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The Marquis of Westmarch (1989) was Frances Vernon's fifth novel,
and perhaps her most original and richly imagined work, fit to
stand comparison with Theophile Gautier's famous gender-bending
historical romance Mademoiselle de Maupin (1835). Its protagonist
is Meriel Longmaster, a handsome and well-liked nobleman who
conceals a secret known only to the loyal steward who has known him
since youth. Meriel begins to feel the need to confide that secret
in another, while sensing, rightly, that this will have dire
consequences. 'A book which combines the narrative excitement of
Georgette Heyer with the sexual premises of Germaine Greer ... a
provocative and lively presentation of feminist issues.' Caroline
Brandenburger, Independent 'A fantastic, haunting, and extremely
well-written story of love and death.' Philippa Toomey, The Times
The Fall of Doctor Onslow (1994) was the sixth and final novel by
Frances Vernon (1963-91). Published posthumously, it is perhaps her
finest work. Set in 1858, it is the story of Dr George Onslow,
reformist headmaster of a leading public school, who harbours
private passions that are fated to be the death of his life's
ambition. 'A searing indictment of the process of education... The
narrative is tersely written in a style that successfully captures
Victorian restraint and its stifling sensibilities.' Ben Preston,
The Times 'A remarkable work, written with spirit and erudition...
It is difficult to believe when reading it that the author was a
child of our times and did not actually live in the middle of the
last century: she recreates that world so vividly, with such
understanding of its characters, such an ear for its speech, such
feeling for its attitudes and taboos.' Jill Delay, Tablet
Privileged Children, first published in 1982, was the brilliant
debut fiction by the prodigiously gifted Frances Vernon
(1963-1991), which earned her the Author's Club Award for Best
First Novel. When Diana Molloy dies in 1912 she leaves a curious
inheritance to her 14-year-old daughter Alice - her collection of
books, and a lasting attachment to her mother's bohemian friends.
The self-possessed young Alice is dismayed, therefore, to be packed
off to live with a rural clergyman uncle. But it's not long before
she contrives an escape back to her beloved Bloomsbury, and the
opportunity to forge her own way in the world. 'Saucy and daring...
here is genuine sparkle and invention.' Daily Express 'Highly
enjoyable' Jenny Uglow, TLS
Gentleman and Players (1984) was the second novel by the
prodigiously gifted Frances Vernon (1963-1991), and served
confirmation of what the TLS called her 'highly original talent.'
Three sisters make their purposeful ways through Victorian society.
Sarah, the eldest, makes an ostensibly good marriage, but is given
cause to reconsider. Sophie, the youngest, undergoes romantic
travails of heartbreak and elopement. Susan, the practical middle
child, dispenses wisdom from her perch in a rural rectory. But the
objects of their affections are mere 'gentlemen', while the three
Misses Pagett are assuredly 'players.' 'A delight ... Cool,
precise, amused and amusing ... Frances Vernon should become a cult
figure.' Robert Nye, Guardian 'An achievement of purposeful
economy.' Victoria Glendinning, Sunday Times
The Bohemian Girl (1988), Frances Vernon's fourth novel, transports
us to 1890s London to meet the young Diana Blentham, whom Vernon
first introduced to readers - as a celebrated grande horizontale -
in the opening pages of her 1982 debut Privileged Children. Diana
fears that the lot of an intelligent woman is to simply be married
and never again open a book. Her father wonders - not incorrectly -
if Diana's brains may lead her 'to some grave lapse in good
behaviour'. So it comes to pass one day when, riding on her bicycle
in Battersea Park, she knocks over a handsome Irish painter... 'A
pretty, witty little parable about Victorian values, and the
hazards of being female and intelligent in a country as sexist and
anti-intellectual as the United Kingdom... This romance has
teeth... it bites the eternal issues of class, and sex, and
freedom.' Philip Howard, The Times
A Desirable Husband, first published in 1987, was the third novel
by the prodigiously gifted Frances Vernon (1963-91). Finola Molloy
- first introduced to readers as the daughter of the bohemian Alice
in Vernon's acclaimed debutPrivileged Children (1982) - has grown
up and married Gerard Parnell, barrister and heir to a Derbyshire
estate. They are living happily in London with two small children
when Gerard, quite unexpectedly, comes into his inheritance. And
yet this gracious living - however fortunate it initially appears -
will prove to be unexpectedly challenging to both partners in the
marriage. 'Frances Vernon is an absolute wonder.' Sunday Mirror
'Subtle hints of Barbara Pym or Ivy Compton-Burnett.' The Lady
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