"May I ask your daughter's age?"
"Nan is thirty-three."
"A dangerous age."
Rose Macaulay takes a lively and perceptive look at three generations of
women within the same family and the 'dangers' faced at each of those
stages in life. The book opens with Neville celebrating her 43rd
birthday and contemplating middle age now that her children are grown.
Her mother, in her sixties, seeks answers to her melancholy in
Freudianism. Her sister, Nan, 33, a writer who has hitherto led a single
and carefree life in London, experiences the loss of love and with it
her plan for the future. And Neville's principled daughter Gerda, who is
determined not to follow her mother's generation into the institute of
marriage, finds herself at an impasse with the man she loves.
British Library Women Writers 1920's.
Part of a curated collection of forgotten works by early to mid-century
women writers, the British Library Women Writers series highlights the
best middlebrow fiction from the 1910s to the 1960s, offering escapism,
popular appeal, and plenty of period detail to amuse, surprise, and
inform.