Entertaining account of a sophisticated young lady from London, broke, who goes to live in the wilds of the country on a primitive farm with relatives who are scareely out of the stone age.
The farm and its inhabitants are a cheeky satire on a sort of portrayal of English rural types which was current back in the early 20th century. The old matriarch of the clan, for example,
never leaves her room, and dwells continually on something "nasty she saw in woodshed." Our heroine quickly sees that the old lady needs something more pleasant to dwell on, and catches her fancey with the latest fashion magazines. The young woman who gets pregnant every year, and considers it inevitable, is soon enlightened about birth control, and so on.
A classic of its genre, I recommend it to Anglophiles with a sense of humor.
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Reprint of story originally written in 1932. It tells of a young lady from the city whose parents die & she chooses to live on a farm with relatives she had never met. Her objective is to "tidy up" the place _ which she does in an amusing manner.
Interesting book. Love how Flora whips them all into shape and turns the farm into a good and productive place.
For me, the humor tried too hard, but I think others will like it. Sort of an Austen-esque tone.
Is this the funniest novel ever written? Yes.
This story is ususual and intertaining, and was mde into a successful movie by Gramercy Pictures. A tale of a srewball family, and one person can change the lives of those around them. A delightful read.