Excellent Women

Excellent Women

First edition
Author Barbara Pym
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Publisher Jonathan Cape
Publication date
1952
Media type Print (Hardback)
Pages 256 p. (hardback edition)

Excellent Women is a novel by Barbara Pym, first published in 1952, her second published novel[1] and generally acclaimed as the funniest and most successful of her comedies of manners.[2]

Title

The phrase "excellent women" is used ironically as a condescending reference to the kind of women who perform menial duties in the service of churches and voluntary organisations.

Plot summary

The book details the everyday life of Mildred Lathbury, a spinster in her thirties in 1950s England. Perpetually self-deprecating, but with the sharpest wit, Mildred keeps busy with near-romances (her own and those of others), church jumble sales, and of course the ubiquitous cup of tea. Mildred's life grows more exciting with the arrival of new neighbours, anthropologist Helena Napier and her handsome, dashing husband, Rocky - with whom Mildred fancies herself in love. Through the Napiers, she meets another anthropologist, Everard Bone, and it is with him that Mildred will eventually form a relationship. A sub-plot revolves around the activities of the local vicar, Julian Malory, who becomes engaged to a glamorous widow, Allegra Gray. Allegra proceeds to ease out Julian's sister, Winifred, a close friend of Mildred's. Eventually matters come to a head and Allegra leaves the vicarage after a quarrel. In the meantime, Helena, who has been on the verge of leaving Rocky for Everard, accepts that Everard does not care for her and leaves the neighbourhood, along with Rocky.

As with most of Pym's books, the plot is less important than the precise drawing of the comic characters (such as Everard's elderly mother who is obsessed with the suppression of woodworm) and situations.

Characters

Notes

Rockingham Napier has been flag lieutenant to an admiral in Italy where his wife says he 'hasn't had to do anything much but be charming to a lot of dreary Wren officers.' Barbara Pym had been a WRN officer in Italy during World War II.

During the 1960s and early 1970s when Barbara Pym's writing was somewhat overlooked, the poet Philip Larkin was exchanging letters with her. In a 14 July 1964 letter to Pym, having just re-read Excellent Women, he called it "better than I remembered it, full of a harsh kind of suffering [-] it's a study of the pain of being single,- time and again one senses not only that Mildred is suffering but that nobody can see why she shouldn't suffer, like a Victorian cabhorse. " And again in a letter of 1971 he praised the book, - "what a marvellous set of characters it contains! My only criticism is that Mildred is a tiny bit too humble at times, but perhaps she's satirising herself. I never see any Rockys, but almost every young academic wife ('I'm a shit') has something of Helena."[3]

In "Jane and Prudence" one of the characters mentions that nice "Miss Lathbury" has married an anthropologist (presumably Everard).

In "Less Than Angels" (1955) Esther Clovis remembers that "Everard had married a rather dull woman who was nevertheless a great help to him in his work; as a clergyman's daughter she naturally got on very well with the missionaries that they were meeting now that they were in Africa again." Later Pym writes "Everard's wife Mildrid would do the typing"

References

  1. Alexander McCall Smith, The Guardian, 5 April 2008
  2. Barbara Pym Society
  3. Selected letters of Philip Larkin, Faber 1992, p.368, 442
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/22/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.