The three books gathered together as Eustace and Hilda explore a
brother and sister's lifelong relationship. Hilda, the older child, is
both self-sacrificing and domineering, as puritanical as she is
gorgeous; Eustace is a gentle, dreamy, pleasure-loving boy: the two
siblings could hardly be more different, but they are also deeply
devoted. And yet as Eustace and Hilda grow up and seek to go their
separate ways in a world of power and position, money and love, their
relationship is marked by increasing pain.
L. P. Hartley's much-loved novel, the magnum opus of one of
twentieth-century England's best writers, is a complex and spellbinding
work: a comedy of upper-class manners; a study in the subtlest nuances
of feeling; a poignant reckoning with the ironies of character and fate.
Above all, it is about two people who cannot live together or apart,
about the ties that bind--and break.