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Some Tame Gazelle (Paperback)

by Barbara Pym (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars See all reviews (10 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

Review
Barbara Pym's (1913-1980) first novel, Some Tame Gazelle , was published in 1950, followed by thirteen more books. A writer from the age of sixteen, Barbara Pym has been acclaimed as "the most underrated writer of the century" by the late British poet laureate, Philip Larkin. Her 1977 novel, Quartet in Autumn, was short listed for the Booker Prize. -- Christian Science Monitor

Product Description
Barbara Pym is a master at capturing the subtle mayhem that takes place in the apparent quiet of the English countryside. Fifty-something sisters Harriet and Belinda Bede live a comfortable, settled existence. Belinda, the quieter of the pair, has for years been secretly in love with the town's pompous (and married) archdeacon, whose odd sermons leave members of his flock in muddled confusion. Harriet, meanwhile, a bubbly extrovert, fends off proposal after proposal of marriage. The arrival of Mr. Mold and Bishop Grote disturb the peace of the village and leave the sisters wondering if they'll ever return to the order of their daily routines. Some Tame Gazelle, first published in Britain nearly 50 years ago, was the first of Pym's nine novels.

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 252 pages
  • Publisher: Moyer Bell (March 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1559212640
  • ISBN-13: 978-1559212649
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 5.5 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #425,917 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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    #14 in  Books > Literature & Fiction > Authors, A-Z > ( P ) > Pym, Barbara

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Some Tame Gazelle
60% buy the item featured on this page:
Some Tame Gazelle 4.3 out of 5 stars (10)
$11.71
Excellent Women (Penguin Classics)
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Excellent Women (Penguin Classics) 4.5 out of 5 stars (33)
$10.20
A Glass of Blessings
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A Glass of Blessings 4.8 out of 5 stars (5)
$10.36
Jane and Prudence
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Jane and Prudence 4.2 out of 5 stars (9)

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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
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26 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of Miss Pym's most enjoyable, June 23, 1997
By A Customer
This review is from: Some Tame Gazelle (Paperback)
Although it was not her first novel to be published, this was one of Barbara Pym's earliest endeavors. I read in A Very Private Eye (a collection of Miss Pym's letters and journals) that she started writing it in her early 20's, basing the main characters on herself, her sister, the man she was in love with at Oxford, and other friends. However, she aged them all considerably, making them 50-ish years old. I think she may have worked on the book again later, so I don't think it's actually the work of a 22-year old. Miss Pym appears as Belinda Bede and her sister as Harriet. In the story, they are two spinsters living together in a small village. Interestingly, later in life Barbara Pym and her sister did live together. The character of their clergyman, a married Archdeacon, is based on a man sharing the same first name (Henry) whom Barbara Pym was devoted to in college. He subsequently broke her heart by marrying another woman. The fictional Henry, too, is married, but has been so for 25 years. Belinda/Barbara is still devoted to him, but with warm affection instead of burning passion. It's hard to explain the appeal of this book. It has humor; Barbara Pym saw the funny side of ordinary happenings and people. And it has pathos, which is a crucial ingredient of the best humor. There is even a touch of feminism, although gentle. For example, when Henry remarks to Belinda that women "enjoy" being martyrs, she repies that they may martyr themselve, but they leave the enjoyment of it to the men. Like Jane Austen, Barbara Pym limits herself to "a few families in a village," and like Jane Austen she succeeds in providing insight, irony, and, withal, enjoyment and optimism.
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Touching and funny, April 22, 2001
By P. A. Hogan (Providence RI USA) - See all my reviews
In the early chapters of "Some Tame Gazelles" we are taken on a "Pym moments" romp through the day-to-day lives of the spinster sisters, Belinda and Harriet Bede. Timid, sentimental Belinda (one of Pym's "Excellent Women")elder of the two, a faithful church worker, has loved the peevish, married Archdeacon Henry Hoccleve ("dear Henry") for over 30 years. Belinda quotes 18th Century poets, wears "sensible" shoes and longs for "some sympathetic person to whom she could say that Dr. Johnson had been so right when he had said that all change is of itself an evil." Plump ("attractive in a fat Teutonic way"),jolly and style-conscious Harriet, in her middle fifties, has a fondness for young curates to whom she serves boiled chicken suppers and makes presents of hand-knitted socks and home-made jellies. We meet: The Reverend Edgar Donne, the latest in a long line of young curates fussed over by Harriet; Edith Liversidge ("a kind of decayed gentlewoman"), the disheveled, blunt-speaking neighbor with an interest in sanitation arrangements; the dreary, snobbish Connie Aspinall, who basks in the memory of her glory days when she was companion to Lady Grudge of Belgrave Square ("a kind of relation of one of Queen Alexandra's Ladies-in-Waiting"); Miss Prior, the touchy sewing woman, in a tender and humorous episode involving cauliflower cheese; the melancholy Count Ricardo Bianco, who on a regular basis offers proposals of marriage to Harriet. There is Archdeacon Hoccleve, the object of Belinda's devotion ("her passion had mellowed into a comfortable feeling more like the cosiness of a winter evening by the fire than the uncertain rapture of a spring morning"), whose standoffish behavior and proclivity for choosing unsuitable prayers and for preaching obscure literary sermons no one understands win him little favor among the people in his parish. And there are more matchless Pym characters set against a quintessential Pym story, touching and funny and quite wonderful.
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Funny--But There's That Mean Streak, February 1, 2001
By A Customer
Barbara Pym is a brilliant writer. I, of course, am not the only one who thinks so, or we might never have seen half of the work she eventually published. After writing and publishing 5 novels, with both critical and commercial success, Pym found her 6th novel rejected by her publisher, and by every other publisher she submitted it to. The 60s had arrived, and the sharply pointed humor of Barbara Pym was no longer in fashion. In spite of the rejections, Pym continued to write for 17 more years with what appeared to be no hope of sharing her writing. Luckily, as with most Pym stories, a bittersweet ending allowed the world to have another half dozen Pym novels in print to delight in. SOME TAME GAZELLE, the second novel she wrote (the first was very much juvenilia) and the first she published (following two separate rounds of editing during the next 12 years), is her funniest. Casting her eye to the future, she wrote about her Oxford friends, and about herself and her sister, Hilary, in middle age. Full of inside jokes, the novel's tongue-in-cheek tone sparkles throughout. Pym is a brilliant writer because her sentences are gems. She is funny because of WHAT she says and HOW she says it. And, finally, she is MEAN in the most pleasurable possible way. Pick up any novel by Pym and delight in her. You will be well rewarded.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Trollope in the 20th Century
I have read the reviews of this marvelous novel and am amazed at some of the reactions plus the review that went on and on about the characters and their actions without ever... Read more
Published 8 months ago by Roger W. Davenport

3.0 out of 5 stars Too tame by half
Barbara Pym said her plan for her first published novel was to imagine what life night be like for her and her sister a few decades in the future; what she came up with was... Read more
Published 10 months ago by Jay Dickson

5.0 out of 5 stars How English
The characters present at the opening of the book are the young curate, Belinda, and Harriet. Harriet's manner is blunt and jolly. Belinda and Harriet Bede are sisters. Read more
Published on February 18, 2005 by Mary E. Sibley

2.0 out of 5 stars Not up to the usual Pym standard
A first novel--and it shows. Has all the charm of Barbara Pym's best work (Excellent Women, No Fond Return of Love) but is marred by narrative clumsiness and (frankly) lousy... Read more
Published on December 2, 2001 by Dale Hrabi

4.0 out of 5 stars Solid provincial light comedy
Some Tame Gazelle is an early Barbara Pym
novel, but her many strengths are fully in evidence. She shows that she knows her way with provincial village life, which she portrays... Read more
Published on October 27, 2001 by Robert H. Nunnally Jr.

4.0 out of 5 stars Solid provincial light comedy
Some Tame Gazelle is an early Barbara Pym
novel, but her many strengths are fully in evidence. She shows that she knows her way with provincial village life, which she portrays... Read more
Published on October 27, 2001 by Robert H. Nunnally Jr.

5.0 out of 5 stars Barbara Pym's Sunniest Side
I have just reread SOME TAME GAZELLE and would like to write a comparison to Pym's other novels, for readers trying to decide between them. Read more
Published on July 18, 2000 by Helen M. Kim

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