All tagged 20th century uk

A Town Like Alice

Nevil Shute’s novel, A Town Like Alice (originally published 1950), leads its readers through the years before, during, and after WWII on both the British home front and the colonial outposts of British Malaya. Eventually, readers wander as a far as Queensland, Australia in this classically mid-century novel about a resourceful (we might call her entrepreneurial in the 21st century) young woman (Jean Paget) whose grit and good sense make her a natural leader and a wildly likeable character.

Excellent Women

One of the things I love about reading books like Barbara Pym’s Excellent Women (1952) is the way the characters and language transport me to mid-20th century England—London in this case—and highlight the myriad Britishism that a Yank like me pauses and considers. Surely, we think “slut” must mean something else; as in: “‘You'd hate sharing a kitchen with me. I'm such a slut,' she said, almost proudly” (4). And, indeed it does. But the linguistic differences is just the start of what makes Excellent Women so, well, excellent. Pym’s novel emerges from the first person perspective of Mildred Lathbury, “an unmarried woman just over thirty, who lives alone and has no apparent ties” (in her own words on page 1). Her world quickly alters as Mrs. Napier moves in to the flat below her; the flat with which she shares a bathroom. Mrs. Napier and her husband, the much-anticipated Rockingham, are not what one might expect from a married couple. Excellent Women quickly populates—around the life of Miss Lathbury—with eccentric and entertaining characters. While the novel is set in London, it has a decidedly village feel and Mildred Lathbury is a wildly likable narrator.