Utter,
utter bliss—
Daily MailA
dazzling comic delight—
Fiona Wilson, The Times, Saturday ReviewThe story's
genius lies in its wicked humour, which remains
relentlessly uplifting even as the Blitz begin to smash all the hopes of that pre-war arcadia—
Olivia Laing, The GuardianToo
spiky and intelligent, I think, to qualify as an altogether cosy read [...] beneath the brittle surface of Mitford's wit there is
something infinitely more melancholy at work - something that is apt to snag you and pull you into its dark undertow when you are least expecting it—
Zoë Heller, The TelegraphNancy Mitford taught the wonderful truth that
laughter can see you through the darkest hours of your life—
Daily MailThe Millennial faint-hearted will be appalled by Mitford's depiction of class and gender. But Mitford's
triumph is that, as the Radletts live and laugh and cry,
we [cry] with them—
Julie Parsons, The Irish TimesIn her novels Nancy mastered her life, making everyone who was different or difficult into figures of mirth, moving only among the aristocracy, and
infusing the world with a spirit of lazy, delightful romance—
Natasha Walter, The IndependentUtter, utter bliss—
Daily MailA dazzling comic delight.
—
Fiona Wilson, The Times, Saturday ReviewUtter,
utter bliss—
Daily MailA
dazzling comic delight—
Fiona Wilson, The Times, Saturday ReviewThe story's
genius lies in its wicked humour, which remains
relentlessly uplifting even as the Blitz begin to smash all the hopes of that pre-war arcadia—
Olivia Laing, The GuardianToo
spiky and intelligent, I think, to qualify as an altogether cosy read [...] beneath the brittle surface of Mitford's wit there is
something infinitely more melancholy at work - something that is apt to snag you and pull you into its dark undertow when you are least expecting it—
Zoë Heller, The TelegraphNancy Mitford taught the wonderful truth that
laughter can see you through the darkest hours of your life—
Daily MailThe Millennial faint-hearted will be appalled by Mitford's depiction of class and gender. But Mitford's
triumph is that, as the Radletts live and laugh and cry,
we [cry] with them—
Julie Parsons, The Irish TimesIn her novels Nancy mastered her life, making everyone who was different or difficult into figures of mirth, moving only among the aristocracy, and
infusing the world with a spirit of lazy, delightful romance—
Natasha Walter, The IndependentUtter, utter bliss—
Daily MailA dazzling comic delight.
—
Fiona Wilson, The Times, Saturday ReviewBorn into one of the aristocracy's more eccentric families and educated at home with a clutch of siblings, Mitford used childhood experience, lightly fictionalised, in her comic novels. She also wrote biographies, translated from the French and edited a celebrated symposium on English Aristocrats.