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This summer holiday vintage classic exploring the mystery of a
buried Cornish hotel invites us to solve the puzzle as detectives:
perfect for Agatha Christie fans, with a dash of Richard Osman ...
'I am loving it!' Nigella Lawson 'Hilarious and perceptive ...
Perfect.' Daily Mail 'Entertaining, beautifully written, and
profound.' Tracy Chevalier 'Tense, touching, human, dire, and funny
... A feast indeed.' Elizabeth Bowen 'Kennedy is not only a
romantic but an anarchist.' Anita Brookner 'Oh boy, what a treat;
wonderfully sharp and funny ... Page-turningly good!' Lissa Evans
'So full of pleasure that you could be forgiven for not seeing how
clever it is.' Cathy Rentzenbrink (foreword) Cornwall, Midsummer
1947. Pendizack Manor Hotel is buried in the rubble of a collapsed
cliff. Seven guests have perished, but is it murder, and what
brought this strange assembly together for a moonlit feast before
this Act of God - or Man? Over the week before the landslide, we
meet the hotel guests in all their eccentric glory: and as
friendships form and romances blossom, sins are revealed, and the
cliff cracks widen .. Reader Reviews: 'One of the best books I have
ever read ... Viva Ms. Kennedy, you were truly marvellous!' *****
'The best book I've ever read. Yes, I know that's a big statement!
Kennedy is quickly becoming my all-time favorite author ... A
first-rate literary genius.' ***** 'This is bar none, one of the
best books I have ever read.' ***** 'Offers us the chance to solve
a very unusual kind of mystery ... An unexpectedly engaging
literary game.' **** 'A magnificent rediscovery ... Kennedy's
masterpiece is a searing and unflinching look at postwar England
... Elegantly and tartly written, this smart and haunting novel
offers one of the most unforgettable endings ... A brilliant and
moving literary feast to be enjoyed without any moderation! *****
'I'm longing to read this again! Clever Kennedy! Is it a thriller?
Is it a morality play or an exploration of divine justice? Or is it
a family/village saga and maybe even a romance? ... Terrifically
readable with a marvellous cast.' ***** 'Such a good idea, and
brilliantly executed ... I was unable to stop reading, absorbed
completely in the company of the motley group. It's almost like
you're eavesdropping on them. After finishing it, I find myself
still thinking about it ... A fabulous read.' ***** 'One of my
favorite kinds of books: a forgotten treasure..' *****
Adapted by Margaret Kennedy, from her own novel, with Basil Dean.10
women, 10 men
"The Oracles" was the twelfth novel published by Margaret Kennedy
(1896-1967) and its titular subjects are the members of a group of
provincial intellectuals who happen upon what seems to them a piece
of stunningly advanced modern sculpture. Possibly they are not to
be blamed for failing to see that it is, in fact, only a
commonplace garden chair that has been struck by lightning and
twisted radically out of shape. However, under a delusion, The
Oracles endeavour to force their fellow townsmen to purchase the
'work' with public money. This comedy of suspense, tension and
confusion presents yet another splendid demonstration of Margaret
Kennedy's remarkable storytelling gift.
"Lucy Carmichael" - Margaret Kennedy's tenth novel, first published
in 1951 and a work by a mature novelist at the height of her powers
- opens on an unforgettably disastrous scene, as the novel's
eponymous heroine, preparing to savour her wedding day, is instead
jilted at the altar. Lucy Carmichael's recovery from this calamity
forms the substance of the story that follows. She takes a job in
the rural Lincolnshire village of Ravonsbridge, at an educational
institute established by a wealthy manufacturer for the cultural
benefit of the local community. This employment will come to offer
Lucy a second chance at romance, but it also brings her
unexpectedly into contact with a host of remarkable characters who
will influence how she sees the world."Lucy Carmichael" has a
density of realism, full of details and observations that the
reader will recognize as truthful, and the rich sense of real
people leading real lives, as Margaret Kennedy paints of her
characters in three dimensions and gives each one his or her due
within the story.
A young Welshman, Evan Jones, arrives in London towards the end of
the 1930s. Attractive and agreeable to outsiders, he has the power
to sell anything to anyone; and he sees other people as an
opportunity. Across the city, Mrs Carter Blake sells her psychic
powers, mixed with a healthy dose of charlatanism. Desperate to
maintain a respectable life, though ashamed of her work, she preys
upon the superstitious and susceptible rich. And the self-made
capitalist, Corris Morgan, is one of the richest men in Europe,
with the power to destroy anyone who crosses him. But even Corris
has his weak points - and as he struggles to escape the fate he
fears, both Mrs Carter Blake and Evan are drawn into his orbit and
inexorably swept along with him. The Midas Touch was first
published in 1938. Margaret Kennedy's The Fool of the Family is
also available from Faber Finds.
The fool of the title in this charming light-hearted Margaret
Kennedy reissue is solid, reliable, put-upon Caryl, one of the
innumerable offspring of the eccentric musician Sanger. He too is a
musician and to save money to put on a concert, he works in the
evening as a cinema pianist on the Lido in Venice. Within the space
of one summer week, two fateful meeting disrupt his calm and
ordered life: that with beautiful Fenella and, much less welcome,
with his handsome, amoral half-brother Sebastian.
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The Feast (Paperback)
Margaret Kennedy
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R474
R374
Discovery Miles 3 740
Save R100 (21%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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'Most people knew in their hearts that the lid had been taken off
hell, and that what had been done in Guernica would one day be done
in London, Paris and Berlin.' Margaret Kennedy's prophetic words,
written about the pre-war mood in Europe, give the tone of this
riveting 1941 wartime memoir: it is Mrs Miniver with the gloves
off. Her account, taken from her war diaries, conveys the tension,
frustration and bewilderment of the progression of the war, and the
terror of knowing that the worst is to come, but not yet knowing
what the worst will be. English bravery, confusion, stubbornness
and dark humour ('Nanny says that an Abbess is threatening to
swallow the whole of Europe') provide the positive, more hopeful
side of her experiences, in which she and her children move from
Surrey to Cornwall, to sit out the war amidst a quietly efficient
Home Guard and the most scandalous rumours. Where Stands A Winged
Sentry (the title comes from a 17th-century poem by Henry Vaughan)
was only published in the USA, and has never been published in the
UK before. Margaret Kennedy (1896-1967) made her name as a novelist
with The Ladies of Lyndon (1923) and The Constant Nymph (1924), and
continued publishing until the year before her death. The
Introduction will be by Faye Hammill, Professor of English
Literature at the University of Glasgow.
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La Fiesta
Margaret Kennedy
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R733
R627
Discovery Miles 6 270
Save R106 (14%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Avant-garde composer Albert Sanger lives in a ramshackle chalet in
the Swiss Alps, surrounded by his 'Circus' of assorted children,
admirers and a slatternly mistress. The family and their home life
may be chaotic, but visitors fall into an enchantment, and the
claims of respectable life or upbringing fall away. When Sanger
dies, his Circus must break up and each find a more conventional
way of life. But fourteen-year-old Teresa is already deeply in
love: for her, the outside world holds nothing but tragedy.
Agatha is aware of an intensity, a powerful storm of emotion
briefly awakened by a shortlived love affair with her cousin
Gerald, that is entirely lacking from the successful marriage on
which she is about to embark. Beautiful, young and carefully
brought up, Agatha knows she is securing a perfect and luxurious
future in marrying handsome John Clewer and becoming Mistress of
Lyndon, and she soon becomes the perfect country house hostess. But
when Gerald reappears and war in Europe disturbs the sheltered
comfort of Lyndon forever, Agatha is once again haunted by the idea
of a different life.
THE CONSTANT NYMTH -- CONTENTS -- BOOK I SANGERS CIRCUS BOOK I1
NYMPHS AND SHEPHERDS BOOK 111 THE SILVER STY EOOK IV THREE MEET
PAGE . l -- 1924 -- BOOK I SANGEKS CIRCUS - CHAPTER I AT the time
of his death the hame of Albert Sanger was barely known to the
musical public of Great Britain. Among the very few who had heard
of him there were even some who called him SanjB, in the French
manner, being disinclined to suppose that great men are
occasionally born in Hammersmith. That, however, is where he was
born, of lower middle class parents, in the latter half of the
nineteenth century. The whole world knew of it as soon as he was
dead and buried. Englishmen, discovering a new belonging, became
excited it appeared that Sanger had been very much heard of
everywhere else. His claims to immortality were canvassed eagerly
by people who hoped soon to have an opportunity of hearing his
work. His idiom, which was demonstrably neither Latin nor Gothic
nor yet Slav, was discovered to be Anglo-Saxon. Obituary columns
talked of the gay simplicity of his rhythms, an unmistakably
national feature, which, they declared, took one back to Chaucer.
They lamented that yet another prophet had passed without honour in
his own country. But for this the British public was not entirely
to blame few people can sincerely admire a piece of music which
they have not heard. During Sangers lifetime his work was never
performed in England. It was partly his own fault since he composed
nothing but operas and these on a particularly grandiose scaIe.
Their production was a risky enterprise, under the most promising
conditions and in England the conditions attending the production
of an opera are never promising. The presssuggested that other
British composers had been heard in London repeatedly while Sanger
languished in a little limbo of neglect. This was not quite the
case. The limbo has never been as little as that. Sanger, moreover,
hated England, left it at an early age, never went back, and seldom
spoke of it without some strong qualification. Appreciation, though
tardy, was generous when it came. A special effort was made, about
a year after Sangers death, and The Nine Muses, an enterprising
repertory theatre south of the river, undertook the production of
Prester John, the shortest and simplest of the operas. The success
of the piece was unqualified. All the intelligentzia and some
others flocked to hecrr, and proved by their applause how ready
they were to appreciate English music as soon as ever they got the
chance. There were no howls of rage such as had arisen when Prester
John was produced in Paris no free fights in the gallery between
the partizans and foes of the composer. The whole thing was as
decorous as possible and the respectful ardour of the audience,
their prolonged cheers at the end, . left no doubt as to Sangers
posthumous position in his own country. They were not unlike the .
ovation accorded to a guest of honour who arrives a little late.
Raving renounced his native land. Sanger adopted no other. He roved
about from one European capital to another, never settling anywhere
for long, driven forwards by his strange, restless fancy...
Betsy Canning is dissatisfied with life. She has always taken pains
to be healthy, popular and well-treated, but despite her wealth,
her comfortable homes and beautiful children, happiness eludes her.
The problem must lie, she thinks, in her marriage to Alec, and a
neat, civilised divorce seems the perfect solution. But talk of
divorce sparks interference from family and friends, and soon
public opinion tears into the fragile fabric of family life and
private desire. Alec and Betsy's marriage will not be the only
casualty, and in this newly complicated world, happiness is more
elusive than ever.
Kate is bored of being overlooked by her grown-up children and
decides to escape on an Aegean cruise. She ends up in Keritha - a
mysterious Greek island all but forgotten by the modern world.
There she encounters her childhood friends, the Challoners,
returned to the island of their birth to claim their heritage. When
another stray arrives: the unattractive, foolish Selwyn Potter,
Kate is irritated. But under the spell of this strange and
beautiful island both visitors find themselves, and each other,
cast in a new light.
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