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Lettice Cooper in
the 1930s |
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336p PERSEPHONE BOOKS ISBN 1903155371
PREFACE BY JILLY COOPER
PERSEPHONE BOOKS CATALOGUE
'All that outwardly happens in The New House,'
writes Jilly Cooper in her Persephone preface, 'is over
one long day a family moves from a large imposing secluded
house with beautiful gardens to a small one overlooking
a housing estate. But all the characters and their relationships
with each other are so lovingly portrayed that one cares
passionately what happens even to the unpleasant ones.
'The New House, first published in 1936, reminds
me of my favourite author Chekhov, who so influenced Lettice's
generation of writers. Like him, she had perfect social
pitch and could draw an arriviste developer as convincingly
as a steely Southern social butterfly.'
'It is tempting to describe Rhoda Powell, the 30-plus,
stay-at-home daughter of a widowed mother, as Brookneresque,'
wrote the reviewer in the Guardian, 'even though
Lettice Cooper wrote this wonderfully understated novel
several decades before Anita Brookner mapped the defining
features of quietly unhappy middle-class women.' While
Kate Chisholm in The Spectator described Lettice
Cooper as 'an intensely domestic novelist, unraveling in
minute detail the tight web of family relations' but one
who is also 'acutely aware of what goes on beyond the garden
gate. The exposé of a family under strain because
of changing times is curiously more vivid and real than
in many novels about family life written today.'
The endpaper fabric for The New House
is taken from 'Rope and Dandelion', a blockprinted velvet
designed and printed by Margaret Calkin James for her
new house, 'Hornbeams' in Hampstead Garden Suburb, in
1936.
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