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I do love books written in the form of letters.  The character of the writer, be it fictional or not, comes through so beautifully with no need to tell us, the reader, anything about them at all.   If a fictional letter writer this needs writing of the highest order to achieve.   I have recently re-read Henrietta sees it Through by Joyce Dennys  (a sequel to Henrietta's War reviewed here) and simply have to mention it again.   Have checked out my earlier post in which this was mentioned and here is what I said then.  I see no reason to change a word.

"I found the Admiral on our doorstep.  As soon as I saw his face I knew that something must have happened to Teddy their youngest son in France………….Mrs Admiral was quite calm but her face looked different.   She sat on the kitchen chair and picked up the corner of her apron and examined it closely. 'I keep thinking about him when he was a little boy' she said in a careful voice. 'We're not telling anyone because of the croquet this afternoon. We can't let anybody down"

….some visitors from the hotel
wandered into the club….'My dear croquet!' said the Lady Visitor 'and
bowls too, how sweet. Of course these people simply don't know there is a
war on"

The Admiral dropped his pipe on the grass.  As he stooped to pick it up he laid his hand for a moment on Mrs Admiral's knee"

I welled up when reading this and welled up again just now when writing.

Just simply
wonderful and a portrayal of the quiet indomitable English way of
country life that just, well, got on with it during the war.  Sad thing
is that Lady B, a simply delightful and lovable character, says that
after the War is over we should all 'mix more'and not just pull
apart after everyone has joined together so well in fighting the common
enemy.  This immediately made me think of the Village by Marghanita Laski where, sadly, we see exactly what happens to the
class divisions the minute VE Day is over.  An absorbing book and read
in conjunction with Joyce Dennys makes for sobering thoughts.

Note: The Village is published by Persephone and is a wonderful study of how the old class divisions rear their ugly heads once the war is over and the unifying factor vanishes.

Then, by coincidence, the next book I picked up this week is Dear Lupin which are letters between a father and his son.   Anybody who has read Diary of a Nobody will pick up on the Lupin reference immediately and
Lupinthe likeness between Lupin and Charlie Mortimer, the son in this book, is exactly exactly what you would expect.    Roger Mortimer was born in 1909 and came from a pretty well off family. He was educated at Eton and Sandhurst and was commissioned into the Coldstream guards. He fought in WW2 and was at Dunkirk, later captured and spent the remainder of his war years in a camp prison. After the war he became racing correspondent of the Sunday Times until his retirement.  He seems to have been endlessly mordantly witty with a rather jaundiced but still hopeful view of life and, though his son obviously disappointed him, his affection never abated nor did his financial help, and he sent Charlie letters throughout his life.   If Charlie had been my son I would probably have murdered him so impatient would I have become with his fecklessness, but Roger never did and, as the years passed, became resigned to his way of life.

I could quote the entire book to you as an illustration of the flavour of these letters as it is difficult to pull out some plums as they are all wonderful, but here are a few:

On being moved in a luncheon car in a train: "waiter says 'There's a young honeymoon couple who don't want to be separated and your table would do them nicely. Would you mind moving?………shifted with ill grace to leave to table to a very dirty young man with a beard like black cotton wool and a dark lady with the promising beginnings of a heavy cavalry moustache.  They may not want to be separated now I thought, but I bet they soon will be….'

and

'Aunt Shirley accompanied by her nurse companion, had to stay three nights in a hotel in Dorset last week. Unfortunately Aunt had to get up several times in the night. Each time she went back to the wrong room and the climax came when she climbed into a bed already occupied by a honeymoon couple. The manager asked her to leave next morning'.

and

'Have you considered the church? There is much to be said for the quiet life of a country curate. Fortunately in the Church of England an ordained priest is not commited to any but the vaguest of beliefs….'

Priceless.

Both these books, one fiction (though pretty sure that Joyce Denys based a lot of her novel on real life) and non-fiction have in common that wonderful English eccentricity, that Wodehousian attitude to life, the famed stiff upper lip and the viewing of any mad and off the wall happening with an enviable sangfroid.   Loved both these books and on a dark miserable day when I had to pull the curtains at 3.30pm and put on the lights, they warmed my heart beautifully.

Both of them so, well, so British……

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16 responses to “Epistolary Delights”

  1. Elaine Avatar

    Reminded me of Diary of a Provincial Lady which I also love

  2. Elaine Avatar

    If you read the Village do let me know what you think of it, I thought it was marvellous. Ditto Lupin!

  3. Elaine Avatar

    Another one I can recommend if you have not already read it is The Guernsey Literary Potato Peel Pie Society by Shaffer. Wonderful book set in the Channel Islands during WW2

  4. Elaine Avatar

    Yes I laughed at that too!

  5. Elaine Avatar

    Glad to hear I got you off to a good start!!

  6. Elaine Avatar

    both Henrietta’s War and Henrietta Sees it Through are pubolished by Bloomsbury and should be easily available on Amazon. Dear Lupin is just wonderful

  7. Elaine Avatar

    I don’t think you will regret buying either of these books Linda

  8. Elaine Avatar

    No I missed that much to my annoyance. I really think you will like Dear Lupin – the affection between father and son remained even though they drove each other mad

  9. Christine Avatar
    Christine

    Yes, Joyce Dennys is wonderful. I have just re-read her myself.

  10. Liz F Avatar
    Liz F

    I adored the Henrietta books when I first read them in the 80’s but let my copies go so I ended up buying them again when they were re-issued. Since I also have a copy of The Village that I treated myself to earlier this year, I might follow your example and read them in tandem as I am in the mood for some English reading.
    I saw a couple of mentions of Dear Lupin when it came out and was intrigued but unsure however your review has persuaded me to at least see if it is in the library.
    Thanks Elaine.

  11. Natalie ~ the Coffee and a Book Chick Avatar

    I love epistolary novels as well. I’ll be adding these to my list.

  12. ctussaud Avatar

    One part where I almost fell off the sofa laughing was when Mrs Mortimer returns from hunting, having had a catastrophic fall. She stands at the door to the drawing room, where Roger is deep in a comfy chair, and clearly has been ‘deep’ and ‘comfy’ all afternoon, with blood and mud all over her and clearly quite shocked. He looks up and says something like “The biscuit tin’s empty….”

  13. Pam - Travellin' Penguin Avatar

    What an absolute laugh. This is the first post I’ve read of the day and what a way to begin it. Pam (Travellin’Penguin)

  14. Pam Avatar
    Pam

    I also love epistolary novels and thoroughly enjoyed Henrietta’s War. I haven’t read the sequel but must get my hands on a copy. Dear Lupin is a new one to me. Sounds like another one worth checking out.

  15. Linda Gillard Avatar

    Thank you, Elaine. I think you’ve just solved a couple of Christmas present problems there. I was tempted by DEAR LUPIN the other day when I was browsing on Amazon, but I wasn’t sure.

  16. Nicola Slade Avatar

    Sounds like a ‘must’, I’ve always loved Lupin and his long-suffering parents. Did you see Hugh Bonneville a year or so ago? Reading The Diary of a NObody nightly on tv, I think.

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