Ankle Deep: A Novel - Softcover

Thirkell, Angela Mackail

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9781559211581: Ankle Deep: A Novel

Synopsis

Ankle Deep is one of Angela Thirkell's earliest novels. With characteristic civility and sophistication, the author welcomes us into her fictional stretch of English countryside, a magical landscape spirited with good people going about the business of life, irresistibly entertaining in their determination to misunderstand each other.

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About the Author

Angela Thirkell, granddaughter of Edward Burne-Jones, was born in London in 1890. At the age of twenty-eight she moved to Melbourne, Australia where she became involved in broadcasting and was a frequent contributor to British periodicals. Mrs. Thirkell did not begin writing novels until her return to Britain in 1930; then, for the rest of her life, she produced a new book almost every year. Her stylish prose and deft portrayal of the human comedy in the imaginary county of Baretshire have amused readers for decades. She died in 1961, just before her birthday.

Reviews

Thirkell (The Headmistress), a British author who wrote close to a book a year from the 1930s until her death in 1961, has a light and surefooted voice, but while this novel (written in 1933 and published now in the U.S. for the first time) is a pleasant enough read, it never approaches meaningful complexity. Fanny Turner is a crafty woman who "would have felt sentiment of an infuriated kind" if her family duties had ever interfered with her frenetic social life. One weekend she invites Valentine Ensor, a divorced school friend of her husband Arthur, for a weekend, along with an older couple, the Howards, who bring along their daughter, the somewhat dour Aurea Palgrave. Aurea is now married and living quite unhappily in Canada, but Arthur had once been in love with her. The weekend is a somewhat predictable time of star-crossed love and slight misunderstandings that lead nowhere. Fanny is quite forward, and although she is married claims that one should always carry on with several men at once because "If you only care for one you'll always get hurt." These characters are so reserved and socially programmed that they never reveal their true selves, and after a while the sparkling prose loses its appeal. Aurea and Valentine, for example, lust after each other endlessly, spend lots of time agonizing over what to do, only to do, in fact, nearly nothing. Glossy writing about people being polite to each other can only stretch so far.

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