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Angela Thirkell (1890–1961)

Author of High Rising

46+ Works 7,931 Members 270 Reviews 56 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: Courtesy of the Angela Thirkell Society

Series

Works by Angela Thirkell

High Rising (1933) 704 copies, 42 reviews
Wild Strawberries (1934) 543 copies, 25 reviews
The Brandons (1939) 426 copies, 16 reviews
August Folly (1936) 394 copies, 24 reviews
Pomfret Towers (1938) 366 copies, 9 reviews
Before Lunch (1939) 334 copies, 11 reviews
Summer Half (1937) 309 copies, 9 reviews
The Headmistress (1944) 261 copies, 14 reviews
Cheerfulness Breaks In (1940) 249 copies, 9 reviews
Miss Bunting (1946) 242 copies, 7 reviews
Northbridge Rectory (1941) 238 copies, 4 reviews
Marling Hall (1942) 238 copies, 6 reviews
Growing Up (1943) 235 copies, 7 reviews
Peace Breaks Out (1946) 214 copies, 5 reviews
The Demon in the House (1934) 193 copies, 9 reviews
Private Enterprise (1947) 179 copies, 4 reviews
Happy Returns (1952) 178 copies, 6 reviews
The Duke's Daughter (1951) 175 copies, 3 reviews
County Chronicle (1950) 174 copies, 3 reviews
Love Among the Ruins (1948) 173 copies, 4 reviews
The Old Bank House (1949) 168 copies, 5 reviews
Jutland Cottage (1953) 167 copies, 2 reviews
Enter Sir Robert (1955) 156 copies, 6 reviews
A Double Affair (1957) 152 copies, 3 reviews
Christmas at High Rising (2013) 150 copies, 6 reviews
What Did It Mean? (1954) 148 copies, 2 reviews
Three Houses (1931) 146 copies, 2 reviews
Love at All Ages (1959) 145 copies, 3 reviews
Close Quarters (1958) 136 copies, 5 reviews
Never Too Late (1956) 131 copies, 2 reviews
Ankle Deep (1933) 130 copies, 6 reviews
Coronation Summer (1937) 116 copies, 2 reviews
Three Score and Ten (1961) 113 copies, 4 reviews
Trooper to the Southern Cross (1934) 94 copies, 4 reviews
O, These Men, These Men! (1935) 80 copies
The Grateful Sparrow (1935) 10 copies
The Good Little Girls (2013) 5 copies
The Brandons, and others (1968) 3 copies
Everything 1 copy

Associated Works

Persuasion (1817) — Introduction, some editions — 29,966 copies, 537 reviews
The Newcomes (1855) — Introduction, some editions — 409 copies, 3 reviews
An Adult's Garden of Bloomers (1966) — Contributor — 7 copies

Tagged

1930s (138) 19th century (724) 20th century (139) audiobook (123) Austen (396) Barsetshire (552) Barsetshire Chronicles (134) Bath (109) Britain (122) British (723) British fiction (255) British literature (444) classic (1,190) classic literature (144) classics (1,373) ebook (218) England (794) English (214) English fiction (113) English literature (411) family (109) favorites (118) fiction (3,997) historical (107) historical fiction (184) humor (326) Jane Austen (551) Kindle (187) literature (581) love (135) novel (614) own (201) read (361) Regency (326) romance (999) series (162) Thirkell (172) to-read (1,233) unread (120) women (130)

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Thirkell, Angela
Legal name
Thirkell, Angela Margaret
Other names
Parker, Leslie
Birthdate
1890-01-30
Date of death
1961-01-29
Burial location
Rottingdean, Sussex, England, UK
Gender
female
Nationality
UK
Birthplace
Kensington, London, England, UK
Place of death
Bramley, Surrey, England, UK
Places of residence
Kensington, London, England, UK
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Chelsea, London, England, UK
Education
St Paul's School, London, England, UK
Occupations
writer
novelist
Relationships
Mackail, Denis (brother)
Mackail, J. W. (father)
Burne-Jones, Edward Coley (grandfather)
MacInnes, Colin (son)
Kipling, Rudyard (first cousin)
Baldwin, Earl Stanley Baldwin (first cousin) (show all 10)
Barrie, J. M. (godfather)
Baldwin, Monica (cousin)
Thirkell, Lance (son)
McInnes, Graham (son)
Short biography
Angela Margaret Mackail was born on January 30, 1890 at 27 Young Street, Kensington Square, London. Her grandfather was Sir Edward Burne-Jones, the pre-Raphaelite painter. Her grandmother was Georgiana Macdonald. Angela's brother, Denis Mackail, was also a prolific and successful novelist. Angela's mother, Margaret Burne-Jones, married John Mackail - an administrator at the Ministry of Education and Professor of Poetry at Oxford University. Angela married James Campbell McInnes in 1911. James was a professional Baritone and performed at concert halls throughout the UK. In 1912 their first son Graham was born and in 1914 a second son, Colin. A daughter was born in 1917 at the time when her marriage was breaking up. In November 1917 a divorce was granted and Angela and the children went to live with her parents in Pembroke Gardens in London. The child, Mary, died the next year. Angela then met and married George Lancelot Thirkell in 1918 and in 1920 they travelled on a troop ship to George's hometown in Australia. In 1921, in Melbourne Australia, her youngest son, Lancelot George, was born. Angela left Australia in 1929 with 8-year- old Lance and never returned. Although living with her parents in London she badly needed to earn a living so she set forth on the difficult road of the professional writer. Her first book, Three Houses, a memoir of her happy childhood was published in 1931 and was an immediate success. The first of her novels set in Trollope's mythical county of Barsetshire was Demon in the House, followed by 28 others, one each year. Angela died on the 29th of January 1961. She is buried in Rottingdean alongside her daughter Mary and her Burne-Jones grandparents.

Members

Reviews

Like most of Angela Thirkell’s Barsetshire novels, Never Too Late shows a subset of the Barsetshire community living fairly ordinary (albeit privileged) lives, with a couple significant developments driving the plot. In this case, Edith Graham has returned from spending several months in America and is trying to find her footing as a young adult. At the same time, an older woman and her adult son are dealing with their husband/father’s decline. In these novels, young adults usually find romantic bliss, but Edith is a bit too young for marriage; perhaps that will happen in the next book. I found the other storyline more interesting. This is the second book in which Thirkell has written about the end of a life well lived; she expertly handles the gradual but inevitable failure of mind and body, the impact on their loved ones, and the feelings of guilty relief afterwards. These scenes were quite moving and I couldn’t help wondering if, at this point in her career, Thirkell was writing from personal experience. And then she surprised me by setting up a new relationship that I look forward to reading about in the next novel.… (more)
½
 
Flagged
lauralkeet | 1 other review | Dec 20, 2024 |
Ugh. I guess I'm too American for this. Class snobbery, and cultural references unfamiliar to me. I agree it would have been lovely to hear Kipling read [b:Just So Stories|34053|Just So Stories|Rudyard Kipling|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1546075870l/34053._SY75_.jpg|2475078] aloud, but even those, Best Beloved, have become too dated to recommend.

LFL find. September 2024
 
Flagged
Cheryl_in_CC_NV | 1 other review | Oct 18, 2024 |
Well, make a big pot, or better yet, two pots of tea, and keep a good few packets of tea biscuits at hand that you can nibble on like a hamster, or else make sure your mug of tea is big enough to dunk your tea biscuit in because to survive this book you will need it.

People who have ever been stuck in a lift with someone who panics can imagine a little bit what it feels like to read this book, but of course I say that with a wink. In any case, Angela Thirkell proves that we do not have a monopoly on the Jan Steen Family and that ADHD is an invention and a concoction to be able to satirize the chaos of fictional families in English literature. In short, Angela describes in her book the troubles of two families - one well-off, the other making ends meet - with a procession of children, who all have some kind of problem, to say the least, be it puberty, jealousy, being in love with a married woman, climbing on roofs and racing cars, everything conceivable and unthinkable comes along, and that at a high pace, as if your least favorite aunt is sitting next to you and keeps on chattering.

In the meantime, almost all of them, with will or with reluctance, are roped in for a Greek play, and so the chaos is complete.

The complications are described with dry English humor, and with the arrival of Mr. Fanshawe, the tent becomes somewhat calmer and everyone is neatly put back on earth with both feet.

The persevering are treated to a piece of English satire, which by the way regularly brings a smile to your face.

Gradually the pieces of the puzzle fall into place and the right people come together. The Greek piece will be performed outside the pages of the book, we are allowed to watch the fatal dress rehearsal just in time.
But the reader who eventually reads the book in its entirety and then understands why half the English-speaking world is still charmed by Angea Thirkell will also understand why I have now ordered a next book by this author.
… (more)
 
Flagged
annus_sanctus | 23 other reviews | May 31, 2024 |
High Rising is rather a delightful nothing. I perhaps should like Thirkell more than I do, seeing as how she sits somewhere between my favourite novelist Barbara Pym and one of my more obscure pleasures, E.F. Benson, author of the Mapp and Lucia series. Thirkell is much kinder to her characters than Benson is (although not without a sense of cosmic justice), and her character examinations are less sharp than Pym's - not lacking in sharpness, mind you.

High Rising is the first in a series of almost 30 novels, which Thirkell wrote over the course of her lifetime, chronicling the same county (a century removed) from Trollope's more famous 19th century novels. So perhaps later in life, when I have run out of material, I will return here. Lengthy series in which little happens beyond character analysis are hard to find, and right up my alley. For now, though I will leave it to more interested parties.… (more)
 
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therebelprince | 41 other reviews | Apr 21, 2024 |

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Associated Authors

May Wilson Cover artist
Roy Colmer Cover designer
Jilly Bond Reader
Thomas Stegers Translator
Nadia May Narrator
Fritz Wegner Cover designer
Tony Gould Introduction

Statistics

Works
46
Also by
3
Members
7,931
Popularity
#3,058
Rating
4.1
Reviews
270
ISBNs
258
Languages
5
Favorited
56

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