Such Pleasure Explained

Such Pleasure
Author:Martin Boyd
Cover Artist:Leslie Wood
Language:English
Publisher:Cresset Press, London
Release Date:1949
Media Type:Print hardback & paperback
Pages:367 pp
Preceded By:Lucinda Brayford
Followed By:The Cardboard Crown

Such Pleasure (1949) is a novel by the Australian writer Martin Boyd.[1]

Plot summary

The novel follows the life of Bridget Malwyn, the illegitimate daughter of an Irish peer and an English governess. Malwyn transforms over the course of the novel from being young and romantic through to an old disillusioned, objectionable old woman who lives in the past.

Reviews

Gladys Hain in The Argus admired the choices made by the author. "Had Martin Boyd been so minded, he might have made of this story a bitter satire, attacking capitalistic society as one which gives to money the power to mould character irretrievably. He has chosen rather to make of his book a wandering, almost meandering sketch of a woman who never recovered from the taste of splendour she got when she lived with her devoted and slightly idiotic parent, an Irish peer, in his castle on the shores of a beautiful lake...Also, had Mr Boyd chosen to dig a little deeper and lay bare the emotions behind the clash between Bridget and her children, he would have written a very powerful novel. Instead, he has chosen, and perhaps wisely, to make his book a comedy of manners, and, as such, it is a highly enjoyable story."[2]

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://www.austlit.edu.au/austlit/page/C240124 Austlit - Such Pleasure by Martin Boyd
  2. Gladys Hainn, "Australian writes a comedy of manners", The Argus, 5 November 1949, p16