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Cluny Brown: A Novel
Cluny Brown: A Novel
Cluny Brown: A Novel
Audiobook7 hours

Cluny Brown: A Novel

Written by Margery Sharp

Narrated by Anna Parker-Naples

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

()

About this audiobook

Cluny Brown refuses to know her place in society. Last week, she took herself to tea at the Ritz. Then she spent almost an entire day in bed eating oranges. So, to teach her discipline, her uncle, a plumber who has raised the orphaned girl since she was a baby, sends her into service as a parlor maid at one of England's stately manor houses.

At Friars Carmel in Devonshire, Cluny meets her employers: Sir Henry, the quintessential country squire, and Lady Carmel, who oversees the management of her home with unruffled calm. Their son, Andrew, newly returned from abroad with a Polish emigre writer friend, is certain the country is once again on the brink of war. Then there's Andrew's beautiful fiancee and the priggish town pharmacist.

While everyone around her struggles to keep pace with a rapidly changing world, Cluny continues to be Cluny, transforming those around her with her infectious zest for life.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJul 31, 2018
ISBN9781977389817
Author

Margery Sharp

Margery Sharp is renowned for her sparkling wit and insight into human nature, both of which are liberally displayed in her critically acclaimed social comedies of class and manners. Born in Yorkshire, England, Sharp wrote pieces for Punch magazine after attending college and art school. In 1930, she published her first novel, Rhododendron Pie, and in 1938, married Maj. Geoffrey Castle. Sharp wrote twenty-six novels, three of which—Britannia Mews, Cluny Brown, and The Nutmeg Tree—were made into feature films, and fourteen children’s books, including The Rescuers, which was adapted into two Disney animated films.

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Reviews for Cluny Brown

Rating: 3.9308510893617026 out of 5 stars
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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Cluny Brown by Margery Sharp is a charming and delightful tale about a free spirited young woman who is sent to the country to work as a parlour maid in order that she learn “her place”. Her plumber uncle was quite undone by his twenty year old niece who thought she was entitled to have tea at the Ritz. Cluny is sent to Devon where she becomes a parlour maid at Friars Carmel, working for Lord Henry, his wife Lady Carmel and their son Andrew. These characters have their own entanglements and concerns that mostly revolve around Andrew’s bachelor status. Andrew is concerned about what is happening in Europe with Hitler and Mussolini and he brings to the country a Polish friend seeking refuge. Adam Belinski is trying to gather inspiration to write his next book, and he and Cluny have some interesting conversations. Both Adam and Cluny go on to have their heads turned by others, but by the end of the book, Cluny has finally figured out where she belongs.I found Cluny Brown to be a charming and delightful read. The author has written a witty social comedy about class and manners and her main character is a joy to read about. This was the first book by Margery Sharp that I have read but I will certainly be picking up more by this author.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A light, relatively cozy read. Sharp never disappoints me, and I enjoyed reading the adventures of orphaned Cluny Brown, who was placed in "good service" with Lady Carmel in Devon after growing up in London. Someone was always asking Cluny "who do you think you are?", and naturally, by the end of this story, she has figured out the answer to her own satisfaction, if not necessarily to that of everyone else.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Lovely pre-WWII romance about a working girl finding her"place". Loved it.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I have been utterly charmed by Cluny Brown.She’s a girl who never does anything that’s exactly wrong; but she’s also a girl who never really does anything that is usual or expected.She simply followed her heart; oblivious to the strictures that hold most people back.One day she took herself out to tea at the Ritz; another day she stayed in bed, eating oranges, because she read in a magazine that it would give her vitality.To many Cluny was a breath of fresh air; but to her Uncle Arn she was a worry. He was a plumber, he had brought up the orphaned Cluny and he was a very conventional man. He worried that his niece didn’t know her place.The final straw came when, in her uncle’s absence, Cluny set out to unblock a gentleman’s sink."The correct costume for a young lady going to fix a gentleman’s sink on a Sunday afternoon has never been authoritatively dealt with: Cluny had naturally to carry her uncle’s tool-bag, but as an offset wore her best clothes."She did an excellent job and the customer was charmed; Cluny was delighted to be offered a cocktail, and she regretfully declined the offer of the use of the loveliest bath she had ever seen. When Uncle Arn arrived and heard Cluny’s account of what had happened, he was aghast.He consulted Cluny’s Aunt Addie, and between them they decided that the best thing would be to find Cluny a job in service."Nothing could be easier, in that year 1938, than for a girl to go into good service. The stately homes of England gaped for her. Cluny Brown, moreover, possessed special advantages: height, plainness (but combined with a clear skin) and a perfectly blank expression. This last attribute was not permanent, but the lady at the registry office did not know, and she saw in Cluny the very type of that prized, that fast-disappearing genus, the Tall Parlourmaid. Addie Trumper too knew what was what; she had been in good service herself, and with footmen practically extinct felt there was no table in the land too high for Cluny to aspire to."Cluny was dispatched to Devon to work as a maid at Friars Carmel, the country home of Sir Henry and Lady Carmel. She took her new job in her stride; she loved taking the neighbours dog – who she had met on the train down from London – out on her day off; and she was captivated when the village pharmacist took an interest in her, tried to educate her, and maybe even to court her.Adam Belinski had arrived at Friars Carmel not long before Cluny. He was a distinguished Polish intellectual, in exile after giving a contentious lecture in Bonn that offended his German hosts. Andrew, the only son of Sir Henry and Lady Carmel, was sure that the Nazis would be trying to track him down, he wanted to do something to help, and so he offered him sanctuary. Belinksi was not so worried, but he was delighted to be offered a home in a quiet country house where he can work, and nurture his growing fame, without distractions.Upstairs and downstairs at Friars Carmel were separate spheres; but in each sphere was a person who was oblivious to their position, who reached out from their sphere, and those two people met.Cluny and Belinski met when she was in the library, looking for a certain piece of poetry.“‘Would you write it down for me?” she asked. “I want to learn it.”Mr. Belinski obligingly went to a table and did so. Cluny followed…to watch over his shoulder and admire again as the neat lines ran out of his pen. For the first time he had really impressed her.“I do think you’re clever!” she said sincerely.“I am, very clever,” replied Mr. Belinski, without looking up. “Who is Mr. Wilson?”“He’s the chemist.”“If he is endeavoring to form your mind with this sort of stuff, he must be a great fool.…”But Cluny, without paying much attention, took the finished copy and folded it very carefully and put it in her apron pocket."Meanwhile, Andrew, who fashioned himself as a cosmopolitan young man but was really rather conventional, was courting the lovely Betty Cream. She fashioned herself as a modern girl, he wasn’t at all sure that he could win her heart, but he had to try.Belinski was charmed by Betty; and Betty was intrigued by Cluny, who she decided ‘looked like somebody.’And so there was a lovely tangle of characters.The principals were are beautifully drawn; the other characters were not so finely drawn, but all were drawn well enough to play their part.That was my one disappointment; there were so many characters I would have liked to known a little better than I did.I loved the way Margery Sharp told Cluny’s story; I loved the way she set it so well against a time of social change; and I loved her wit and intelligence as much as I ever did.The ending was beautifully set up, and I can understand why some people didn’t like it, but I thought that it was exactly right for Cluny.She was the wrong girl for a conventional happy ending; she was the wrong girl for an ending at all or for a fixed future.I just wish there was a sequel, because I would love to read the next chapters of her story.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Cluny Brown's greatest failing, in the eyes of her family, is that she "doesn't know her place". Ever-curious and completely un-snubbable, Cluny attempts a career as a housemaid at a country estate, where she encounters the local aristocracy and Polish writer Belinski, in hiding from the secret police. (Or is he?)