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  • av Ursula Orange
    169,-

    Of all the unhappiness my divorce has brought upon me, loneliness has never been in the least a part. Lack of company in the evening is to me an absolute luxury.Thus does Vicky, a young divorce in London with a small daughter to support, reassure herself.But as the plucky courage of the early days of World War II gives way to the fatigue and deprivations of its middle, company in the evening is just what she gets. To the chagrin of her housekeeper, Vicky agrees to take in a pregnant, widowed sister-in-law (';Talking to her is like walking through a bogsquash, squash, squashnever, just never do you really crunch on to anything solid'). As she is adapting to this change and the tensions it creates, and dealing with an impossible client at work at a literary agency, she happens to meet ex-husband Raymond one night Told in a first-person confessional style ahead of its time, and featuring Ursula Orange's trademark humour, Company in the Evening is a charming evocation of wartime life, snobbishness in many forms, and the difficulties of being a woman on her own.';Delightfully entertaining good portraits add considerably to its attractiveness. Light reading of the most enjoyable kind.' Sunday Times';Brilliant portraiture. Crisp writing. Human understanding. Really excellent light reading.' Sunday Graphic

  • av Ursula Orange
    179,-

    Oxford, it appeared, if it did not seem to have fitted her for any precise occupation, had at least unfitted her for a great many things.In her charming and incisive debut novel, Ursula Orange focuses her sharp eye on four young women only recently down from Oxford.Jane and Florence live in London, working at office jobs, the latter channelling her excess energy into a dreadfully earnest novel of her own. Sylvia remains at home, shocking her family with theories of sexual and social liberation. And Leslie, as the novel opens, idealizes the other three, as she tries to convince her mother to let her use her small nest egg to attend art school in London.As the four friends balance their youthful ideals with the realities of work and romance in 1930s England, Orange offers hilarious and thoughtful perspectives on the quandaries of educated, ambitious women in a world not yet ready for them. This new edition includes an introduction by Stacy Marking.';a charming and deftly written book' Sunday Times';The fresh quality and genuine youthfulness of this story are as charming in fiction as in life.' Times Literary Supplement';an unusually good first novel, in a decade of unusually good first novels.' Daily Telegraph

  • av Elizabeth Fair
    169,-

    ';The best thing one can say about the Priory is that it would have made a splendid ruin,' she stated. ';If only the Seamarks had left it alone 'Hester Clifford has come to Mingham to recover from pneumonia, at the invitation of her godmother, Cecily Hutton, an eccentric painter with a predilection for ruins. Hester determines to bring order to the Huttons' easygoing lives, not to mention those of the villagersincluding elderly Mrs. Hyde-Ridley, attempting to enforce her Edwardian standards of behaviour, Mrs. Merlin, the Rector's wife, equally determined to share the joys of country dance with an unenthusiastic parish, and Thomas Seamark, a classic example of the wealthy, brooding widower. Amidst conflict, manipulation, matchmaking, and general hilarity, Hester clearly has her work cut out for her.Furrowed Middlebrow is delighted to make available, for the first time in over half a century, all six of Elizabeth Fair's irresistible comedies of domestic life. These new editions all feature an introduction by Elizabeth Crawford.';Miss Fair's understanding is deeper than Mrs. Thirkell's and her humour is untouched by snobbishness; she is much nearer to Trollope, grand master in these matters.'--Stevie Smith';Miss Fair makes writing look very easy, and that is the measure of her creative ability.'--Compton Mackenzie

  • av Elizabeth Fair
    169,-

    ';I wonder what Mr. Heritage thought of his godson,' she said quickly.';Rather clumsy, but quite good manners,' Edith remarked. ';And a well-shaped skull.'These were her own views, but she took it for granted that sensible people would agree with her.Sisters Edith and Rose have rather come down in the world by keeping their hotel, Seaview House. So Mr Heritage believes, and he's not pleased when Rose's daughter Lucygrown a bit too attractive for his comfortbecomes friendly with his godson Edward. Would-be paramour Nevil isn't thrilled either, and to complicate matters further, Edward is behind a scheme to build new terraced housing, depriving village residents of their coveted sea view.Dilemmas and dramas unfoldincluding a fire, a cook's prophecy, and a disaster of a luncheonbut the loose ends get tied up in Elizabeth Fair's cheerful, inimitable style.Furrowed Middlebrow is delighted to make available, for the first time in over half a century, all six of Elizabeth Fair's irresistible comedies of domestic life. These new editions all feature an introduction by Elizabeth Crawford.';light-hearted, shrewd, diverting'--New York Times';Miss Fair makes writing look very easy, and that is the measure of her creative ability.'--Compton Mackenzie

  • av Elizabeth Fair
    169,-

    A widow, at an age when birthdays are best forgotten, with no children to occupy her mind, can be very lonely. Julia Dunstan knew she was more fortunate than most widows, not merely because she was prosperousas widows gobut because she had always taken an interest in other people.And from the moment Julia moves to Goatstock, where she has inherited a house, there are plenty of people for her to take an interest in. For a start, there's cousin Dora, who might just as easily been left the house herself and who instead becomes Julia's companion.Then there's Lady Finch, the local expert on Fresh Food and the victim of a deception so dastardly that even her attractive but irreverent niece, Harriet, is indignant. This distracts Harriet for a while from the rather thankless task of planning the futures of her friends, Marian and Robert. And all are concerned with news that the village will be made into a ';New Town'. However the old values, at least those of Elizabeth Fair's fiction, remain: wit, charm, and romance.Furrowed Middlebrow is delighted to make available, for the first time in over half a century, all six of Elizabeth Fair's irresistible comedies of domestic life. These new editions all feature an introduction by Elizabeth Crawford.';Where she breaks with the Thirkell school is in her total absence of sentimentality and her detached and witty observation of her characters.'--The Sphere';Miss Fair makes writing look very easy, and that is the measure of her creative ability.'--Compton Mackenzie

  • av Elizabeth Fair
    175,-

    At the end of the war, Mrs. Midge stayed on. While the war lasted Mrs. Custance had accepted her as part of the war-effort; it was only in the past year or two that Mrs. Midge had been transferred to the category which Mrs. Custance described as ';people we could manage without.'Elizabeth Fair's rollicking second novel takes place in Little Mallin, where village life is largely dominated by preparations for the August Festival. Out of such ordinary material Fair weaves a tale of conflict, scheming, misunderstandingand of course romance.Among the villagers are a vicar dreaming of ancient Greece; his wife, largely concerned with getting their daughter married off; the melancholic Colonel Ashford; the eccentric Eustace Templer and his nephew; not to mention Mrs. Midge and her delicate son. The author said the novel was meant for people who ';prefer not to take life too seriously.' Compton Mackenzie said it was ';in the best tradition of English humour.'Furrowed Middlebrow is delighted to make available, for the first time in over half a century, all six of Elizabeth Fair's irresistible comedies of domestic life. These new editions all feature an introduction by Elizabeth Crawford.';Where she breaks with the Thirkell school is in her total absence of sentimentality and her detached and witty observation of her characters.'--The Sphere';A real success will give pleasure to those for whom Trollope and Jane Austen remain the twin pillars of English fiction.'--John O'London's Weekly

  • - A Golden Age Detective Story
     
    169,-

  • - A Golden Age Detective Story
    av Peter Drax
    169,-

  • - A Golden Age Detective Story
    av Peter Drax
    169,-

  • - A Golden Age Detective Story
    av Peter Drax
    169,-

  • - A Golden Age Detective Story
    av Peter Drax
    169,-

  • av Robin Forsythe
    169,-

    ';Take my advice; from to-day keep your own counsel. Listen to everything, disclose nothing. Avoid being alone. Come to me if you're in doubt about anything or feel you scent danger. I can assure you we both live in danger.'Geoffrey Mayne is in need of some serious r'n'r after studying intensively for his bar exams in London. A luxurious Pacific island cruise seems just the ticket, especially when one of his fellow passengers is the attractive young Freda Shannon.But after a terrible storm and shipwreck, Geoffrey and Freda find themselves in a small party of survivors, marooned on a remote South Sea island. The castaways resolve to make the best of what may be a long wait on the deserted isle. But is it really deserted? A gunshot is heard and then one of their party is found, slain. Is a shadowy denizen intent on murdering the interlopers, or is the hidden truth more diabolical still?Murder on Paradise Island was first published in 1937. This new edition includes an introduction by crime fiction historian Curtis Evans.';Mr. Forsythe belongs to the new school of detective story writers which might be called the brilliant flippant school.' J.B. Priestley

  • av E.R. Punshon
    169,-

    ';There's a spot of trouble this morning. Old gentleman found dead in his bath.'Bobby answered: ';there may be one chance in a million it's natural death.'When the notorious gangster Cy King was imprisoned thanks to Commander Bobby Owen's investigation, he spent a good deal of time talking about avenging himself. Now Cy's out of jail, linked to a notorious London nightclub owner, while a man impersonating Bobby has been spotted snooping around in a remote London suburb. The same suburb, as it happens, where a young woman, recently arrived from Canada, has seemingly vanished into thin air. All Bobby's investigations lead to the unassuming borough of Southam, where the disappearance of Elizabeth Smith is compounded by the sudden death of a respectable old man. Cy keep dodging around in the background of the case, but can Bobby bring it home to the old villain or find an alternative solution?The Secret Search, a classic golden age whodunit, is the twenty-eighth novel in the Bobby Owen Mystery series, originally published in 1951. This new edition features an introduction by crime fiction historian Curtis Evans, and a selection of E.R. Punshon's prolific Guardian reviews of other golden age mystery fiction.';What is distinction? in the works of Mr. E.R. Punshon we salute it every time.'--Dorothy L. Sayers

  • - A Bobby Owen Mystery
    av E. R. Punshon
    175,-

  • - A Bobby Owen Mystery
    av E. R. Punshon
    175,-

  • av E R Punshon
    169,-

  • av E R Punshon
    169,-

  • av E R Punshon
    169,-

  • - A Bobby Owen Mystery
    av E. R. Punshon
    169,-

  • av E R Punshon
    169,-

  • av E R Punshon
    169,-

  • av E R Punshon
    169,-

  • av E R Punshon
    169,-

  • av E R Punshon
    169,-

  • av E R Punshon
    169,-

  • av Winifred Peck
    169,-

  • av Patricia Wentworth
    169,-

  • - A Ludovic Travers Mystery
    av Christopher Bush
    175,-

    ';I judge him to have been dead just about twenty-four hours. Suicide, almost certainly.'Ludovic Travers polished his eyeglasses. Inspector Wharton gruntedsure signs of impending mystery. And they were right.The car took the wrong turning and landed them in double murder dressed as suicide. In one room, made up for her principal success, Mary Tudor, was Mary Legreyepoisoned on her throne. In the next, the handymandead on the floor. Nothing initially justifies arrestbut Travers pursues his hunch, breaks a cast-iron alibi, and justifies, as never before, his reputation for unerring intuition.The Case of the Tudor Queen was originally published in 1938. This new edition features an introduction by crime fiction historian Curtis Evans.';The visionary Travers seems to be crooning to himself with considerable justice: ';We are the alibi breakers; we are the dreamers of dreams.''--Observer

  • - A Ludovic Travers Mystery
    av Christopher Bush
    175,-

    ';George Wharton said he hoped I'd have a nice murder for you.'Ludovic Travers and his wife choose to spend part of their honeymoon in the quiet town of Edensthorpeone place where they can be sure of peace and quiet, and where an eminent author and his famous wife might not be recognised.Unfortunately for them, however, another fugitive has sought anonymity in the nearby village of Pettistonea swindler named Brewse who has just completed a prison sentence for fraud. Brewse has made an unfortunate choice of home, because the leading citizens of Pettistone all suffered serious financial losses as a result of his fraudulent dealings, and they unite in an effort to drive him away from the village. Before they can do so, however, somebody decides upon a more permanent method of getting rid of Brewse.Ludovic Travers cannot, once again, resist the temptation to use his powers of insight and detection to discover the murderer of the man in the green hat.The Case of the Green Felt Hat was originally published in 1939. This new edition features an introduction by crime fiction historian Curtis Evans.Travers: ';As for my methods of crime detectionwell, I haven't any. For that my only tool is a brain that has been called agile, sharpened on crosswords rather than chess.'

  • - A Ludovic Travers Mystery
    av Christopher Bush
    175,-

    Palmer saw him out, and gave that little deprecatory cough.';If you'll pardon me, sir, is it another murder?'';Looks like it,' Travers told him from the door.This affair of Ludovic Travers and George ';the General' Wharton is packed full with sleuthing excitement, during which three men die, and the careers of four people are ruined before the round-up is accomplished. The leaning man, the kingpin of the plot, meets his death outside a London theatre.Travers soon finds a link between this case and the murder of a Maharajah, and is curious to know why the actor, Sir Jerome Haire, is involved. In finding out, he brings under suspicion Joy and Bernice Haire, Sir Jerome's daughters and music-hall stars in their own right. The travels of a priceless emerald ring add mystery to an already perplexing problem, elucidated by the keen deduction of Ludovic Travers.The Case of the Leaning Man was originally published in 1938. This new edition features an introduction by crime fiction historian Curtis Evans.';Mr. Bush has produced another good detective story, this time with emotional complications such as the experts say should have no place in this type of fiction. But the experts are not always right.'--New York Times

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