South Riding

Front Cover
Little, Brown Book Group, Mar 10, 2011 - Fiction - 544 pages

NOW A BRITISH DRAMA FILM AND A MAJOR BBC TELEVISION ADAPTATION.

A preface by Shirley Williams, an introduction by Marion Shaw and an epitaph by Vera Brittain.

'Rich in humour and worldly insight' INDEPENDENT

'The novel undoubtedly remains a fascinating depiction of a time and place' GUARDIAN

'Holtby's personal masterpiece . . . I can't say enough good things about this book' SARAH WATERS

When Sarah Burton returns to her hometown as headmistress she is full of ambition, determined to create a great school and to inspire her girls to take all they can from life. But in the aftermath of the First World War, the country is in depression and ideals are hard won. Lydia Holly, the scholarship girl from the shacks, is the most brilliant student Sarah has ever taught, but when her mother's health fails, her education must be sacrificed.

Robert Carne of Maythorpe Hall stands for everything Sarah despises: his family has farmed the South Riding for generations, their position uncontested. Yet Sarah cannot help being drawn to this proud, haunted - and almost ruined - man.

South Riding is a rich, panoramic novel, bringing vividly to life a rural community on the brink of change.

 

Contents

VIRAGO MODERN CLASSICS
Prologue in a Press Gallery
EDUCATION
Kiplington Governors Appoint a New Head Mistress
Mr Holly Blows Out a Candle
Alderman Mrs Beddows Considers Heredity
Miss Burton Surveys a Battlefield
Alderman Snaith Contemplates a Wilderness
PUBLIC ASSISTANCE
Mrs Beddows Has Three Men to Think
Sarah Looks Out of a Window
Nymphs and Shepherds Come Away
Carne Visits Two Ideal Homes
Mr Mitchell Faces an Inquisition
MENTAL DEFICIENCY
Midge Provokes Hysteria

Madame Hubbard Has Highly Talented Pupils
HIGHWAYS AND BRIDGES
Councillor Huggins Incurs an Obligation
Tom Sawdon Decides to Buy a
Sarah Acquires an Ally and Carne an Enemy
Lydia Holly Goes Home
Two Antagonists Meet
The Cold Harbour Colonists State a Case
Alderman Snaith is Very Fond of Cats
Mr Castle Counsels Caution
Mr Barnabas Holly Toasts Heredity
Two Antagonists Meet Again
PUBLIC HEALTH
Teacher and Alderman Do Not See Eye to
Councillor Huggins Secures the Floodlighting of the Hospital
Lily Sawdon Propitiates a
The Hubbards Only Object is Philanthropy
Mr Huggins Tastes the Madness of Victory
Mrs Beddows Pays a Statutory Visit
Nat Brimsley Does Not Like Rabbit
Two in a Hotel are Temporarily Insane
FINANCE
Mr Holly Brings Home a Christmas Present
Councillor Huggins Prepares for an Election
A Procession Passes Through Maythorpe Village
The Head Mistress Introduces a Governor
Carne Rides South
HOUSING AND TOWN PLANNING
Three Revellers Have a Night
Councillor Huggins Vindicates Morality
Midge Decides to Go Home
The Hollys Go Picnicking
Mrs Beddows Sends Sarah About Her Business
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About the author (2011)

Winifred Holtby (1898-1935) was an English journalist and novelist. Holtby was a committed socialist and feminist who wrote the classic South Riding as a warm yet sharp social critique of the well-to-do farming community she was born into. This was adapted into a British Drama film and later a television adaptation by the BBC. She wrote a lot of literary fiction, biographies and memoirs. She was a good friend of Vera Brittain, possibly portraying her as Delia in The Crowded Street. She died at the age of thirty-seven.

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