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Miss Hargreaves (1939)

par Frank Baker

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4202759,806 (3.62)79
When Norman Huntley, and his friend, Henry, invent an 83 year old woman, called Mrs. Hargreaves, they are inspired to write to their fictional friend. The silly, harmless, game turns out not to be such, when she arrives on their doorstep, in Buckinghamshire, exactly as he imagined her.
  1. 10
    Augustus Carp par Henry Howarth Bashford (starbox)
    starbox: incredibly funny book about a self-righteous church-goer
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Affichage de 1-5 de 27 (suivant | tout afficher)
This is a fantasy novel.
I feel like that statement needs to sink in. Because I don't read fantasy! And also this is a quiet domestic novel written in the 1930s with a little old lady. So it's a bit unexpected. But, yeah, this is a fantasy novel.
Norman Huntley and his friend Henry Beddow every now and then enjoy making up stories. Not with any malicious intent, but just for fun. At times it's almost a compulsion to just stir up stories from out of thin air and see how far they get.
They've been traveling, and one day they pop in to look at a church. For the benefit of the sexton at the church, they invent a little old lady of mutual acquaintance, name of Connie Hargreaves. They throw out all sorts of ludicrous details about her. She travels everywhere with her own bathtub. She has written a book of poetry, plays the harp, has a pet bird and a dog, etc., etc., etc.

Still in the throes of this creative process, Norman writes and mails her a letter inviting her to visit his family.

Guess what?

She comes. And she's exactly as he described.

The rest of the book is Norman's love/hate relationship with his creation. It's very different, that's for sure. At first Norman searches desperately for a rational explanation, but he can't find one. Miss Hargreaves takes her cues from his imagination, which he finds both delightful and terrifying. When things go too far Norman mentally washes his hands of her, allowing her to go rogue, and that's when he really starts to regret things.
This book is well written. It's not exactly my cup of tea, but I have to say it's well written and I was honestly moved by its poignant moments, like when Miss Hargreaves finally realizes that she is not real, that she is just a thought. Or when Norman dithers on his feelings about her and then finally decides what to do. The ending was pretty gripping. Yes, it's a unique book, and I think some people would immensely enjoy it.

If a metaphysical fantasy novel with all the outward trappings of British domesticity sounds like your thing, then this book is for you. ( )
  Alishadt | Feb 25, 2023 |
En un día lluvioso, el joven Norman Huntley, organista de iglesia e hijo del librero de la imaginaria ciudad catedralicia de Cornford, y su amigo Henry Beddow, mecánico de coches, tienen la ocurrencia, de puro aburrimiento, de inventarse un personaje: una octogenaria, sobrina del duque de Grosvenor, intérprete de arpa, poeta, dueña de una perra y una cacatúa, e intrépida viajera que siempre va acompañada con su propia bañera. Cuál no será su sorpresa cuando, días después de tal invento, la anciana «en persona» se presenta, con todos sus bártulos, en la estación de Cornford.
  Natt90 | Feb 13, 2023 |
I knew the book from a radio adaptation but I'd not read it. It came up in conversation a propos someone coming into my life exactly fitting a character I'd sketched in my head, and the real person being a bit of a nightmare. So I thought I'd give old Miss H a read. I'd forgotten the father somehow, who's a great character, especially if you stick with the book til the end. Norman and Miss H are more frustrating and painful to read than I'd remembered and for that reason, I wouldn't recommend the book. But the premise and the philosophy are definitely worth the candle. For me, 'Miss Hargreaves' will forever be shorthand for something much much bigger... ( )
  emmakendon | Oct 26, 2018 |
Reconec que el llibre està ben escrit. Reconec que està ben traduït. Reconec que, d'entrada, el tema és sugerent. Però a mi, no em va aquest tipus d'humor ni de fantasia. Hi puc dedicar 150 pàgines però no més de tres-centes. L'he deixat...
  Montserratmv | Mar 22, 2018 |
“Always be careful, my boy, what you make up. Life’s more full of things made up on the Spur of the Moment than most people realize. Beware of the Spur of the Moment. It may turn and rend you.”

Spending time with the hapless Norman Huntley and our eponymous Miss Hargreaves has been an absolute delight. Miss Hargreaves, is a work of an extraordinary imagination, both dark and funny, poignant, and completely unforgettable. I am sure all of you will know that it is on Simon’s (Stuckinabook) list of fifty books. A list I have copied into my phone to inform my future second hand book shopping. It is certainly worthy of inclusion on such a list, I can see why Simon and many others love it so much. In fact, Simon loves this book so much, he is quoted on the back cover of this edition.

When young cathedral lay clerk, Norman Huntley and his best friend Henry travel to Lusk in Ireland, they have no idea, what a seemingly dull visit to a pretty grim old church will unleash. The two young men being of an imaginative and light-hearted frame of mind, entertain themselves, during a long conversation with the sexton, by inventing an octogenarian called Miss Hargreaves. Miss Hargreaves so their story goes was a childhood friend of the late Mr Archer, of whom the sexton is particularly loquacious. The Miss Hargreaves of the two friends’ invention becomes gradually more and more eccentric, as they each try to outdo the other with wilder and wilder details. The sexton believes absolutely in Miss Hargreaves, why shouldn’t he – for him the old lady Norman and Henry talk about with such affection is a fully rounded person. After leaving the church and the old sexton behind, Norman and Henry continue to entertain each other with tales of Miss Hargreaves. They even go as far as to write, and then post a letter to their creation at the hotel they have imagined her to be currently residing. And that, is where the trouble starts.

When Norman is back in the Cathedral town of Cornford, he is more than a little astounded when a telegram arrives from Miss Hargreaves. Assuming it to be a prank of his friend Henry – Norman marches round to have it out with his friend. Meanwhile, Norman’s family including his sister Jim, his vague bookseller, music loving father and his girlfriend Marjorie are puzzled by all this talk of someone they had not previously heard of. Henry denies all knowledge of the telegram, and they wonder whether, coincidently there wasn’t another Miss Hargreaves staying at the hotel they wrote to who has replied to their letter. However, it is soon apparent that the Miss Hargreaves of their imagination and invention is the Miss Hargreaves who proposes to visit Cornford.

“Henry stared at me. ‘Are we going batty? Is this a dream?’
‘Listen,’ I said. ‘Listen to that!’
A shrill imperious voice had cried, ‘Porter! Porter! Porter!’ Simultaneously the cockatoo, with a sepulchral growl on a low D, stopped singing. By now everybody else had got out. A porter sprang to a first-class carriage and opened the door. With his assistance, slowly, fussily, there emerged an old lady. She was carrying two sticks, an umbrella and a large leather handbag. Following her was a fat waddling Bedlington terrier, attached to a fanciful purple cord.”

Every single eccentric detail the two had invented for Miss Hargreaves is replicated in life as eighty-three-year-old Miss Hargreaves, (who abominates fuss – you know what that means!) arrives by train, with a Bedlington terrier, a cockatoo, a harp and an old hip bath, to be duly installed in a local hotel. All of Cornford is soon aware of Miss Hargreaves’ presence – she blithely gate-crashes Norman’s organ practice, insinuates herself with all the cathedral clergy and Norman’s colleagues and family. Suddenly, and absolutely Miss Hargreaves begins to take over Norman’s life, he finds himself both fond of her and absolutely horrified by her. Miss Hargreaves remember abominates fuss! but she is a stickler for the way things should be done, wears the most peculiar hats with aplomb, writes some slightly odd rhyming poetry and is blissfully unaware of ever being in the wrong place at the wrong time.

While Norman struggles to explain the existence of Miss Hargreaves to his friends and family – who all start to think he is rather losing the plot – Miss Hargreaves’ batty eccentricity starts to take on a more malevolent turn as Norman begins to fear that she will destroy everything.

Miss Hargreaves is a most marvellous creation, but Frank Baker doesn’t merely confine himself to one superb creation, this is a novel packed with quirky, memorable characters. From the garrulous squinting sexton in Lusk to Norman’s adorable father – who is constantly mishearing, mispronouncing names, bullying his assistant Squeen (who always talks of himself in the third person) Baker gives us a marvellous array of characters, who step fully formed (and slightly bonkers) from the page.

I can’t believe I have had this book for three years at least and not read it before, but such is my tbr. I know Frank Baker has written other novels, but I’m not at all certain how available (if at all) they are. I shall keep my eyes peeled. ( )
  Heaven-Ali | Jul 26, 2016 |
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Nom de l'auteurRôleType d'auteurŒuvre ?Statut
Baker, FrankAuteurauteur principaltoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Beech, PenelopeArtiste de la couvertureauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé
Morris, SarahConcepteur de la couvertureauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé

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'Miss Hargreaves -' I murmured. (Preface)
When I wrote essays at school I was always told to begin at the beginning and end at the end. I'm not at all sure that this story has an end.
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It was a Rolls-Royce with more than the usual consciousness of pedigree; you almost heard the cogs and plugs (do Rolls-Royces have plugs?) and cylinders chatting to one another about their family trees.
She was asked to open a Conservative bazaar and she opened it damn well; I wandered in there after she had left and I had the strongesy feeling that it was the best-opened bazaar I had ever been to. Not a bit of it was closed, you could see that.
Pat Howard no doubt had his points. But I never liked him. I can't say I'd trust my money to the bank he works in.
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When Norman Huntley, and his friend, Henry, invent an 83 year old woman, called Mrs. Hargreaves, they are inspired to write to their fictional friend. The silly, harmless, game turns out not to be such, when she arrives on their doorstep, in Buckinghamshire, exactly as he imagined her.

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