Friday, 2 August 2013


What an inspired choice of cover (I don't recognise the artist) but this is exactly how I imagine Miss Mole. My copy, unfortunately, is a faded 1930s hardback that I picked up for £1 and has been lying around for ages ... if only I'd known what a treasure was languishing down the side of the sofa. (It won the James Tait Black memorial prize in 1930.)

Miss Mole is a Miss Pettigrew crossed with Mary Poppins but with a 'past' that she acquired by loving not wisely, but too well, in the aftermath of WWI. She is almost 40, wears unfortunate clothes but good shoes and dreads a future of poverty-stricken spinsterhood with optimism and courage. After losing her job as a lady's companion, she becomes housekeeper to a pompous Nonconformist minister and his dysfunctional family. You'll have to plod through a few longueurs - my red pencil would have chopped   50 pages or so - but it's worth it for the wonderful character of Miss Hannah Mole and her sharp tongue. This is a Spinster Lit classic and Miss Mole is a role model for anybody who has ever lunched off the cheapest currant bun in the teashop. (The equivalent these days is probably a miserable egg sandwich from M&S.)

I've been reading it through some of the hottest, stickiest, sleepless nights of the heatwave but this is a book for autumn, full of mists and dahlias and Michaelmas daisies ... not that I'm wishing the summer away, but I'm wilting.

Does anybody recall this rather wonderful sounding BBC adaptation from 1980? I don't remember it at all.

15 comments:

  1. Thank you for reminding me that I have a copy of Miss Mole (a green Virago but a different portrait on the cover) but I've never read it. Maybe, as you say, when the season turns ...

    ReplyDelete
  2. It's more of a nip of whisky read than a Pimm's read, Karen.

    ReplyDelete
  3. A delightful review Mary, witty as only you can give it! Thanks for sharing, and what a find at the price!
    Wilting Dear? 15 degrees C here on the Pacific NW coast and wondering what happened to Summer?

    ReplyDelete
  4. Came over from Cornflower Books as I was intrigued with the reference there! This sounds so very good. You dont know the meaning of wilting till you have come to Sri Lanka!!!!

    ReplyDelete
  5. Sounds lovely, I shall hope to search for it in a second hand book shop & save for autumn reading one year.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I love the book but don't remember any radio adaptation.

    Lots more E H Young to enjoy for those who like Miss Mole!

    ReplyDelete
  7. I mustn't grumble it away, Noelle, and it's much cooler today.

    I've only once been to Sri Lanka, Mystica, for Christmas - and the weather was heavenly! But I think your summers would finish me off!

    I think you'll find one quite easily, Joan.

    It was TV, not radio, Callmemadam. I've been looking for it on YouTube but no luck. But I do have a copy of William so I'm looking foirward to more EH Young.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Another one for the list, thank you. Might read it at Michaelmas :-)

    ReplyDelete
  9. I'm ready for the autumn evenings with this recommendation. You are always utterly reliable. It's like having a personal cultural guide.

    ReplyDelete
  10. That's very kind of you, Lucille. I could rather fancy being a professional culture-taster!

    ReplyDelete
  11. Having recently re-read Miss Pettigrew (and loving it anew) I think that Miss Mole might suit me very well. thank you for your review Mary.

    ReplyDelete
  12. It's not as frothy as Miss Pettigrew, but Miss M is a wonderful character. Hope you enjoy it, Toffeeapple.

    I love One Fine Day, Sue. I'd like to read it again, too.

    ReplyDelete
  13. Thank you, Sue. I recognised one of his other paintings now I know the name. Hope you enjoy the book.

    ReplyDelete
  14. I loved Miss Mole - I loved William even better. And I agree that some of the prose could have been chopped, but the dialogue is worth every second.

    ReplyDelete
  15. That's good to know, Simon. I've got William and also bought The Curate's Wife in Oxfam the other day.

    ReplyDelete