It was a re-read for me too. A friend chose Excellent Women for a book club a few years ago and I was hooked on all things Pym after that - despite having been aware of her for years, I’d never read any of her books, but I’ve since devoured them all.
I really enjoyed An Academic Question although, for me, it isn’t one of her best - she was desperately trying to get published again in the 70s after having been dropped, and the introduction to my copy notes that she told Philip Larkin it was ‘supposed to be a sort of Margaret Drabble effort'.
And it wasn’t in fact published - her friend Hazel Holt edited it for publication after her death from two drafts and Pym's notes. For that reason I can see that it’s a bit thin, with not much of a plot (not that Pym's novels really do), and was trying to be 'swinging', with a younger narrator, married and with a small child, and elements like Alan being unfaithful. But even Pym admitted she couldn’t really keep it up, and there are some very enjoyable glimpses of echt Pym breaking through - like the ghastly Sister Dew, Dolly and her hedgehogs, and people constantly assuring each other that things are 'suitable'. Oh, and I loved the names. Iris Horniblow 😂