This is not a recent broadcast but I wondered if Col Danby, who mentioned these books,or anyone elsewould like to revive memories of them. I read some of them over 60 years ago [] so would love to hear of recent converts. I csn only remember titles like 'The Acceptance World'??? and 'At Lady Molly's' ??? both probably wrong. I know at 18 they took me into an entire world I didn't know.
Anthony Powell. Dance to the Music of Time.
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Mandryka
On my 'to to be read one day' pile.
I know that Powell's intrinsic Toryism puts a lot of potential readers off.
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Mandryka
Originally posted by salymap View PostWas there a character called Widmerpool who upset everyone else? Alas I borrowed them from the library so can't even check on them. I think there were 12 volumes in all, I only read three or four.
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I read all twelve volumes of this sequence over a period of ten or more years, twenty years back. What I liked was the sense of a series of relationships which developed and mingled over a very long time span. I too found the wartime volume the most affecting, suggesting that this was the time at which the author was most in touch with his emotions. Of course the world portrayed is one of a narrow coterie of figures from the establishment, yet it is no less a human story for all that. I wonder whether it would now read a little datedly, if one can say that; certainly it is written in what one might call a classical style of English prose. Widmerpool appears in the first pages of the first volume, and dies, if I recall correctly, while dancing in the open air with a curious sect, in the last volume. I think he's a rather more rounded and colourful character than I think Ted Heath was.
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