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from Living in the
Country © Norman Dakers 1941 PQ No1 |
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280p PERSEPHONE BOOKS ISBN 1903155207
PREFACE BY RUTH GORB
The Daily Mail called this 1944 novel 'an elegiac
romance that describes social niceties, petty squabbles,
self-restraint, all played out in a rural idyll, while
abroad thousands die defending that very way of life.'
The great interest of Jocelyn Playfair's book for modern
readers is its complete authenticity. Set sixty years ago
at the time of the fall of Tobruk in 1942, one of the low
points of the war, and written only a year later when we
still had no idea which way the war was going, A House
in the Country has a verisimilitude denied to modern
writers. Sebastian Faulks in Charlotte Gray or Ian
McEwan in Atonement do their research and evoke
a particular period, but ultimately are dependent on their
own and historians' interpretation of events; whereas a
novel like this one is an exact, unaffected portrayal of
things as they were at the time. The TLS praised
'its evocation of the preoccupations of wartime England,
and its mood of battered but sincere optimism'; and The
Tablet remarked on its 'comic energy, compelling atmosphere
and richly apt vocabulary.'
The endpapers show a 1942 Jacqmar
scarf that was owned by a Persephone reader's mother;
the indefatigable gardener at 'Brede Manor' is a symbolic
figure in the book. |