It is a wet day in Dorset, and walking to a luncheon party is Sir Edward Feathers QC, followed by two elderly friends.
His scruffy neighbour and sparring partner, Veneering, and Fiscal-Smith, the meanest lawyer ever to make a fortune at the Bar. Fans of Jane Gardam’s bestselling novel, Old Filth, will be delighted to encounter Filth, now almost ninety. Making his immaculate way to Privilege Hill, named perhaps for the Prive-Lieges who arrived with the Normans, but more probably for the village privies.
Ranging from a Victorian mansion converted into a home for unmarried mothers to a wartime hospital in the middle of the Blitz, from ghost stories to brilliant observations of love and loneliness in their various manifestations.
Including, in ‘Pangbourne’, a woman who falls in love with a gorilla – to reflections on the haphazard nature of intellect and memories in ‘The Last Reunion’. These were the stories in this collection mix Jane Gardam’s trademark sardonic wit with a delicate tenderness and a touch of the surreal.
‘Her new collection exemplifies Gardam‘s zest for human oddity, which she explores with characteristic empathy and humour.’ Literary Review
The Child on the Beach
On a summer afternoon fifteen years ago, I went to hear Jane Gardam at the South Bank Centre. She does not often appear in public, indeed she has been withering in her fiction about the idea of an...
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