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49 of 49 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Mapp and Lucia: Napoleons of the Tea Room, October 22, 2002
By 
CodeMaster Talon (Orlando, FL United States) - See all my reviews
This is the first book I've read in E.F. Benson's "Lucia" series, and it is fun-filled ride indeed. For Benson novices, Lucia Lucas is a middle aged, recently widowed (in this novel), perfectly nice upper middle class woman who just happens to have the mind of Machavelli. Missing her obvious calling for World Domination, she is instead content to rule the social life of her small English village with an iron fist. As "Mapp and Lucia" begins however, Lucia has long since deposed any serious threat to her social dominance in her immediate vicinity, and decides fresher pastures are in order. She packs up her things (including , of course, best friend and right-hand-man Georgie) and moves to Tilling, where she expects she will be made society Queen in no time flat. Unfortunately for Lucia, Tilling already has a Queen, one Elizabeth Mapp, and she has no intention of relinquishing her crown.

The scene is thus set for a true Battle Royal, only in Tilling the battelfields are luncheons and dinner parties, and the weapons fruit gardens and lobster recipes. The results are very very funny, as the genteel of Tilling spend a breathless year thoroughly enjoying each swipe, snub and put down. The hilarious climax has our heroines floating out to sea on an overturned kitchen table, with Lucia's last audible words promising delicious gossip just as soon as she gets out of her current mess.

Benson draws his characters exquisitely well, I found myself flat out liking her. She is an Englishwomen of the 1930's, past her prime but still youthful, who just happens to be blessed (cursed?) with the personality of an Alpha Male. The resulting battle of wits with the formidable Mapp is fascinating; Mapp is clearly not her intellectual equal but through a mixture of deviousness and and cunning manages to pull the carpet from underneath Lucia's carefully laid plans time and again. The supporting characters are equally well written, with best friend Georgie and Mapp's crony Diva especially amusing.

All in all, a funny, entertaining and biting satire that is well worth reading whether you are already a Lucia fan or are picking up a Benson novel for the first time. Highly recommended!

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30 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Heaven help my credit card..., May 4, 2003
Oover the last fifteen years I have been meaning to read certain authors. H.E. Bates, Anthony Trollope, P.G. Wodehouse, E.F. Benson and the like.

Last week I succumbed to a nasty bout of influenza and E.F. Benson. I had grabbed the slender volume of "Mapp & Lucia" from the library shelf and it had rested in my bookcase for almost a week. Not wanting to dull my brain with endless hours of television, I cracked open "Mapp & Lucia".

Ten pages into the book and I was hooked. Lucia, her period of mourning almost over is looking to regain her iron control on her hometown. First action, regain her star role as Queen Elizabeth in the village fete.

As I read Lucia's plots and plans, a strange thought hit me. Lucia is the creature Hyacinth Bucket (the main character of the BBC's Keeping Up Appearances) secretly dreams of being. Having taken over the fete from her dazed and confused friend, Lucia goes onto greater pastures, the hometown of Miss Elizabeth Mapp, reigning social goddesss.

Miss Elizabeth Mapp (known as Mapp) plots with her friends to rent out their respective homes a profit. Lucia and her best friend (a gentleman who brings to mind a cross between KUA's Richard and AYBS Mr Humphries) move and slowly begin to take over the town. Mapp is not pleased and a genteel war of one-upsmanship begins between the two ladies.

Drawings are rejected from the art exhibit, parties given, ownership of produce and fruit desputed with the poor town in the middle. Matters come to a head on Boxing Day (December 26) when Mapp decides to steal a longed for recipe that Lucia refuses to give to her.

Lucia stumbles on her rival in the kitchen and both women are swept out to sea on Lucia's kitchen table (yes, Lucia's kitchen table, this is a not a mis-type). The town mourns the two ladies as lost and the Great War of Mapp-Lucia as over.

Okay, enough said. You'll have to succumb to the collective charms of the ladies Mapp and Lucia yourself and find out all the bits I've left out. Now, I'm off hunt down and read the rest of E.F. Benson's wonderful books.

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23 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Cheerful Malice, March 2, 2003
By 
sweetmolly (RICHMOND, VA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Mapp and Lucia (Paperback)
"Mapp & Lucia" is like reading Trollope's "Barchester Towers" with the gloves off. The teacup may be small, but the battles rumble like thunder on the bay. Lucia is incredible. She combines absolute self-absorption with ironclad charming resolve to succeed in her every endeavor. She really is wasted being queen of Society in a small English village when fulfilling the duties of Lord High Admiral would not cause her so much as a tiny frown.

Lucia is a newly minted widow in this hilarious outing. Her fires have been banked, and she is anxious to get back in the swing and show her mettle. She rents a house for the summer from the formidable Miss Elizabeth Mapp of Tilling. Miss Mapp is clearly the leader of society in Tilling and revels in her role. Lucia eyes the situation, and the lines are drawn in the most charming but resolute way possible Lucia is the richer of the two and possibly more clever, but Miss Mapp has some powerful advantages of her own. She has pride of place, a town full of quaking allies, and indomnable perseverance. When these two square off, the fun begins and doesn't let up.

This is a delightful read, a mood lifter of the first magnitude. "Mapp & Lucia" is my introduction to Lucia, and I cannot wait to further my acquaintance with this fascinating lady.
-sweetmolly-Amazon Reviewer

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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Delicious!, July 5, 2000
This review is from: Mapp and Lucia (Paperback)
If ever 21st Century life gets a little 'tarsome' (as Lucia's stalwart escort, 'Georgie', would put it), I turn time and time again to the little village of Tilling, East Sussex, where E.F Benson has created his 'world' of tea shops, dinner parties, amateur art societies and, most importantly, PEOPLE - for it is within the realms of PEOPLE and their most hateful foibles that Benson's genius lay. The autocratic 'Lucia' and her arch rival, the dastardly 'Miss Mapp', battle it out over a series of rich and wonderful books, and there is not a page which does not have me crying tears of laughter into my cucumber sandwhiches and India tea! Marvellous escapism and unbelievably suspensful (WHAT'S going to happen when Georgie and Mr Wyse BOTH wear their new velvet suits to Lucia's dinner party! ), Benson turns his caustic, playful eye on British society of the 1920s with such pure delight that there is only one word for these books; DELICIOUS!
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17 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Tarsome? I should say not!, October 22, 2000
This review is from: Mapp and Lucia (Paperback)
Ten years ago a friend suggested that if I were short of reading material I could do no better than to pick up a copy of 'Queen Lucia' - the first in a series of six 'Lucia' books. I ignored his advice but, fortunately for me, several months ago I experienced an attack of extremely good sense, bought the first book and have never looked back. 'Mapp and Lucia' (PLEASE read the three books preceding this one!!) will introduce you to the most disagreeable, ridiculous, shallow, narrow-minded, scheming, snobbish, frightful, venomous, adorable group of middle-class English ladies (not forgetting Mr Georgie Pilson) that you are EVER likely to meet. Every chapter oozes poison and I lapped it up. At the end of 'Trouble For Lucia' - the sixth and final book - it was most painful having to say 'au reservoir' to all my delightful new friends in Tilling. 'Mapp and Lucia' is arguably the best of the six but...it'll be so much fun making your own mind up!
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Too too thrill making, September 3, 2000
By 
P Blakeney BART (Somewhere Charming) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Mapp and Lucia (Paperback)
Enough cannot be said about the merit of this and all other Lucia novels. They are the very apotheosis of English humorous writing. The machinations by which Lucia inevitably achieves her ends make vastly amusing reading. You will reach the end of this novel having learned nothing. It will not improve you. The characters will not grow into better, more mature, more enlightened beings than they were at the start of this all too short gem of a book. Despite these facts (all "serious" readers will deride and condemn) there has been nothing like these exemplary novels for pure entertainment, and I, for one, still believe this is an admirable reason for opening a book at any time. Do try it.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Only five stars?!, May 7, 2005
This review is from: Mapp and Lucia (Paperback)
Read these books and discover the truth. It's all there -- the vanity, greed, passion, jealousy, and exultation. Don't let the objects of all these towering emotions fool you (lobster recipes, psychic bridge, red currant fool, babytalk Italian, dead budgies, suspect gurus, the Moonlight Sonata), it is the stuff of life!
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars like dynasty on smart pills, February 28, 2001
By 
"soonerlover" (Duncan, Oklahoma United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Mapp and Lucia (Paperback)
What a delightful book! The bitchiness is fabulous--after reading Queen Lucia and Miss Mapp, I absolutely could not wait to find out what happened when the two of them crossed paths. This entire series is a can't miss, and I recommend it to anyone who enjoys British wit and passive aggressive social antics that would put my mother-in-law to shame! Please try them and enjoy them--they are indeed a treat!
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Gentile warfare!, August 16, 2005
This review is from: Mapp and Lucia (Paperback)
E F Benson's characters are just sublimely and achingly funny, it seems with Mapp and Lucia he was aiming to scrutinise and satarise the nosensical heirarchy and rivalry of bored and over privelaged upper middle class folk.

This aspect of the British Class system was one he knew well and which was breathing it's last in the times in which Mapp and Lucia live, witness the somewaht irritating coldness with which the Ladies treat their Maids, Drivers and Shop staff.

Lucia is the dominant character, lithe, fashionable and razor sharp while Mapp is clumsy, mumsy and opts for bulldog tactics.

The two appear in many novels, Lucia more often and one cannot help wonder if she was based on a Lady whom Benson was ever so slightly in love with, but here they meet for the first time, as Lucia moves to "Tilling" for the summer in Mapps rented out home "Mallards". The array of colurful charcters they surround themselves with and draw into their delighfully bitchy and cunning war agaisnt each other, are of equal delight, of particualr note are Quaint Irene and Georgie. Perhaps seen as little more than bohemian in their day but doubtless these characters would now be seen as obviously Lesbain and Gay; with the former being in love with Lucia. A daring inclusion in Benson's time but subtle and beautifully inclusive one.

Fans of these deliciously naughty pair should see the 1986 TV series which is available on DVD. Geraldine McKewan (of current Miss Marple fame)is petite, pretty, acid and simply perfect as Lucia while Prunella Scales (Cybil of Fawlty Towers) brings Miss Mapp to dusty, dowdy and bullish life! Excellent stuff!

The series was filmed in Rye in Sussex, home town of Benson, it used many locations close to his home (Lamb House), such as the lovley houses of Watchbell Street (My favourite being No 11 which was used as Godiva's house) and "Twistevens" shop on Mermaid Street, actually a Tea Room in reality.

WELL WORTH A VISIT! Literature fans may also wish to know that Lamb House was once home to American novelist, Henry James before Benson's time. One can also visit Benson's Grave in the town. Benson was Lord Mayor of Rye for a while and the river "Tilling"-ton flows through the town.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Ladylike Battles of Social Supremacy, February 11, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Mapp and Lucia (Paperback)
This popular tale is a delight even 70 years later. The reader gets to know very well the primary characters in this social comedy. Benson does a superb job of describing the genteel battles between the two ladies in Tilling,concerning Lucia's much coveted lobster recipe, and invitations to dine. The men are, of course, secondary to the plot.They hover around the ladies like courtiers. I think that Georgie, Lucia's devoted and platonic friend, is my favorite character-perhaps the most genuinely nice person in the book. I sometimes even feel sorry for Miss Mapp when Lucia takes over social affairs so thoroughly! I wonder what would happen if Lucia and Miss Mapp were both interested in Major Benjy!
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Mapp and Lucia (Penguin Modern Classics)
Mapp and Lucia (Penguin Modern Classics) by Edward Frederick Benson (Paperback - July 1, 2004)
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