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Original jacket © Estate
of E.H Shepard; a postcard reproduction accompanies
each copy of the book. |
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392p PERSEPHONE BOOKS ISBN 1903155258
PREFACE BY REBECCA COHEN
PG Wodehouse described this 1925 novel as 'so good that
it makes one feel that it's the only possible way of writing
a book, to take an ordinary couple and just tell the reader
all about them.' Greenery Street can be read on
two levels - it is a touching description of a young couple's
first year together in London, but it is also a homage
- something rare in fiction - to happy married life.
Ian and Felicity Foster are shown as they arrive at 23
Greenery Street, an undisguised and still unchanged Walpole
Street in Chelsea. Their uneventful but always interesting
everyday life is the main subject of a novel that evokes
the charmingly contented and timeless while managing to
be both funny and profound about human relations.
Denis Mackail was a grandson of Edward Burne-Jones on
his mother's side and son of JW Mackail, the eminent classical
scholar ; his sister was the novelist Angela Thirkell.
He wrote nearly a book a year for thirty years.
There was no question about the endpaper
fabric for Greenery Street -it had to be something that
the Fosters would have had in their house. This 1925
cretonne is, we believe, exactly what Felicity might
have bought at 'Andrew Brown's' (Peter Jones) and used
to cover the sofa.
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