35 They Were Sisters Dorothy Whipple Audible
I discovered this Between The Wars and just beyond author on GN, where else! and am enjoying her vivid descriptions of marriages and male/female dynamics from an earlier 20th century perspective. There is as expected a subtle change in language since what is 100 years ago, not as pronounced as a 19th century novel, the narrative nevertheless is often littered with the words gay and queer, for example, which sometimes has brought me up short having a delayed reaction as to their original meaning. This one is my second book of hers, and I'm on a roll now with her books as it seems quite a few have recently been republished. As with writers, I've read who who would have been her contemporaries, namely Agatha Christie and Enid Blyton, this is an England of the solidly middle classes, the working class only to figure as domestics, there's usually a cook in place in the household and someone to run around with what ever the equivalent of a Hoover was back then, one of those useless Ewbank contraptions I suspect. Although there are times when the family finances appear to hit the buffers, hardly surprising this particular book was set in the 20s and 30s and the precarious Stock Markets of the time that could seriously affect family finances, there are however are no nods to the crippling poverty caused by The Depression of that era, Dorothy Whipple's families seemed cushioned from any of that. Never quite on their uppers, though sometimes it was incumbent on them to reign it in and eat a bit of tripe for supper, nevertheless always food on the table, even if it at times meant that the woman of the house had to cope with their own donkey work when they had to let staff go.
This, the tale of 3 sisters whose lives take very different paths determined by the marriages they make. The eldest, Lucy marries William a good and sympathetic man, soulmates throughout, although they are to remain childless. The next sister down, Charlotte marries, Geoffrey an absolute horror, who turns her from a vivacious exuberant young woman to a quivering wreck, he undermines and bullies her at every turn, as he does to 2 of their children. Initially pleased by their first born Margaret, by the the time the younger two siblings, Stephen and Judith have arrived he's very much over the whole parenting experience and his interaction with them is to merely cower them both. When there is an instance of him being defied by them over the family dog, a mere puppy who sounded adorable, his revenge was to have the animal put down. At which stage I wish I could have stepped into the actual pages and done him some serious damage. Fortunately for the children, when at stages in their lives, they can stand their father no more there is a refuge at their much loved Aunt Lucy's, she in fact turns out to be a surrogate mother to several of her nieces and nephew during certain junctures in the book. Although, Stephen is ultimately to run away to sea and sever ties with his family, the hatred for his father has blighted his young life. The youngest sister, Vera, is described as very beautiful and very spoilt and hasn't a great deal of interest in either her husband or her two daughters, having various dalliances during her marriage but as her looks fade so does the interest of her paramours, one in particular who is to turn his attention to her teenage daughter, Sarah, who certainly does little to encourage that beyond wanting a tennis partner and is quite horrified by his attention. By which time Vera's husband has upped sticks and left for America with one of their daughters and a secretary, who is later to marry. Lucy is really the only sister whose life is not ruined by either a bullying controlling husband or vanity.