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Miss Mapp: Including, The Male Impersonator
  
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Miss Mapp: Including, The Male Impersonator [Hardcover]

E. F. Benson (Author), Michael Mac Liammoir (Foreword)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Book Description

September 1970

Miss Mapp rules the tiny English village of Tilling- that is she rules those who matter. It is a tiny circle of people who have enough class to rate her attention - but she manipulates and lauds over them with machiavellian schemes, and intelligent surmises - and she is intelligent. Benson has written a village with a range of gorgeous characters - from Diva who is Miss Mapp's great rival, to Irene the local artist who keeps embarrassing Miss Mapp with her prosaic pronouncements. Then there is the local Vicar who talks in a combination of Shakespearian English and Burnsian dialect. There is also Mrs Poppit who is an up and coming social climber (hardly worthy of Miss Mapp's notice) and the novel begins with Miss Mapps machinations to the Poppitt Bridge party. Village life you see seems to run around Bridge parties. In this petty world of card games there is a great deal of opportunity to expose one another's weaknesses and Miss Mapp, in order to be the center of village life in Tilling finds no object too petty to exploit. This is a novel of small things made into huge issues because of the smallness of the village. There is Miss Mapps constant running battle to dress better than Diva, the competition over Mr Wyse's attentions (with his supposed comtessa sister), and the ever pressing desire to be the First To Know all the gossip in town. The physical descriptions both through the characters minds and from Benson's pen are wonderful for instance Diva is always depicted as whirling around the place - her legs circling. Mrs Poppit is ever present in a huge and weighty sable coat. This is a wonderful book, and beautifully written. Benson seems to me to be very influenced by Austen - there is the small and claustrophobic atmosphere of village life - the characters (Miss Mapp seems so like Mrs Norris of Austen's 'Mansfield Park') to me - and then there are the odd Austen Names (in this case the Coles feature strongly as a family that is not quite up to snuff - just as the Coles are in 'Emma'). If nothing else Benson writes of English village life in the 1920's with the same Ironic pen as Austen did of village life in the early nineteenth century. Highly recommended if you want a couple of days of laughter

source: www.reviewscout.com

--This text refers to the Kindle Edition edition.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"This book is clever, as all that [Benson] does is clever, light, amusing, satirical, written in the smooth and easy style his earlier books have made familiar to us. Its people are real: one acknowledges their verisimilitude, and is deeply, humbly grateful to that beneficent fortune which was so kind as to cast one's lot elsewhere than in Tilling, the home of Miss Mapp."

-The New York Times

--This text refers to the Kindle Edition edition.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: William Heinemann Ltd; First Edition Thus edition (September 1970)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0434065048
  • ISBN-13: 978-0434065042
  • Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 5.9 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.5 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,333,618 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars mapp of the human heart, February 18, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Miss Mapp: Including, The Male Impersonator (Hardcover)
A funny, biting comedy of manners that's a delight to connoisseurs of embarrassment such as myself. The title character is a preening, nosy, gossiping small-town English woman whose entire life is a sort of game of oneupmanship. This sort of totally self-involved, unreflective character is the soul of much comedy (exploited, for example, as the lead character in the British sitcom "Keeping Up Appearances," with whom I mentally equated Miss Mapp)--but the brilliant thing here is that EVERYBODY in the town, not just Mapp, is the same sort of game-player. (Well, almost everybody.) Their constant attempts to socially out-maneuver each other offer up some hilariously embarrassing consequences. Probably my favorite is when the bombastic military buddies Major Benjy and Captain Puffin fight, and Puffin is challenged to a deul. He tries to run away--cursing himself for "befriending the sort of man who would bring deuling into the modern world"--only to run into Major Benjy at the train station, himself trying to flee. Of course, each attempts to bluff the other with casualness and avoid any further unpleasantries.

These antics are presented in serial form and do get repetitious, but Benson never lacks for wit or spite (he even kills Puffin, when it comes to it). Nicely squirmy.

This book was recommended to me as an analog to the film "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly"--was going to say I didn't see how they fit together, but now I do: the constantly cycling game of oneupmanship. Except of course in the Western it's all done with open direct confrontation rather than quiet social scheming.--J.Ruch

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