Readings Newsletter
Become a Readings Member to make your shopping experience even easier.
Sign in or sign up for free!
You’re not far away from qualifying for FREE standard shipping within Australia
You’ve qualified for FREE standard shipping within Australia
The cart is loading…
‘Barbara Pym is one of my most favourite novelists. Few other writers have given me more laughter and more pleasure.’ Jilly Cooper
Barbara Pym was an incomparable chronicler of ordinary, quiet lives. With warmth, humour, precision and great vividness, she gave her best characters an independent life we recognise as totally familiar. In A Few Green Leaves, her last novel, her heroine is Emma Howick, anthropologist. Through her eyes Barbara Pym examines in her own ironic and individual style the quiet revolution in English village life, combining the rural settings of her earliest novels with the themes and characters of her later works. The result is a compelling portrait of a town that seems to be forgotten by time, but which is unmistakably affected by it. Romance shares the pages with death in this engaging novel that is the culmination of Barbara Pym’s acclaimed writing career.
‘I could go on reading her for ever’ A L Rowse, Punch
‘A vivid sense of how we live now’ New Statesman
‘Her sense of brilliant comedy is a direct inheritance from Jane Austen’ Hibernia
‘A beautifully written, very delicate comedy’ The Times Literary Supplement
$9.00 standard shipping within Australia
FREE standard shipping within Australia for orders over $100.00
Express & International shipping calculated at checkout
‘Barbara Pym is one of my most favourite novelists. Few other writers have given me more laughter and more pleasure.’ Jilly Cooper
Barbara Pym was an incomparable chronicler of ordinary, quiet lives. With warmth, humour, precision and great vividness, she gave her best characters an independent life we recognise as totally familiar. In A Few Green Leaves, her last novel, her heroine is Emma Howick, anthropologist. Through her eyes Barbara Pym examines in her own ironic and individual style the quiet revolution in English village life, combining the rural settings of her earliest novels with the themes and characters of her later works. The result is a compelling portrait of a town that seems to be forgotten by time, but which is unmistakably affected by it. Romance shares the pages with death in this engaging novel that is the culmination of Barbara Pym’s acclaimed writing career.
‘I could go on reading her for ever’ A L Rowse, Punch
‘A vivid sense of how we live now’ New Statesman
‘Her sense of brilliant comedy is a direct inheritance from Jane Austen’ Hibernia
‘A beautifully written, very delicate comedy’ The Times Literary Supplement