Miss Mole

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"angela thirkell"
"barbara Pym"
"Clare Chambers"
"feminist classic"
"mid-brow"
"Small pleasures"
"virago modern classic"
1930s
A01=E.H. Young
Author_E.H. Young
Bristol
Category=FB
Category=FBC
Category=FS
Clifton
comfort read
Depression era
England
eq_bestseller
eq_classics
eq_fiction
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
family comedy
family saga
feminism
feminist fiction
historical fiction
interwar novel
midbrow
middle brow
middle-class domesticity
period fiction
respectability
single woman
spinster
the extra woman
women's fiction
women's interior lives

Product details

  • ISBN 9780349014135
  • Weight: 285g
  • Dimensions: 124 x 196mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Oct 2020
  • Publisher: Little, Brown Book Group
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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'Young is a sharp and funny writer with a brilliant eye for moral fudging and verbal hypocrisy, and she has a splendid foil in Miss Mole' Sally Beauman

WINNER OF THE JAMES TAIT BLACK MEMORIAL PRIZE

'Who would suspect her sense of fun and irony, of a passionate love for beauty and the power to drag it from its hidden places? Who would imagine that Miss Mole had pictured herself, at different times, as an explorer in strange lands, as a lady wrapped in luxury and delicate garments?'

Miss Hannah Mole has for twenty years earned her living precariously as a governess or companion to a succession of difficult old women.Now, aged forty, a thin and shabby figure, she returns to Radstowe, the lovely city of her youth. Here she is, if not exactly welcomed, at least employed as housekeeper by the pompous Reverend Robert Corder, whose daughters are sorely in need of guidance. But even the dreariest situation can be transformed into an adventure by the indomitable Miss Mole. Blessed with imagination, wit and intelligence, she wins the affection of Ethel and her nervous sister Ruth. But her past holds a secret that, if brought to life, would jeopardise everything.

Emily Hilda Young (1880-1949) was born in Northumberland, the daughter of a ship-broker. She was educated at Gateshead High School and Penrhos College, Colwyn Bay, Wales. In 1902, after her marriage to solicitor, J.A.H. Daniell, she went to live in Bristol, which was to become the setting of most of her novels.

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