"[The book] I'll be pressing into people's hands forever is "Lolly
Willowes," the 1926 novel by Sylvia Townsend Warner. It tells the story
of a woman who rejects the life that society has fixed for her in favor
of freedom and the most unexpected of alliances. It completely
blindsided me: Starting as a straightforward, albeit beautifully written
family saga, it tips suddenly into extraordinary, lucid wildness." -
Helen Macdonald in The New York Times Book Review's "By the Book.
In Lolly Willowes, Sylvia Townsend Warner tells of an aging spinster's
struggle to break way from her controlling family--a classic story that
she treats with cool feminist intelligence, while adding a dimension of
the supernatural and strange. Warner is one of the outstanding and
indispensable mavericks of twentieth-century literature, a writer to set
beside Djuna Barnes and Jane Bowles, with a subversive genius that
anticipates the fantastic flights of such contemporaries as Angela
Carter and Jeanette Winterson.