The Priory The Priory

The Priory

    • 1.0 • 1 Rating
    • $13.99
    • $13.99

Publisher Description

The setting for The Priory is a large house ‘somewhere in England’, partly modelled on Newstead Abbey near Nottingham where Dorothy Whipple had a weekend cottage and partly on Parciau, the house on Anglesey where she stayed in 1934. And, as David Conville, who used to stay at Parciau as a child, writes in his Afterword: ‘The Parciau inhabitants in The Priory were hardly disguised.’

At the beginning of the book we see Saunby Priory: its ‘West Front, built in the thirteenth century for the service of God and the poor, towered above the house that had been raised alongside from its ruins, from its very stones. And because no light showed from any window here, the stranger, visiting Saunby at this hour, would have concluded that the house was empty. But he would have been wrong. There were many people within.’

The sentence is typical of the opening of a Dorothy Whipple novel. Gently, deceptively gently, but straightforwardly, it sets the scene and draws the reader in. We are shown the two Marwood girls, who are nearly grown-up, their father, the widower Major Marwood, and their aunt. Then, as soon as their lives have been evoked, we see the Major proposing marriage to a woman much younger than himself; and we understand how much will have to change.

It is a classic plot (albeit the stepmother is more disinterested than wicked) and the book has many classic qualities; yet there are no clichés either in situation or outlook, just an extraordinarily well-written and absorbing novel by the writer who has been called the twentieth-century Mrs Gaskell.

Above all, The Priory is a very subtle novel, so subtle that, as with all Dorothy Whipple’s books, it is very easy to miss what an excellent writer she is. As Books magazine wrote in August 1939: ‘Because it is so unaffectedly and well-written, and because it conveys very effectively a sense of the old house and what it meant to be the various persons connected with it, The Priory carries a punch out of proportion to its otherwise artless-seeming content.’ And Forrest Reid, the Irish novelist and friend of EM Forster, described it in the Spectator as being ‘brilliantly original and convincing. It is fresh, delightful, absorbing, and one accepts it with gratitude as one did the novels read in boyhood.’

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
2015
18 February
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
393
Pages
PUBLISHER
Persephone Books
SELLER
Persephone Books Ltd
SIZE
1.7
MB
They Were Sisters They Were Sisters
2014
A Home for Alice A Home for Alice
2017
Mersey Maids Mersey Maids
2010
A Mother's Gift A Mother's Gift
2011
The Daughters of Ironbridge The Daughters of Ironbridge
2019
Break of Dawn Break of Dawn
2011
They Were Sisters They Were Sisters
2014
Young Anne Young Anne
2019
Every Good Deed and Other Stories Every Good Deed and Other Stories
2019
They Knew Mr Knight They Knew Mr Knight
2023
Someone at a Distance Someone at a Distance
2015
Eran hermanas Eran hermanas
2025
Mariana Mariana
2014
Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day
2014
Vittoria Cottage Vittoria Cottage
2020
Darling Darling
2022
Excellent Women Excellent Women
2011
The English Understand Wool The English Understand Wool
2022