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Nancy Mitford : Blessing, The [Import]
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Author: Nancy Mitford
Title: Blessing, The [Import]
Moochable copies: No copies available
Topics:
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Binding: Paperback
Pages:
Date: 1960
ISBN: B00JL0Z2RQ
Publisher: Penguin Books
Amazon prices:
$30.00used
Previous givers: 1 chris (Japan)
Previous moochers: 1 Kate (USA: CA)
Wishlists:
1chris (Japan).
Description: Product Description
Soft Cover; Good; No Dust Jacket; A Good, yet fragile copy of a title by Nancy Mitford, described as ".a prince of entertainers. The Blessing is her best book.'--Sunday Times."Cover illustration by Nicolas Bentley has the young son Sigi, running his hand through his hair. Complete and Unabridged. From back cover:"For copyright reasons this edition is not for sale in the U.S.A."Number 1211 in the Penguin Series. Shelf wear to cover along spine and a wrinkle to bottom right corner. Wrinkling to spine. Slight lean to title. 222 pages. Slight sunning to page edging. 12 Chapters. Text is clean with no markings. From the front flyleaves through to page 11, the pages are slightly separating from the interior spine at the bottom. From verso:"Reprinted 1960."From inside cover:"The Pursuit of Love in a foreign country is never plain sailing for a typical Englishwoman. Grace Allingham, good, beautiful, and not very clever, makes a hasty war-time marriage with Charles-Edouard de Valhubert. When he comes back from the war and takes her home to Provence her married life begins and so do her troubles." 12mo - over 6¾" - 7¾" tall
Reviews: chris (Japan) (2016/09/11):
By darragh o'donoghue on December 7, 2000
Format: Paperback
Nancy Mitford's comic variant on 'The American' is certainly more FUN than Henry James ever was; after a bitty start, it turns into a classic comedy about cultural clashes, loneliness, abandonment, love. Mitford's eye is strictly realistic in her attitudes, if not her style - in the tacit spaces, one can hear Grace's howls of despair.
The book is full of exquisite characters - Charles-Edouard, dashing, aristocratic, Resistance hero who uses his Frenchness as an excuse for serial adultery; Sigi, the Blessing ot the title, a devious monster who sees his happiness in his parents' divorce; the variously sophisticated and cynical grandes dames of French society; the spectacularly pompous 'Heck' Dexter, millionaire advisor to the US President. But Mitford not only has a gift for portraying eccentricity; she somehow makes dogged dullness palpable as in Grace's half-hearted suitor Hughie.
This is Mitford's most Waugh-like novel - full of short, pregnant, elliptical scenes, told in terse, comic sentences. The frustrating lack of structure means that scenes don't accumulate emotionally as they do in Waugh, leaving the book feeling a little thin (unlike her masterpieces, 'The Pursuit of Love' and 'Love in a Cold Climate'), but with this much pleasure, who cares?

When Grace Allingham, a naïve young Englishwoman, goes to live in France with her dashingly aristocratic husband Charles-Edouard, she finds herself overwhelmed by the bewilderingly foreign cuisine and the shockingly decadent manners and mores of the French. But it is the discovery of her husband’s French notion of marriage—which includes a permanent mistress and a string of casual affairs—that sends Grace packing back to London with their “blessing,” young Sigismond, in tow. While others urge the couple to reconcile, little Sigi—convinced that it will improve his chances of being spoiled—applies all his juvenile cunning to keeping his parents apart. Drawing on her own years in Paris and her long affair with a Frenchman, Mitford elevates cultural and romantic misunderstandings to the heights of comedy.



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