Miss Mole
Posted: 2020/06/15 Filed under: Book Reviews, BookLust II, E-Books, Fiction | Tags: 2020, april, book lust ii, book review, ebook, EH Young, Fiction, women Leave a commentYoung, E. H. Miss Mole. New York: Doubleday & Co., Inc., 1985
Reason read: Miss Mole was supposed to be this quick, under 300 page easy read I could bang out in a week’s time. Instead it turned out to be a slog I put down and then forgot to pick back up…for eight weeks. Oops.
Confessional: In the beginning, I didn’t care for Hannah Mole. In the beginning I was questioning myself, was I supposed to like Hannah Mole? Possibly not, since this was included in the More Book Lust chapter called “Viragos.” After finishing the book and with careful consideration, I think I am supposed to see Hannah as an independent, plucky, middle aged woman who barges through life with integrity, wit and humor. She had a prejudice against nonconformist ministers, tells small lies (don’t we all?), and keeps secrets. The more Miss Mole’s personality blossomed, the more I admired her. Plucky! As my grandmother used to say.
As an aside, I don’t know why Hannah Mole would subject herself to being a companion for a succession of crotchety old women. As a middle aged spinster, she starts working for Reverend Corder. It seems as if she has traded in her difficult women for a pompous ass.
Line I liked, “I was wondering if the best wives are the ones who are not married” (p 41).
Author fact: Miss Mole is considered Young’s best work.
Book trivia: Miss Mole won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize in 1930.
Nancy said: Pearl said Miss Mole was a virago you should not miss.
BookLust Twist: from More Book Lust from, as I’ve said several times over, the chapter called “Viragos” (p 227).