Friends of the blog know I am a “Downton Abbey” fan, addicted to the upstairs-downstairs lives being chronicled on PBS’s Masterpiece Theatre. Last night’s episode was especially entrancing with the return of the viper Vera and the wounding of Matthew and William in France. And didn’t you love dowager Lady Violet doing battle with the vicar?
I’ve seen a number of proposed “Downton Abbey” reading lists for those wanting to know more of the Edwardians and World War I. Mostly they round up the usual suspects in literary fiction, memoir and poetry, which is well and good to a point. Paul Fussell’s The Great War and Modern Memory is one of my favorite books, and yes, you really should read Siegfried Sassoon, Wilfred Owen, Robert Lowell’s Goodbye To All That, Vera Brittain’s elegiac Testament of Youth. Be aware, though, they are more downers than “Downton.”
They are not the books I went in search of to satisfy my craving for sudsy family sagas. I am still getting to know the Crawleys. The Swanns, the Grevilles, the Straffords, the Spragues and the Days are all old friends, and thanks to R.E. Delderfield, Philip Rock, Ursula Zilinksy and Elswyth Thane, I know their family trees better than my own. (They also are handily printed at the novels’ beginnings).
Right now, I’m basking in Zilinsky’s The Long Afternoon, delighting again in the details of life at Altondale Park a century ago: “Draperies and portieres and clutter made unending work, especially when combined with sooty coal fires, but housemaids cost less to keep than a hunting dog, and the rumblings of William Morris, who preached natural wood, light-colored walls, and simplicity, would not reach Yorkshire for some years to come, and when they did, would be ignored.”
After I finish with the changing fortunes of aristocratic Toby, his German cousin Felix, and their friend David, the vicar’s son, I plan to move on to Rock’s The Passing Bells and reacquainting myself with the Grevilles, American cousin Martin and housemaid Ivy Thaxton. Since it’s the first book in a trilogy, I’ll be hard pressed to stop with one book.
And then there are Delderfield’s doorstops in his God is an Englishman trilogy. The Edwardian/ World War I story of Adam Swann’s heirs is the third, Theirs Was the Kingdom. And there are seven volumes in Thane’s Williamsburg series, although The Light Heart, following Phoebe Sprague and Oliver Campion from 1902 to 1917, may well be my favorite.
Unfortunately, many of these books are out-of-print, but you can find copies in libraries and used bookstores. Lucky me has them all, as well as Alison McLeay’s The Summer House, Rumer Godden’s China Court, and Kate Morton’s more recent The House at Riverton.
The many new books I have to read are just going to have to wait. Look for me in an English country house. I hope you’ll stay for tea.
I love me some gothic old mansions…Kate Morton is a master at them. It makes me wonder why I haven’t jumped on this Downton Abbey bandwagon yet. I guess this is the way I roll. I’ll be all over it in five years.
Thanks, Nancy for the title “Passing Bells”! LOVED that book! When I studied in England, took a class on World War I pilots in an old mansion that the family actually lost after the war. Haven’t checked out Downton yet. I am an Upstairs, Downstairs disciple myself Judy Tobey
I just found your blog thanks to a post on Facebook by Mary Kay Andrews! Added you to my bookmarks right away as I love to read and I am always on the lookout for new books. BTW, I read the first book by Caroline Cousins and wanted more but could never find them! Will be on the lookout for the other two…will you be writing more? I really enjoyed the writing!
Thanks, Arlene (and MKA). I’m always on the lookout for new-to-me titles, too.
All three of Caroline Cousins books are in print and also available as e-books ($4.99) for all platforms. Right now, rebuiilding CC website, carolinecousins.net,
Great post, Arlene! With the Downton craze going ’round it hits the spot for sure! I’ll take your advice and try to read a few. I’m with you, however, because I prefer not to read those more “downer” than Downton, as you say–at least for now. I’m in for tea, too! 🙂
May I mention my own books here–the Royal Spyness mysteries, about a penniless minor royal in early 1930s England. The stories feature house parties at stately homes and castles, intrigues among the upper class set. Think Nancy Mitford with bodies! They are comedies yet have serious underpinnings in the political and class structure of the time. (They have also won quite a few awards and Her Royal Spyness is being made into a movie.)
“And there are seven volumes in Thane’s Williamsburg series, although The Light Heart, following Phoebe Sprague and Oliver Campion from 1902 to 1917, may well be my favorite.”
I couldn’t agree more! Watching Downton sent me right to my bookshelf to read the “Ever After” and “The Light Heart in one sitting!