Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Arundel, Honor - Margery Fisher
Arundel, Honor - Margery Fisher
MARGERY FISHER
A family failing is social comedy, sophisticated and wise and touched with humour, stating its points with a certain detachment that makes them all the clearer. Although a girl of eighteen is in the centre of the story, [Honor Arundel] gives due prominence to the other characters. Joanna's parents are thrown into confusion by a sudden change of alignment. While Jonathan Douglas loses his job on a newspaper because he doesn't choose to adapt to its new popular style, his wife finds an outlet for her quick wits in a profitable television quiz game. The Women's Lib. situation is never over-stated but it is seen as clearly from the parents' point of view as from the standpoint of Joanna, who tells the story as a way of explaining the break-up of the family to herself. This is a very clear-eyed story, at times sardonic, completely without sentiment or evasion. It might, I suppose, bring consolation to other girls whose security at home is threatened...
[The entire page is 223 words long]
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- Introduction
- Robert Bell
- Polly Goodwin
- S. L. Blanford
- Linda Crowe
- Zena Sutherland
- Mrs. J. M. Murphy
- Margery Fisher
- Mrs. J. Aldridge
- Margery Fisher
- Julia G. Russell
- Judith Aldridge
- John W. Conner
- Nicholas Tucker
- John W. Conner
- Margery Fisher
- Celia Boyd
- Judith Aldridge
- Vivienne Furlong
- J. Russell
- John Rowe Townsend
- Eleanore Braun Luckey
- Copyright
