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Get an extra £5 when you trade in books worth £10 or more until June 30, 2012. Trade in Ladies of Letters.com: Series 4 (BBC Radio Collection) for an Amazon.co.uk gift card of up to £0.25, which you can then spend on millions of items across the site. Trade-in values may vary (terms apply). Find more products eligible for trade-in.
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Ladies of Letters.com is an entertaining romp through the lives of two loveable over-competitive grandmothers. Vera and Irene squabble, snipe, and bicker their way through holidays, care of their grandchildren, their daughter's pregnancies, births, and marital troubles, as well as a potential stalker, and the delights - or otherwise - of their cooking skills and recipe book plans, all the while trying to impress on the other how much better their life is than the other's. Varying from one-upmanship over the devoted love offered by their daughters, to making suffering at the hands of the overly-keen but none too fussy paramour, Edward Blunt, into an Olympic sport, life with the ladies of letters is an ongoing competition.
This is the book of the third radio series of Ladies of Letters. I doubt that reading them out of order will matter, as this forms a brief snapshot into the lives of these two formidable ladies. It also doesn't appear to matter if you missed the radio series, as the book stands alone perfectly well. Having said that, the note that the radio voices were Prunella 'Fawlty Towers' Scales and Patricia 'Keeping Up Appearances' Routledge certainly didn't hinder the amusement.
The book starts with a foreword from Sue Townsend, creator of 'Adrian Mole,' supposedly written from her prison cell. (It does become clear, honestly!) This tells you almost nothing about the rest of the book, but is very amusing in it's own right.
This is followed by Vera's opening letter to Irene - by normal mail at this stage - to "offer you the chance to make amends" for past insults and arguments, centring around the wedding of Vera's daughter. She paints a wonderful picture of the event.
Irene responds by denying having done anything wrong, and merrily blaming Vera for, and giving us a very different view of the same set of events. Both pack their letters with slander, bluff, and not-so-subtle barbs - as perfectly targeted as only old friends (or adversaries) can manage, taking it in turns to carefully ladle salt into each other's well-known wounds.
The battle continues, moving onto e-mail. Letters to others in each family, and between other family members shed light on how utterly wrong both are about how they - and the other - are perceived within their both families, and equally misled regarding how much anyone enjoys their cooking, a mutual favourite obsession.
Surprisingly, given the constant digs over everything, this pair do care about each other, albeit neither would ever admit it. Unless, of course, doing so provided a chance to compare their loving kindness with the other's ungrateful response.
A final word of warning - for those of you who laugh out loud when you read - this is a deeply embarrassing book to be reading on the train.
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