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Lolly Willowes or The Loving Huntsman
 
 
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Lolly Willowes or The Loving Huntsman [Paperback]

Sylvia Townsend Warner (Author)
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)

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Book Description

May 23, 2004
1926. Sylvia Townsend Warner's first novel is an enduring, subversive, and lyrical portrait of spinsterhood in post-World War I Britain. Lolly is a single woman and after her father dies, she is moved, as a matter of course, to her brother's house, where she meekly obliges to play caregiver to his children and housemaid to his wife. After 20 years of this life she moves to the rural village of Great Mop. She feels an affinity for the town, the countryside, and her new neighbors. She blossoms emotionally and spiritually, and as she does so, she discovers an important secret: She is a witch, as is everybody else who lives in Great Mop. A graceful read in the tradition of women's fiction and magic realism.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Sylvia Townsend Warner began her literary career as a poet, and her first novel is as nimble and precise as poetry and reads as if it might have been composed to a meter. Like some of Jane Austen's fiction, Lolly Willowes is a comedy about the perils, pleasures, and consolations of spinsterhood, and the predicament of its heroine is at first deliberately and deceptively commonplace. "Aunt Lolly, a middle-aging lady, light-footed upon stairs, and indispensable for Christmas Eve and birthday preparations," is nevertheless troubled by vague, indefinable longings, a hankering after the solitude of woods and dark rural places. At last a revelation in a greengrocer's leads her to abandon her outraged London family and take rooms in an obscure hamlet, Great Mop.

Here her neighbors keep curiously late and noisy hours, but otherwise allow her to pass the time "in perfect idleness and contentment." She is eventually pursued into her idyll, however, by her nephew, and Titus's familiar small demands drive her to rage and despair: "No! You shan't get me. I won't go back. I won't.... Oh! Is there no help?" She is promptly visited by a mysterious black kitten, who fastens its claws upon her hand and draws blood. At once she understands. The kitten is her familiar, and has been sent by dark forces. "She, Laura Willowes, in England, in the year 1922, had entered into a compact with the Devil."

She has, in short, become a witch--or, rather, she has rediscovered her own slumbering diabolical potential, in the unlikely setting of a Buckinghamshire hamlet that--as she now realizes--is peopled entirely by witches. Laura soon attends a rollicking but ultimately rather disappointing midnight Sabbath; she is visited by Satan in the shape of a pleasant-faced man in a corduroy coat and gaiters who rids her of Titus and restores her to privacy and peace. She is left with a vision of the women "all over England, all over Europe ... as common as blackberries, and as unregarded" to whom he has offered the promise of adventure, "the dangerous black night to stretch your wings in." It is this vision that lends the novel its subversive edge, that ultimately allies it less with the work of Austen than with that of Virginia Woolf, and with later feminists. They "know they are dynamite," says Laura of Satan's women, "and long for the concussion that may justify them." --Sarah Waters --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

Review

In this intriguing story, a middle-aged woman finally escapes her role as spinster when she decides to have a life of her own, "not an existence doled out to you by others." Laura Willowes - Lolly to her family - is twenty-eight when her father dies and she is taken in by her elder brother, Henry, and his family in London. While Lolly has no desire to leave Lady Place, her childhood country home, she proffers no argument to her family's assumption that she must live with someone. Henry and his family live a well-regulated and comfortable life into which Laura settles herself with quiet, nearly unconscious discomfort. Henry is a lawyer, a profession which, in Laura's mind, "had changed his natural sturdy stupidity into a browbeating indifference to other people's point of view." Although Laura tries her best to like London, she cannot. There are no fields to roam, no herbs to gather; there is no quiet to comfort her and feed her dreams. When Laura can no longer hide her feelings that the jaws of her potential suitors "were like so many mouse-traps, baited with commonplaces," Henry and his wife stop inviting eligible bachelors to their home. Rendered in wry and piercingly lovely prose, Lolly Willowes posits a realistic and still-relevant social dilemma that Sylvia Townsend Warner resolves with surprising elan. -- For great reviews of books for girls, check out Let's Hear It for the Girls: 375 Great Books for Readers 2-14. -- From 500 Great Books by Women; review by Jesse Larsen --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Kessinger Publishing, LLC (May 23, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1417921307
  • ISBN-13: 978-1417921300
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.1 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,178,157 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

13 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (13 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

27 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An astonishing edition of an astonishing novel, March 4, 2000
By A Customer
These new little NYRB editions are just honeys--I have yet to read one that wasn't absolutely spectacular (the editors have superb taste), and the editions themselves are little gems--they FEEL so nice in your hands because they're made of gorgeous high quality paper and set in a lovely font.

Warner's novel is fantastic--its rhythms are slow but musical, and it takes quite a while to determine what awaits Laura in Great Mop. A very, very funny book that also comments movingly on the condition of "odd women" in the generation before Suffrage... I couldn't put this down!

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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars more like a slow cruise down the river than a high-speed chase, February 1, 2006
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This book might not be for everyone. The pace is very slow and leisurely. There isn't much action, in fact periods of 20 years go by without much action. However, the writing is elegant, flowing and rhythmical, a pleasure to read. There isn't a single sentece in the book that is jarring or out of place. The story is based on the lives of superfluous women after WWI and the Spanish influenza killed off a lot of males that would otherwise have been available for marriage. It is also a nod to the suspicion in which society in general has held unmarried women, and the fact that for a long time there was no place for them in society - they couldn't go out and work and live independent lives and so were often just used by their relatives as unpaid labor in exchange for a place to live and financial support. There really isn't any witchcraft in the book, at least not the Harry Potter kind of witchcraft. Lolly Willowes's pact with the devil is just how her sudden desire for independance would seem to her friends and relatives - the devil got into her.
Overall the book is a pleasure to read, but you have to be willing to slow down and enjoy the scenery.
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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A kind of realist fantasy about a woman-witch., November 10, 1998
By A Customer
Lolly Willowes is Sylvia Townsend Warner's first novel (1926). It is a wry look at the contrictions of an Edwardian spinster's life--and at her unexpected escape from those constrictions. Although it ostensibly tells the tale of a woman who becomes a witch, the supernatural is rather understated in this book. Of much greater interest to Warner is the *possibility* of a lifestyle unbound by conventions. The novel also puts into relief the constrast between urban life in the early 20th century and the life of rural England--a place both influenced by modern life and stubbornly resistant to it. A wonderful read. Intelligent, funny, insightful. and a note or two or interest: his was the VERY FIRST Book of the Month book. It was very well received in both England and the U.S.. AFter the publication of this book, Warner was at a dinner party with Virginia Woolf, who asked her if her knowledge of witches came from being one herself!!
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
WHEN her father died, Laura Willowes went to live in London with her elder brother and his family. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Great Mop, Lady Place, Aunt Lolly, Miss Willowes, Miss Carloe, Apsley Terrace, Miss Jane, Billy Thomas, Miss Larpent, Miss Minnie, Lazzard Court, Auntie Lolly, Folly Wood, Pandora Williams, Henry Perry, Kit Bendigo
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