everard Bone. It quickly becomes clear that the marriage is having problems, and Mildred gets drawn in. At the same time, Fr. Julian Malory, whom Mildred believed that she would serve forever, announces his engagement to Allegra Gray, a clergyman's widow who is renting a room at the rectory. Within this simple framework, author Barbara Pym minutely examines the lives of Mildred and "excellent women" like her who believe that they "must not allow [themselves] to have feelings, but must only observe the effects of other people's." As Mildred's life gradually expands and she begins to become just a bit more assertive (and even to have a drink), she also begins to draw some attention from Rocky Napier and Everard Bone. Through Mildred's intentionally limited relationships, Pym skewers the social mores of the day among the excellent women, the men who take them for granted, and the church which encourages (and benefits from) their selfless devotion. Pym's humor is so subtle, however, that one may be tempted, at first, to take the novel at face value, but Mildred is such an extremely excellent woman that the reader sees the absurdities of her behavior and of the society which encourages the Mildreds of the world to lead the lives they do. Mildred is living the life that she was rewarded for when she was a child. Still childlike, however, she inspires sympathy at the same time that the reader sees that she has never made her own choices, an absurdity that Pym exploits in grand fashion. n Mary Whipple Some Tame Gazelle, 1950 Jane and Prudence, 1953 Less Than Angels, 1955 Glass of Blessings, 1958 No Fond Return of Love, 1961 An Unsuitable Attachment, 1963
15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent Women,
By
This review is from: Excellent Women (Penguin Classics) (Paperback)
I was recently reccommended Barbara Pym, by a friend who knew I had enjoyed similar books to hers. This is the first one that I have read. What a treat it was. They just don't write books like this anymore I'm sorry to say. Mildred is a sweet likeable character from another time - considered middle aged at just over thirty - and pitied for being unmarried. In it Barbara Pym seems to be raising the issue of how it is society measures a woman's usefulness - and suggests that "the excellent women" of the title are the ones that people so often depend upon, but never marry - a question which in itself dates the book I suppose - but at the time may have been true for some women at least. I will be reading more by this author soon.
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