One of the things that's rather extraordinary about what Persephone Books has achieved is that so many people seem to fantasize about the titles they should publish. People (myself certainly included!) are always saying that Persephone should reprint this or that—so much so that they've hosted "Possibly Persephone" events, where folks can suggest and discuss titles they think Persephone might want to reprint. It seems rather unique for a publisher to inspire that sort of interest, to have developed such a unique and cohesive publishing agenda that we start to apply Persephone's selection criteria to other books we read. I mean, I really can't imagine, for example, someone saying, "Wow, this would really be a perfect title for Penguin!" or "This book has HarperCollins written all over it!" Can you?
So that's my little heartfelt ode to Persephone, because the idea for this post came quite a while back when I was reviewing a list of titles suggested at a Possibly Persephone event (two of the titles below were even included on the list).
All the same, though, the title of this post could be "Possibly Virago." Or "Possibly Greyladies." Or "Possibly Bloomsbury." Etc. It could even be "Possibly HarperCollins," as far as I'm concerned. "Possibly someone," is the main point here.
The post could also be called "Fantasy Publishing" because, in addition to fantasizing about what books Persephone should reprint, I do occasionally
engage in a pleasurable reverie about bypassing the whole issue by launching my own publishing house—Furrowed
Middlebrow Books, perhaps? Hmmm.
If only it weren't for all of the pesky work and expense that would be required—and how that would cut into my reading and blogging time…
[In fact, I might as well confess here that, before my obsession with unknown writers settled on mid-twentieth century British writers, I even took my fantasy publishing so far as to create a print-on-demand book of public domain short stories by American women writers. It has even sold a handful of copies, though it was mostly for the fun of setting it all up—choosing the fonts and the layout and design, editing it, etc. I like how it turned out, but whew! What a lot of work! I certainly had newfound respect for small independent publishers after that experience.]
If only it weren't for all of the pesky work and expense that would be required—and how that would cut into my reading and blogging time…
[In fact, I might as well confess here that, before my obsession with unknown writers settled on mid-twentieth century British writers, I even took my fantasy publishing so far as to create a print-on-demand book of public domain short stories by American women writers. It has even sold a handful of copies, though it was mostly for the fun of setting it all up—choosing the fonts and the layout and design, editing it, etc. I like how it turned out, but whew! What a lot of work! I certainly had newfound respect for small independent publishers after that experience.]
At any
rate, following are the first titles I would choose if I could make my publishing fantasies a reality without any significant effort or investment. The list contains only titles that I've read
and really loved or found striking and worthwhile. Only books I think other readers would enjoy
too. And of course, only titles that are
currently (inexplicably, criminally, tragically, etc.) out-of-print.
I
haven't reviewed most of these here yet, but I've linked to those I have done. And I should note that, with the exception of
the first novel, which is my current obsession and therefore seems most criminally overlooked to me, the
titles are in no particular order.
And on the topic of the first author mentioned below, Kristi from the DES discussion list just made the most amazing find on Ebay after my query of the group whether anyone knew about Ursula Orange: an actual photo of her and a fascinating, if short, tale about her rise to public attention (see text on photo below). The photo comes from the archives of the Baltimore Sun newspaper (and it's still available here, or you can spend many hours browsing many, many more such pictures by visiting the Tribune Photo Archives store at Ebay here—I found a whole slew of other author photos, including several more impossibly obscure writers I never thought I'd find photos of). It's lovely to be able to put a face with the name and the wonderful writing!
And on the topic of the first author mentioned below, Kristi from the DES discussion list just made the most amazing find on Ebay after my query of the group whether anyone knew about Ursula Orange: an actual photo of her and a fascinating, if short, tale about her rise to public attention (see text on photo below). The photo comes from the archives of the Baltimore Sun newspaper (and it's still available here, or you can spend many hours browsing many, many more such pictures by visiting the Tribune Photo Archives store at Ebay here—I found a whole slew of other author photos, including several more impossibly obscure writers I never thought I'd find photos of). It's lovely to be able to put a face with the name and the wonderful writing!
Hope
you find some new titles on this list, and perhaps some old favorites too. Please do feel free to add your own suggestions ("Possibly Furrowed
Middlebrow"???) via comments or email.
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URSULA ORANGE
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This would be my very first
selection of a book to reprint. It's
unfathomable that no one has reprinted it already. Like a D. E. Stevenson novel diffused
through an E. M. Delafield lens, in which a jaded London wife and mother is
evacuated to a country village to stay with an old school friend, delves into
the village's affairs, and learns a bit about herself and happiness in the
process. A fitting title for
Persephone or Greyladies.
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2
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URSULA ORANGE
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And while I'm at it, I've just finished this earlier
Orange tale (the only other one I've tracked down so far). It follows four young
women who were together at
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3
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EDITH OLIVIER
The Seraphim Room
(1932)
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Of course. If you've read the rest of this blog, you
know of my undying love for Olivier, and this one (published in the U.S. as Mr. Chilvester's Daughters) is the ultimate achievement of
her quirky brilliance. Her earlier
novel, The Love-Child (1927), is
the only one to have been reprinted (by Virago in the 1980s, now long
out-of-print again), but for me this is her best—a rather loony tale of a
tyrannous father (almost certainly based on Olivier's own) and his campaign
against indoor plumbing. No kidding! I started reviewing her novels in chronological
order, and haven't gotten to this one because I keep getting distracted by new discoveries, but someday...
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4 & 5
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CELIA
BUCKMASTER
Village
Story (1951) & Family
Ties (1952)
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It started with a casual
reference to Buckmaster in Nicola Beauman's The Other Elizabeth Taylor, continued with my obsessive search
for details of the forgotten Buckmaster's life and work, and ended up with the
only two novels she published finding a permanent place among my all-time
favorites. They are vivid,
compassionate, sometimes funny, always powerful evocations of village life,
and both should be more widely read.
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6
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MARGERY SHARP
The Stone of Chastity
(1940)
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I've enjoyed other of Margery
Sharp's novels, many of which should undoubtedly be in print as well, but The Stone of Chastity is the silliest,
daftest, and most laugh-out-loud joyful.
One of my top picks for a rainy day re-read, or a bad cold re-read, or
just a bad day re-read, this is the story of a professor who thinks he's
discovered an ancient stone in a village stream that's possessed of special
powers—no impure woman can step on the stone without falling into the
water. Outraged sensibilities and
outrageous antics result.
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7
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NORAH HOULT
House Under Mars (1946)
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Out of my obsessive World War II
home front reading a few years ago, this one stood out. It's dark, it's cynical, it's a bit
depressing, but it's also a brilliant character study, set in a
boarding-house late in the war with mostly women tenants. The women snip and snipe and sneak because the
stresses and deprivations of wartime have left them exhausted and ready to
claw for whatever advantage or happiness they can find. Reminiscent of Patrick Hamilton's
also-wonderful and similarly dark wartime novel The Slaves of Solitude (1947), House Under Mars lives up to Hoult's haunting earlier novel There Were No Windows (1944), already
reprinted by Persephone—hint hint…
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PAMELA FRANKAU
A Wreath for the
Enemy (1954)
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Admittedly, I'm surprised that
most of the novels on this list aren't in print, but in this case I'm downright
amazed that A Wreath for the Enemy
isn't considered a classic and read in high schools alongside Salinger's The Catcher in the Rye. It's a gorgeous novel about a young girl’s
life-altering experiences one summer in the bohemian
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9
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MARY BELL
Summer's
Day (1951)
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This one was actually reprinted by Greyladies a few years back (thankfully, or I might never have come across it at all), but it has
lapsed back out of print again. My
only guess as to its continuing obscurity is that it sounds much lighter and
fluffier than it really is. Stories
set in girls' schools seem to evoke, for better or worse, stories for schoolgirls. This one is one of the former but not one of the latter. It's an entertaining, hilarious, and
nevertheless thoughtful and serious meditation on time and eternity, youth
and aging, love and heartbreak, joy and melancholy. Balancing hilarity and heartbreak is quite an accomplishment for any writer, and Summer's Day is
now one of my favorite novels.
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10
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DIANA TUTTON
Guard Your
Daughters (1953)
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(As I was finalizing this post, I stumbled across a mention of a possible reprint of this one by Hesperus Press set for March of next year. It's about time! The Hesperus website makes no mention of it, however, so I'm leaving it on my list for now. If the reprint does happen, I'll be overjoyed to say, "1 down, 19 to go!")
I'm very late to the party here,
as numerous bloggers have been recommending this novel for years, and Nicola
Humble discusses it at some length in her classic critical text The Feminine Middlebrow Novel, 1920s to
1950s (2001). And yet it's still
out-of-print, which I find so surprising I wonder if Tutton's heirs have been refusing permission—it's absence from bookstore shelves is otherwise
inexplicable. The novel is a bit Dodie
Smith, a bit early Barbara Pym, and (more than it might first appear) a bit
of the darker side of Ivy Compton-Burnett.
This tale of a family of sisters trying to meet men despite their
mother's phobic dread of letting them into the real world is funny and
fascinating, and its dark undercurrents only enhance its pleasures.
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11
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ROSE MACAULAY
The World My
Wilderness (1950)
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Another novel whose
unavailability is genuinely shocking—I'm hoping it's just an oversight and
Virago will be printing a new edition very soon. For me, this is one of the great novels of
the immediate postwar, about a seventeen-year-old girl’s difficulty in
adjusting to bomb-ravaged London after years of working for the
French underground. It makes powerful
and atmospheric use of the scarred ruins of London, and is a brilliant and
sensitive precursor to later novels of teenage disillusionment and
delinquency. Also a perfect
companion-piece for Rumer Godden's An
Episode of Sparrows. (And, honestly, if it does get reprinted, why not use the gorgeous original cover above? At least, that's what Furrowed Middlebrow Books would do...)
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12
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SUSAN TWEEDSMUIR
Cousin Harriet (1957)
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Set in the Victorian period and
written in a typically Victorian, epistolary style, Cousin Harriet reads like a lost 19th century classic—undoubtedly
too scandalous to be published in its time.
Following the difficulties of a smart, moral young woman living at
home with her father as she tries to help a female cousin pregnant out of wedlock,
the novel's style lends it a sense of immediacy and gives the reader a
feeling of having glimpsed a reality hidden from public view. Cousin
Harriet was reprinted by Penguin not long after its first publication,
but has been missing from bookstore shelves ever since.
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13
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D. E. STEVENSON
Bel Lamington (1961)
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Some of Stevenson's works have
been slowly returning to print recently (Persephone now publishes three,
Bloomsbury one, Sourcebooks several, and Greyladies has brought to light more hitherto unknown and unpublished works, as well as her impossible-to-find
debut, Peter West—and what could be a better testimonial to Stevenson's broad appeal than the array of publishers she's collected?!?!), but there are
still many more worth reprinting—in particular, three more "Mrs.
Tim" novels that continue from Mrs.
Tim of the Regiment, reprinted by Bloomsbury. But for this list I'm going with my most
recent favorite, which the DES discussion list is just finishing—the tale
of a shy girl, left alone after her father's death, making her way in a
London office and making her getaway to the Scottish
Highlands where she gets a new lease on life. Charming and completely
irresistible.
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14
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RACHEL FERGUSON
A
Footman for the Peacock (1940)
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Author of the Virago (and now Bloomsbury) favorite The Brontës Went to Woolworth's (1931) and the wonderful Persephone reprint Alas, Poor Lady
(1937), Ferguson still deserves more attention than she gets. For me, A Footman for the Peacock
rivals both of her more widely-read titles, and it has the advantage of
combining the daft hilarity of Brontës with the outraged satire of Alas. In a nutshell, it revolves around a cruelly
mistreated medieval footman reincarnated as a Nazi-sympathizing peacock on
the estate of a loathsome family of impoverished gentry in the early days of
World War II. Need I say more? It's a brilliant skewering of snobbishness,
entitlement, and casual indifference to the suffering of others.
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15
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DOROTHY EVELYN
SMITH
Miss
Plum and Miss Penny (1959)
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A novel that appears to divide
readers, Miss Plum and Miss Penny
is one of my favorite discoveries of this year and was one of the titles
suggested as "possible Persephone" a couple of years back. The tale
of a spinster (Miss Penny) who rescues a young woman (Miss Plum) from
suicide, only to find her life taken over by the manipulative Miss Plum, it's
admittedly possessed of a rather dark, sarcastic sense of humor (for example:
“I do not anticipate for one moment that Miss Plum has been murdered, though
I should have some slight sympathy with her assassin if she had”). And the
darkness is cloaked in what would otherwise be the perfect setting and
situation for a perfectly light, cozy novel of village life, lending it a
distinctly "uncozy" edge. But I found it to be quite perceptive
about the darker side of character motivations as well as the ordinary side. More importantly, no book has made me laugh
harder this year.
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16
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RUBY FERGUSON
Apricot Sky (1952)
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From an "uncozy" to a
novel that—were there justice in the world—would be read by cozy fans
everywhere. A family comedy set in the
Scottish countryside, Apricot Sky
is the best approximation I've found of a D. E. Stevenson novel not written
by Stevenson herself. Ferguson's
earlier novel, Lady Rose and Mrs.
Memmary (1937), is one of Persephone's best-loved titles (and one of mine
as well). This one seems like a perfect
choice for Greyladies…
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17
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BRYHER (pseudonym of ANNIE WINNIFRED ELLERMAN)
Beowulf (1956)
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Another favorite from my WWII
home front reading, Beowulf is an
excellent example of "Blitz lit."
Apparently including autobiographical elements of Bryher's and partner
H.D. (Hilda Dolittle)'s lives during the war, the novel focuses on two women
running a London tea shop—their tensions, their interactions with customers,
friends, and staff, their difficulties with food supplies, and (of course)
the little matter of falling bombs.
Not to mention one hideous statue of an English bulldog that forms a
central symbol in the book. Bryher,
who also wrote historical fiction, has been overshadowed by Dolittle, but she
was a talent in her own right (and had a fascinating life as well).
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18
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RUTH ADAM
A
House in the Country (1957)
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Adam is certainly an
underappreciated writer. Apart from
her masterful history of women's roles through much of the twentieth century,
A Woman's Place 1910-1975—a must-read
that's available from Persephone—only her second novel, I'm Not Complaining (1938), has ever been reprinted, by Virago in
the 1980s. Other of her works, such as
There Needs No Ghost (1939), about
Bloomsbury's reactions to the approach of war, or So Sweet a Changeling (1954), about adoption, have been
completely neglected. She also wrote fiction for girls, which you can read about here. But this one is my favorite so far—a comedy
about a group of friends in the immediate postwar who decide to live
communally in an old manor house. It's
hilarious, but the problems they encounter provide a vivid and still-relevant
antidote to fantasies of Downton Abbey-esque
lifestyles.
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19
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INEZ HOLDEN
Night Shift (1941)
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One final wartime work. With all the interest in the home front and
women's roles in wartime, it's hard to believe this one hasn't come to light,
but Holden—a talented novelist who worked from the 1920s until the 1950s—has dipped
into serious obscurity, now mentioned more in relation to her friendships
with George Orwell and Anthony Powell than for the quality of her work. Night
Shift is a short but powerful look at life in a wartime aircraft factory. Episodic and even experimental in style, it
focuses more on the overall mood and activity of the factory than on specific
characters, but the effect is vivid and memorable.
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20
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DODIE SMITH
A Tale of Two Families (1970)
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And now for something completely
different… Dodie Smith is probably the
most widely read author on this list, due to her authorship of The Hundred and One Dalmations (1956)
and I Capture the Castle (1948),
but her five later novels for adults have been seriously neglected. That was partly rectified when Corsair heroically reprinted the first
three last year, so that they're at least in print in the U.K. But the final two remain unavailable and
increasingly unaffordable to buy second-hand.
I still haven't tracked down Smith's final novel, The Girl from the Candle-lit Bath (1978), but I unearthed this
one, her second to last, at a book sale a while back. It has had mixed reviews online too, but
I've been rather haunted by it ever since I finished it—it's hilarious and
disturbing by turns, and even a bit edgy, but always entertaining.
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[Note: I'll be taking a few days off from posting (and from work—yay!) to relax with Andy and enjoy our long Thanksgiving weekend. But in the meantime, Happy Thanksgiving to those in the U.S. and ... well ... happy last weekend in November for the rest of you!]