The Complete Mapp and Lucia, Volume Two - E. F. Benson
    • The Complete Mapp and Lucia, Volume Two - E. F. Benson
    • The Complete Mapp and Lucia, Volume Two - E. F. Benson

    The Complete Mapp and Lucia, Volume Two - E. F. Benson

    En Stock

    With an Introduction and Notes by Dr Keith Carabine, University of Kent at Canterbury.

    Contains: Mapp and Lucia; Lucia’s Progress; Trouble for Lucia.

    These three wonderful comic novels drolly record the battle between Lucia and Elisabeth Mapp for social and cultural supremacy in the village of Tilling (based on Rye). 

    Jour
    :
    heure
    :
    min
    :
    sec
    8,550 TND TTC
    9,500 TND TTC
    Économisez 10%
    Quantité:

    About the Book

    These three wonderful comic novels drolly record the battle between Lucia and Elisabeth Mapp for social and cultural supremacy in the village of Tilling (based on Rye). Their constant skirmishes ensure that every game of bridge, tea or dinner-party, church service, council meeting or art–exhibition are thrilling encounters that ensure Tilling is always on ‘a very agreeable rack of suspense’. Both Elisabeth and Lucia are gross hypocrites, snobs and bullies, the huge differences in temperament and style ensure the battle is usually unequal. Elisabeth is incurably mean-spirited and Lucia suffers from splendid delusions of grandeur and personal prestige. Driven by demons of revenge, Elisabeth always acts impulsively, and therefore every revelation of her meanness allows Lucia, the consummate actress, to kill her ally with a sickening kindness.

    In his insightful Introduction Keith Carabine shows that these books are excruciatingly funny because Benson, like Jane Austen, invites the reader to view the world through the self-deluded chronic anger and jaundiced suspicions of Elisabeth and through the self-deluded fabrications and day-dreams of Lucia. Carabine also concentrates on the novels’ disturbing, bitchy, ‘camp’ humour whenever ‘that horrid thing which Freud calls sex is raised’

    About the Author

    E. F. Benson

    Edward Frederic Benson (1867–1940), novelist, was born at Wellington College on 24 July 1867, the third son of Edward White Benson (1829–1896) and Mary Sidgwick (1841–1918). His father was headmaster of Wellington College and subsequently archbishop of Canterbury. He was a younger brother of Arthur Christopher Benson (1862–1925), Mary Eleanor Benson (1863–1890), and Margaret Benson (1865–1916), and an elder brother of Robert Hugh Benson (1871–1914). He was educated at Temple Grove School, Sheen, Marlborough College, and King’s College, Cambridge, where he was exhibitioner (1888) and scholar (1890). He secured first classes in both parts of the classical tripos (1890, 1891) and his first book, Sketches from Marlborough, was published while he was at Cambridge.

    Benson worked in Athens for the British School of Archaeology (1892–5) and in Egypt for the Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies (1895). His first novel, Dodo, was published in 1893 and was a runaway success. From 1895 to 1918 he lived in London and devoted himself to writing, much of his work being published in fashionable magazines. From 1918 he lived for the greater part of each year at Lamb House in Rye, Sussex, which had been the home of Henry James.

    Benson described himself as uncontrollably prolific: he published at least ninety-three books, excluding collaborations. Benson’s writings fall into three groups: novels of social satire, reminiscences, and horror stories. Most famous among his social satires are the novels of manners, especially the ‘Mapp and Lucia’ novels, which include Queen Lucia (1920), Lucia in London (1927), and Miss Mapp (1922); they are set both in London and in ‘Tilling’, a fictionalized Rye, and are said to be romans-à-clef (as also are the Dodo novels, where Dodo is believed to be a portrait of Margot Tennant, later Lady Oxford). These novels remain witty and penetrating social studies. A London Weekend Television dramatization, entitled Mapp and Lucia, was screened by Channel 4. This, along with an omnibus publication of the complete novels, Make Way for Lucia (1977; 1986), revived interest in Benson’s work, and increased his popularity with a wider audience. Another group of his social satires were less successful, and deal with university life, examples being, The Babe, BA (1897), David Blaize (1916), and Colin II (1925).

    Benson’s books of reminiscences, such as As we were (1930), As we are (1932), and Final Edition (1940), have value as sources for social history and personal anecdote, as he excelled in creating vivid pictures of the atmosphere of the times. This was a quality also displayed in his biographical studies of Edward VII and Queen Victoria. In one of his books of family recollections Benson claims for himself a retentive, observational memory, even of things hardly noted at the time. This was perhaps his most remarkable quality, displayed in his non-fiction and fiction alike. His stories of horror and the supernatural have remained consistently popular. Early horror novels, such as The Luck of the Vails (1901), and The Room in the Tower (1912), are characterised by lavish descriptions and psychological tension. Visible and Invisible (1923), Spook Stories (1928), and More Spook Stories (1934) are more coldly unemotional excursions into the realm of ghosts and marvels.

    Benson never married and many of his novels suggest that he had a generalised dislike of women. He lived alone in Rye and continued writing until his death. He was Mayor of Rye from 1934 to 1937 and a J.P. He was elected an honorary fellow of Magdalene College, Cambridge, in 1938 and was awarded an O.B.E. He died in University College Hospital, London, on 29 February 1940, and was buried in the Rye cemetery after a funeral conducted by the Bishop of Chichester. The E. F. Benson Society was founded in London in 1984, and publishes The Dodo, a semi-annual journal.

    Wordsworth Editions
    045395

    Fiche technique

    Langue
    Anglaise
    Dimensions
    127 mm x 198 mm
    Edition
    Wordsworth Editions
    Collection
    Wordsworth Classics
    Auteur
    E.F. Benson
    Poids
    438 g
    Nombre de pages
    665 pages
    Date de Parution
    10/04/2011
    Série
    Classics

    Références spécifiques

    autres produits de la même catégorie