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What to read after Stella Gibbons and Nancy Mitford?

70 replies

MsMarple · 07/09/2016 22:24

I've been immersed in a happy time-warp recently with Cold Comfort Farm and Love in a Cold Climate, and I'm not ready to come back to the real world yet!

I have some Barbara Pym books at the ready, but what else can I try that is early 20thC and funny?

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BestIsWest · 07/09/2016 22:26

PG Wodehouse?

Rifka · 07/09/2016 22:29

Georgette Heyer!

Gasp0deTheW0nderD0g · 07/09/2016 22:33

It's a bit earlier, but Diary of a Nobody is one of my all-time favourites. Also, the short stories of Saki are brilliant. Evelyn Waugh? Anthony Powell? I second the idea of P. G. Wodehouse - every word a gem!

YesILikeItToo · 07/09/2016 22:40

Molly Keane. Disintegrating Irish gentry humorously rendered.

RustyBear · 07/09/2016 22:45

Monica Dickens (Charles' granddaughter) wrote 3 very funny (though semi-fictionalised) accounts of her jobs before and during WWII - My turn to make the tea (journalist) One Pair of Hands cook/housemaid) and One Pair of Feet (nurse)

carrieswar · 07/09/2016 22:46

Have you read Dodie Smith's I capture the castle?

flightywoman · 07/09/2016 22:49

Get yourself to Persephone Books, there's lots to choose from across a range of time periods.

Tea With Mr Rochester by France's Towers is a book of lovely short stories.

Or I'd recommend Dorothy Whipple. She's FAB!

MsMarple · 07/09/2016 22:49

Oooh thank you, I'll definitely look out for all those. Off to cruise the online library catalogue!

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lilyfire · 07/09/2016 22:49

Mapp and Lucia books? I'm reading the Cazalet chronicles at moment and vaguely surprised I'm not living in a country estate in the 1930s.

PerspicaciaTick · 07/09/2016 22:56

I think you'll enjoy Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day.
Also try some Dorothy L Sayers Lord Peter Wimsey books - they are very funny even though they are "crime" fiction and beautiful period pieces.
And definitely some PG Wodehouse.

I recently read Angela Thirkell's "High Rising" which has the funniest descriptions of a small boy's obsessions that I've ever read. The rest of it is pretty funny too.

PerspicaciaTick · 07/09/2016 22:57

yy to Mapp and Lucia too.

icingonthewall · 07/09/2016 22:58

Yes, Persephone is a really good source
Try Saplings, by Noel Streatfeild
Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day
Or for something quite different, how about Antonia White - Frost in May?
Elizabeth and her German Garden?

None really funny though, I have to say...

MsMarple · 07/09/2016 23:22

Oh yes lilyfire that is exactly the effect I am looking for!

And thank you PerspicaciaTIck I do love a bit of vintage crime, so that sounds perfect. Probably slack of me not to have tried the Lord Peter ones before.

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Izzy24 · 07/09/2016 23:27

Elizabeth Jane Howard Cazalet chronicles.

flightywoman · 07/09/2016 23:31

OH, for vintage crime look at Clifton Robbins, they're from the 30s, they've just been republished in ebook by The Abandoned Bookshop. Of their time but not massively dated. I'm enjoying the first one very much!

MsMarple · 07/09/2016 23:34

Thanks flightywoman I will check those out. I have read a couple of the British Library reissued Vintage Crime ones (for an odd Christmas treat: a nice snowy murder...) and really enjoyed them.

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Potatofish · 08/09/2016 00:24

Another vote for Molly Keane - very black humour, brilliant characterisation, definitely kinship to Mitford at her best, set in disintegrating Anglo-Irish Big Houses. Start with Good Behaviour.

Marmighty · 08/09/2016 02:04

Diary of a provincial lady by EM Delafield - absolutely hilarious

gailforce1 · 08/09/2016 18:44

Word of warning about the Persephone website - be prepared to lose all track of time!

clippityclop · 08/09/2016 18:47

Another vote for the Cazalets. I also have a soft spot for Rosamund Pilcher's Shellseekers.

Laquila · 08/09/2016 18:51

If you like a bit of mirder-mystery then try the Dandy Gilver series, by Catriona McPherson - I've spent many a happy hour on the bath reading these. They're set in 1920s/30s Scotland - very funny and cleverly-observed, with a female protagonist/heroine.

RitchyBestingFace · 08/09/2016 18:52

The Brontes Went to Woolworths - can't remember who wrote it but very similar in content to Mitfords / Dodie Smith and in style to Miss Pettigrew.

Gentlemen Prefer Blondes by Anita Loos - the book is just excellent.

I would also recommend Damon Runyan - a bit different in that it's set in 1920s broadway & prohibition gangsters but has the same brilliant comic characters, ironic & unreliable narrator and wit.

I tried PG Wodehouse after Mitfords but can't stick it. Many others can.

RitchyBestingFace · 08/09/2016 18:54

I'd also try Angel by Elizabeth Taylor - set in early 20th century but written, I think, in 1950s.

SecretSpi · 08/09/2016 22:09

... and another Woolworths title - 'Our spoons came from Woolworths' by Barbara Comyns