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How to follow the Cazalet Chronicles?

54 replies

SevenKingsMustDie · 19/09/2025 20:29

Just that really - I am 3/4 of the way through All Change, and already feel bereft. I have loved this family and I cannot believe I won’t know anything more about them…😢

Any suggestions of how to fill the void?

OP posts:
Dappy777 · 19/09/2025 21:58

No advice, only sympathy. I loved those books. It’s amazing how involved you can get with the characters.

How about trying a different series and falling love with a new set of characters? The only early 20th-century British equivalents I can think of are:

Evelyn Waugh: Sword of Honour
Ford Madox Ford: Parade’s End
Powell: Dance to the Music of Time

Borgonzola · 19/09/2025 22:11

Get the audiobooks!

RosieMilkJug · 19/09/2025 22:16

Start from the beginning again. You’ll pick up extra nuances that you missed first time around.

Ilovemyshed · 19/09/2025 22:16

Have you read any Delderfield? Try the Swann books!

Blimeyblighty · 19/09/2025 22:17

You might enjoy Rumer Godden’s China Court.

Ilovemyshed · 19/09/2025 22:25

Also anything by Cynthia Harrod Eagles. Morland books (about 36 of them!), Ashmore Castle, Kirov trilogy, the WW1 series - all excellent.

Barbara Taylor Bradford Woman of Substance - about 6 books there
Elizabeth Howard
Norah Lofts
Pamela Belle’s Wintercombe books

Mrsmunchofmunchington · 19/09/2025 22:26

Cynthia Harrod Eagles Morland Dynasty series. 37 books following a family from before the English civil war up to WW2.
That will keep you going!

ChessieFL · 20/09/2025 07:05

Just to let you know that Elizabeth Jane Howard’s niece, Louisa Young, is writing further Cazalet books. The first one is due out next year. I adore The Cazalet Chronicles so on the one hand I’m delighted there will be more, but on the other hand I don’t want the series ruined if they’re no good.

www.theguardian.com/books/2024/nov/15/elizabeth-jane-howard-niece-louisa-young-cazalet-chronicles-books

SevenKingsMustDie · 20/09/2025 07:40

Oh, thank you all so much!

Great ideas - most of which I haven’t read. I shall fill up my list 😊

Interesting that there is to be more in the series written by EJH’s niece - I feel the same mixed emotions!

OP posts:
ArseInTheCoOpWindow · 20/09/2025 07:42

Diary of a Country Lady is set at the sane tune and is really funny.

SevenKingsMustDie · 20/09/2025 07:44

I’ve just placed a library hold on The Founding, which looks like the first in the Morland Dynasty series. Looking forward to it!

OP posts:
ArseInTheCoOpWindow · 20/09/2025 07:51

Great thread op.

I bought the Cazalet Chronicles tv series on a DVD the other month. Keep forgetting to watch it. Also don’t have an easily accessible cd player.

Peggysue14 · 20/09/2025 08:06

Family and Friends by Anita Brookner.

ChessieFL · 20/09/2025 08:15

Another interesting read is Elizabeth Jane Howard’s autobiography Slipstream. There is a lot of herself and her family in The Cazalets.

Ilovemyshed · 20/09/2025 12:07

SevenKingsMustDie · 20/09/2025 07:44

I’ve just placed a library hold on The Founding, which looks like the first in the Morland Dynasty series. Looking forward to it!

You will love it …enjoy binge reading the next 36!

SevenKingsMustDie · 20/09/2025 14:44

Oh, I didn’t know there was a TV series - has anyone watched it?

OP posts:
ArseInTheCoOpWindow · 20/09/2025 15:03

Just watching it now! Only available on DVD though.

ArseInTheCoOpWindow · 20/09/2025 15:05

It’s good. Only starts at 1937 though. Hugh Bonneville is in it.

Not as good as Downtown though.!

ChessieFL · 20/09/2025 20:28

I love the TV series but it only covers the first two books unfortunately. I would love someone to do a full series covering all the books.

Borgonzola · 21/09/2025 17:33

RosieMilkJug · 19/09/2025 22:16

Start from the beginning again. You’ll pick up extra nuances that you missed first time around.

Definitely this also.

id also recommend Kate Atkinson’s Life After Life and A God in Ruins for similar timeframe and family-chronicle style narrative.

SevenKingsMustDie · 21/09/2025 19:14

RosieMilkJug · 19/09/2025 22:16

Start from the beginning again. You’ll pick up extra nuances that you missed first time around.

I’m very tempted - if it wasn’t for the fact I’ve had to order them all one at a time from libraries across the county and they’ve sometimes taken weeks to arrive, I probably would have already started!

OP posts:
Squarestones · 21/09/2025 19:17

I loved Howard's book 'the long view' - doesn't fill that desire for a long series of books but it does fill the desire for her excellent writing.

I am going to look up many of these other books, thanks for the thread!

JohnBullshit · 21/09/2025 19:58

Try her other books? I didn't really get on with After Julius or The Long View, but the others are worth a shot.
I'm halfway between intrigued and appalled at her niece taking up the Cazalet thread.

Eastofnowhere · 21/09/2025 20:20

The Poldark books are a fantastic family saga. I loved them as much as the Cazalets (although I skipped a lot of stuff about steam engines and mining...)

PermanentTemporary · 21/09/2025 20:23

There’s also the biography of EJH and her novel Falling. The novel is fairly chilling but reading the real-life events that inspired it was one of the most terrifying things I have ever read - I can’t exactly remember why but I don’t want to read it again to find out.