sarah reviewed Jane and Prudence by Barbara Pym
A lesser Pym is still a great book
4 stars
Nothing wrong with this one, but it doesn’t reach the heights of Pym greatness.
222 pages
English language
Published May 21, 1971 by Cedric Chivers Ltd.
The setting of this very funny novel, one of Barbara Pym's earliest, is an English village, where Jane's husband is the newly appointed vicar, and where Prudence will pay Jane a visit and find herself courted by a fatuous young widower. Prudence, at twenty-nine, has achieved nothing in life but a dull research job in London and a string of dud affairs; Jane, now in her forties, was Prudence's tutor at Oxford. Jane cheerfully concedes that she is an incompetent housewife, but she hopes that the move to a rural parish may transform her into a Trollopean vicar's wife, as well as a crafty matchmaker. There are many comic complications as Jane learns that matchmaking has as many pitfalls as does housewifery.
Nothing wrong with this one, but it doesn’t reach the heights of Pym greatness.