At Mrs. Lippincote's

At Mrs. Lippincote's is a 1945 novel by Elizabeth Taylor, her first novel. It was published again in 1988 by Virago Press, containing an autobiographical sketch of the author.

At Mrs. Lippincote's
First edition (publ. Knopf)
AuthorElizabeth Taylor
LanguageEnglish
Published1945
Media typePrint
ISBN0-86068-538-1

Plot synopsis

Julia and her husband, Roddy Davenant, along with their young son, Oliver, and Roddy's cousin, Eleanor, are temporarily living at Mrs. Lippincote's, a house filled with old mahogany furniture and other reminders of earlier wealth. Julia and the others have joined Roddy, who is an officer in the Royal Air Force.

She must be mother and, above all, an officer's wife. Roddy, a "leader of men," requires that she fulfill her role impeccably. Julia accepts the pompousness of Armed forces service life, but her honesty and sense of humour prevent her from taking her role too seriously.

Reception

In a 1946 book review in Kirkus Reviews the review called the book "special social comedy" to be "subtle" and "stylised," but "lacking particular pattern or purpose." Kirkus also noted "we also expected it to interest only discriminating tastes."[1] In a retrospective of Taylor, The Guardian wrote the book "was for many years well reviewed and commercially successful."[2]

gollark: Aren't they in Australia?
gollark: (But it would be totally possible to ban E2EE chat apps from stores)
gollark: (Obviously they can't entirely ban it)
gollark: It also seems to function as a plausibly deniable way to ban end to end encryption (it never mentions it explicitly but does have a mechanism to force technology companies to make their service amenable to centralised monitoring).
gollark: The UK government is also working on the incredibly ææææ "online safety bill", which obliges online things to ban "harmful content" (not illegal, "harmful").

See also

References

  1. "At Mrs. Lippincote's". Kirkus Reviews. 1946.
  2. O'Connell, John (19 June 2009). "I have not got a bikini". The Guardian.


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