The first novel in Fay Weldon's 'Love and Inheritance' trilogy, following the lives and loves of an aristocratic family at the turn of the nineteenth century. As the summer of 1899 gives way to autumn Lord Dilberne's decision to remain in Belgrave Square rather than move the household to the ancestral acres of Dilberne Court sends out ripples of concern over his debts. The ripples spread to his wife Isobel who orders the life of the household, and to Grace the lady's maid who orders the life of her mistress. They touch the insouciant lives of his still unmarried children, Arthur, who is passionate about motor cars and keeps a courtesan in Half Moon Street, and Rosina, who airs fashionably progressive views and keeps a parrot in her bedroom....
Female characters in novels by Virginia Woolf are studied in their relationships as wives, mothers, ...
It is generally said that Elizabeth Gaskell, unlike many nineteenthcentury women writers, thought co...
Hanbury is getting more and more governed by the principles of the French Revolution. Lady Ludlow, l...
The third novel in Fay Weldon's 'Love and Inheritance' trilogy, following the lives and loves of an ...
A talk on the final installment in the brilliantly executed Love and Inheritance trilogy. Fay Weldon...
Fay’s Love & Inheritance trilogy brings an aristocratic Edwardian household to life in a witty tale ...
This study will be the first to look at the effect of the strict settlement on the language, plots a...
This thesis considers three British novels of the 1880s that imagined a range of middle-class domest...
A modern classic, Housekeeping is the story of Ruth and her younger sister, Lucille, who grow up hap...
My dissertation offers a new entry point into Victorian fiction’s well-documented concern with the c...
The English country house has captured people’s interest and imagination for centuries, and has been...
Edith Wharton\u27s fiction is replete with characters engaged in fractured or distorted relationship...
More than any other Victorian novelist, it is Dickens who has been regarded as a fit subject for rea...
Second Nature: The Discourse of Habit in Nineteenth-Century British Fiction explores ideas about hab...
Millicent of Rose Hall is a fantasy novel for children. It tells the story of twelve-year-old Millic...
Female characters in novels by Virginia Woolf are studied in their relationships as wives, mothers, ...
It is generally said that Elizabeth Gaskell, unlike many nineteenthcentury women writers, thought co...
Hanbury is getting more and more governed by the principles of the French Revolution. Lady Ludlow, l...
The third novel in Fay Weldon's 'Love and Inheritance' trilogy, following the lives and loves of an ...
A talk on the final installment in the brilliantly executed Love and Inheritance trilogy. Fay Weldon...
Fay’s Love & Inheritance trilogy brings an aristocratic Edwardian household to life in a witty tale ...
This study will be the first to look at the effect of the strict settlement on the language, plots a...
This thesis considers three British novels of the 1880s that imagined a range of middle-class domest...
A modern classic, Housekeeping is the story of Ruth and her younger sister, Lucille, who grow up hap...
My dissertation offers a new entry point into Victorian fiction’s well-documented concern with the c...
The English country house has captured people’s interest and imagination for centuries, and has been...
Edith Wharton\u27s fiction is replete with characters engaged in fractured or distorted relationship...
More than any other Victorian novelist, it is Dickens who has been regarded as a fit subject for rea...
Second Nature: The Discourse of Habit in Nineteenth-Century British Fiction explores ideas about hab...
Millicent of Rose Hall is a fantasy novel for children. It tells the story of twelve-year-old Millic...
Female characters in novels by Virginia Woolf are studied in their relationships as wives, mothers, ...
It is generally said that Elizabeth Gaskell, unlike many nineteenthcentury women writers, thought co...
Hanbury is getting more and more governed by the principles of the French Revolution. Lady Ludlow, l...