Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Miss Mapp
Miss Mapp
Miss Mapp
Ebook302 pages5 hours

Miss Mapp

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

()

Read preview

About this ebook

The acclaimed author of Mapp and Lucia introduces the beloved Miss Elizabeth Mapp, a devious social climber, in this charming British comedy of manners.

In the English seaside village of Tilling, Miss Elizabeth Mapp keeps a thorough notebook about everyone’s business, including her servants. Whatever information she can’t collect through gossip, she discovers with the aid of opera glasses. Looking out from her window over High Street, she pays especially avid attention to her neighbor, Maj. Benjamin Flint, whom she has been planning for years to marry.
 
The second novel in E. F. Benson’s popular Mapp and Lucia series, which has been adapted for BBC television, offers a biting satire of post-WWI English village life, complete with a cast of colorful characters who all fall under the knowing gaze of “Old Mappy.”
 
This ebook has been professionally proofread to ensure accuracy and readability on all devices.
 
LanguageEnglish
Release dateSep 24, 2019
ISBN9781504058933
Author

E.F. Benson

Edward Frederic Benson (1867–1940) was an English novelist, biographer, memoirist, archaeologist, and short story writer. Benson was the son of the Archbishop of Canterbury and member of a distinguished and eccentric family. After attending Marlborough and King’s College, Cambridge, where he studied classics and archaeology, he worked at the British School of Archaeology in Athens. A great humorist, he achieved success at an early age with his first novel, Dodo(1893). Benson was a prolific author, writing over one hundred books including serious novels, ghost stories, plays, and biographies. But he is best remembered for his Lucia and Mapp comedies written between 1920 and 1939 and other comic novels such as Paying Guests and Mrs Ames. Benson served as mayor of Rye, the Sussex town that provided the model for his fictional Tilling, from 1934 to 1937.  

Read more from E.F. Benson

Related to Miss Mapp

Titles in the series (1)

View More

Related ebooks

Satire For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for Miss Mapp

Rating: 4.029411715686274 out of 5 stars
4/5

204 ratings9 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Forty-ish Elizabeth Mapp, much like the heroine of the last book in this series, Lucia, places great stock in the latest news in her village of Tilling. The first person in possession of the latest tidbits has a tactical advantage over her neighbors. Therefore, she maintains a vigilant surveillance of her neighborhood from her garden room window, where “anger and the gravest suspicions about everybody had kept her young and on the boil.”Written in 1922, there is very little here to remind readers of the horrid war that effected so many in those years following World War I. By design, this is a light-hearted, humorous look at life in an English village and reading it at this point in time gives the reader a glimpse of a time long ago when people took time for tea, had servants, found pleasure and importance everyday occurrences and lived an entirely different kind of life.Miss Mapp’s primary nemesis is her fellow village resident Godiva Plaistow and the two carry on a hilarious give and take relationship as they try to one-up each other. The main thrust of their one-upmanship occurs as they vie against each other to out-create various dresses. In addition, directly across from Miss Mapp reside two bumbling gentleman, retired military men, who enjoy daily golf outings and take pleasure in each other’s company over a drink or two in the evening.Every morning at the appointed time village residents fill the streets with their market baskets ready for their purchases, which according to accepted mores, must be kept covered so that no one knows what’s been procured. And Miss Mapp certainly follows all the rules and makes sure that others do so as well. She meets her match, however, when the Contessa comes to town:”Miss Mapp’s head was in a whirl. The Contessa said in the loudest possible voice all that everybody else only whispered; she displayed (in her basket) all that everybody else covered up with thick layers of paper. If Miss Mapp had only guessed that the Contessa would have a market basket, she would have paraded the High Street with a leg of mutton protruding from one end and a pair of Wellington boots from the other…But who could have suspected that a Contessa…”It’s hard to over-emphasize the power Miss Mapp has over her fellow village residents or the skill Benson displayed in creating dialogue that dripped with irony and humor. Absolutely delightful.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I've read the entire Mapp & Lucia series a few times and have come to the conclusion that Miss Mapp is my favourite character. Such a crafty mischief-maker! The machinations and intrigues of the residents of Tilling are hilariously entertaining. Major Flint and Captain Puffin are known to have bibulous disagreements but it was Puffin's belligerent confrontation with Miss Mapp that made me laugh so hard it brought tears to my eyes: "You say I'm drunk, do you? Well I say you're drunk." On this nth reading, I'm awarding 5 stars yet again.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Mapp is much meaner in spirit than Lucia, but the silly situations and surrounding characters make this a fun read for those down moments.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Miss Elizabeth Mapp sits most of the time behind her bay window which gives her a vantage point over the main street of her village, Tilling, and especially over the houses of her neighbours, Captain Puffin and Major Flint. A lot of bridge is played and there is a tedious duel between Captain and Major that goes on and on and on. This one I will remember as the book of the cut-up chintz curtains. It is my least favourite of the six (I already read the last three in the volume Lucia Victrix).
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Where to start? The backstabbing machinations of the two-faced, gossiping, vindictive characters in this book would better people a YA high school clique novel. Don't tell me that I just don't get it-- because of the time period in which it was written--I've read lots of things written in this time period, and set in this time period. For the most part, these people are just selfish, and mean to each other for no other reason. Regardless, it's like an accident: you don't want to look, but you feel compelled. Miss Mapp, and her friends (?), while tedious, were entertaining.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    One of the fabulous E.F. Benson novels of English village life and all its machinations. I love all the Mapp and Lucia books, and reread them regularly. While Miss Mapp is one of my favorite characters, this book has always seemed to me to be a bit darker than the Lucia books. Miss Mapp, as a book and as a character, seems to be just the tiniest bit darker and more vindictive than Lucia. Still, this novel is great fun and from time to time even approaches the laugh-out-loud level, even after many re-readings.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    It is no wonder that, when E.F. Benson decided to further the adventures of his divine Emmeline "Lucia" Lucas, he brought her to the town of Tilling. For here, in the first (pre-Lucia) Tilling novel, everything is absurd and hilarious in equal measure. Indeed, Lucia so o'erwhelms the measure in the later books that it is worth settling in to Miss Mapp to recall how perfect Benson's comic creations are, from the doughty title character to "quaint" (read: queer) Irene, the entire town ready to burst into a frenzy over the hoarding of corned beef or the origin of a recipe for "red currant fool".

    My comic ideal.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    3.5* rounded up for this audiobook edition.

    It has been decades since I read the Mapp & Lucia series and I had forgotten much this entry (2nd in publication order but 3rd in the omnibus). I found Miss Mapp meaner than I remembered but the book funnier (so often the way in satires that the nastier characters are the source of most of the humor).

    Nadia May does a marvellous narration so I am glad to have listened to this rather than read my Kindle edition.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I don't understand why I love the residents of Riseholme and Tilling so much. They really are the most vapid, conniving, hidebound, silly snobs you could ever imagine, and Lucia and Miss Mapp are the worst of the bunch. And yet, when they do occasionally get their comeuppance, I can't help but feel a pang. And I'm always eager to read more.

Book preview

Miss Mapp - E.F. Benson

Pdbook_preview_excerpt.html|ێ$Ǒ >r.Eq!J\ BQQU17kO=acfU3 2 _?LX};]զTaKok59LM쟦aӄ^R}O\}Ʊ|t}FtֹU0౧aZ.ՏR]ì_~.q.V6/1U=-w \Pԍs̋X[7jwOz.'[[}I]oZ~Yw#^q0-VioTu ~Xbl/C_YjݰDis5.a82gsjC_Dzo?>W_~?X[??CtߴpؖU.5VLjB:bƒ /<5K8${O˭:ޯ3NAD0Uz6qz=J=)`G^g'XӴ9Hu5HNiַ: zn\~G|zI9`'~8 `APF/8 OZ[\qb:n3tcE5C:ƾJ]xk_sBb=Pu*a기6-Kk{K8P\}E,}:¼c%p )㍛s^Z䆭qR[-#@8˰TB(0Xk}6L8cJe{!5)l9>* ?a(59%SZXir"U k{<vŒf5-B)f)G+=b=8y fw7'P_&};\`,~gȧ?AdkWiSϵAƍ>K&ȿ4iTz'VGaDr nWM5W ˀuLΥ\ZU[%.?Y7-@^8WB^l[Dm=iuQslሠ)Hf@08zFp,<9q4vpWmZQ)dv=,){Pyz$loӾx4438Fo+ ]I۸(RkN :%oQsl9Z w,[Kn;eeHAgś:`Ův>MyTj;R1/qsP 7pksϔkxX_{.6xpS@,#&0:}3V,e2+kSԊ;ڊ?քZD~Jo_+3e*9 SyѯGꋿ%<)!M?g]ˉN;T~'pS\"YX 0ֺy*Wcl;aVn/g fP}?܎% >E~da}-v(ob|9uwGXN##J޸(qGl+ =v{zj#Ѧy1 Š0 -̤ ,ݼ"+:>Z"@`R;Guu5)1 p))dΉ;` '0QWR(nqdA0*%*." 9…n`;~N`)xPN@x(R1 Nyn fg4Tt0;tVHk=З,oB Cdk6eŮ^v$C4*bFeCCǿTƣK0נ¾d*AM-IS2}ڽrjD: C Ī-+v?%+8" ^Ph8J5j)f)K" gd13(|΁$n$0{Xʢo|`VX6#N@*ʇ܍n&HRF1 \6*zO/,$b~l& ]qWS3C{jMm١ۜ *LBB8TGQ3Ng3iVsZ:8G=W-9`,~ ʁ:f9dNTk#$3q Jc& |2 nӖt7 4HGtk+6-u3%xJtp%(^z7_܆U%uO[wyԋ`oɛ"z/'qb >c*/Eo/vMkL 2dzeK0ɀpgCmod k!Ӗо]v.NZ_3A4xL~JʹM ;$2?&PM"NKC$ט@{s2׈\KqB{lJ{5tY Xͷlk)>lN\N#^ųi[C=WI0p&.ݜI:d2 Ȥ{tWgʫ_¹%œhnѮK\ԙ3M4Dn~D.KZ֦`?ٱ8\%&dtzr1M|IT >%|ԹuLL"oѠV q.Kimo;,)۔-ApZ&fj,&ν%WwNF\pYr/?76{xhAbRyOuvk0ic]O.dҬ5OD#Ɯv,e!OMsNz+*nuq: lNbs$F'g!Iz5:8r#Iĵ_a@rڕE-Tb`^=B:g&І x+6;5eǙ:_Q^DiVnf,gѬk l$m# W`y6FpYoFPS" Q2sփ'V*dMRRbegY,Z>W}ff*_ $&L4k,I'Vg E̮0:6Yj)8ϣxv"0qh?Q "dTWÆOKv en gYCtSZL\z.QL:4uC[:BVm닱/wʘpC#LCdzOTbRŠSeF}VN=#Ȫ";˛-W䭢֤~~Zg "H <6E0ϗafYK5rjU$]8sL-=nWr!ӗ4-qTu{ ي[Yi`I>.Bs*tfL%d Vopv47u SA1"#3b"_?u1Ncٯa0S¸lqv_QW)D'Vϛ}^nE_˾= Ә_DQ^>]P S/hĚf n$K}@DK 7R\<Ձ(g*bc8lpZ6n T4y>QOBf˟ccbW_sV#8iʷEJzl&:PrV ؉#bJ7aŧ(sn^7&7~2Wm2v3^~v_rܮR;,[ ^f-:o5#chi(Ci1lYه7{hZnN,τ ywgbr%NZezk%kTӌU\/rOe~I5L~:8uL#@""̭纳N/0,WhTߛ%DXXo wQo߬Tdc$uSnm4<On$H5uə!9aX ;'mc&-pP}Œ`^3$,ɀXJR3 }Vr *_qgbjVV $3Wn}x//w1ɠыdmaos^Jm݂׳}!>ܱ!v*oVLik 2 bT )~?Un[cN~?:tϯ?l;R%. ܧe"zcX(]7&Kcؕ~ψ8Ki(O(Ƥ+;)j+6uR? \xR[d?]:ZZ$վ0amJiMȾv(#%ܴ zaLP ÙBCSǯ\_Hh re5]AA/^&tK3F8ohVنcWMٚ)bE#kJ~M/*ok"KgK;W@ |ima-^W7 6V9KKٙYC>C6W"H=RU`mG+D<|04RY3bI,Q6[\2hC9[;B^1p)۝U\yU&Sqkn_->Ժ%)%|K\ҫY w]c2>so$PLupЗ7 P-0xn iT*A-0im[ZBJl/<[f"P_Ub^vN 1ָ5Zx ^] ɢS}خbHRWD,(a }XnOt"pm_=ߙS\8ӉL~Onyhfױ貳2aٱ<N' 8lrޖ v@.\ɣ 9d݋X&f>MPP zYu8bҪt'^d]?J;c ܼ{{c НQpNos ظa:^a4M{F<ˊB6 Pp^\"ڠi/i1c5AI g1R3U@gR?u섚Pljn!-L(NdB9|h)M㞜96zerR&Lcڹ̝p$Fɱ^dGku6i7'pž`hLAP~=DZ9R,W]aոoGeFYb !7筁&vyezO-X TM \7LF7٫i5`qr&򓩱vuWJ}80y{"Ek@S\)) Gy acSO<ͽxkaY?g-LzkO)2^%kDzǵ2/Rku~Fq89;ͯE]w k6Uqf[A+_X]g읨a^wi2@' rlʕ8ӔΉ3Q3V>B-tWђprha` bחmROYƔh|8qDӌ;WTg@E)ky 9-1]Exjׇl? F#uȵ4іi%'~-;F;I] (w@̼n3)°(HRSLT$_Hyg}BB;uQsu.qnN(vE~a1.֍mtgg=ܪ7$gCJdSO/IBml핧1H:3J+Lmrس g$;Vd7Y͢sBǁꍅNWt&ϔ[,+`l%dڍ-Sx0=e82R㼘i;/Ce&/^>]y$ Ap>85^RAQ҇(Wz(f$_5ݤ;tJ.Rasl==4l/9^V,mWytJO C$?>eS6n.r}۪Rq̉_weDoYҎa_:O&&19{lԆ<]inQzuҨm/$&3lmRGp?ua|\=4 p I6/=фl<+BqLCNCln4ww Cx%:݃49p4(WrՂt_ÜYt4O%QFi/J'AeφHnw{-mN0G/,ncY/v PU~ĕ۹ō"$JxԳ;ҙVR>)k96Eҟ|%PA][ qee۵q"u>ԓ m7L 6Y+K1v3 o"_AʊzC޹2 Xi2uC썕tP=ܪQ W~⸩k1>׻m6WE8Spޝ ~ެ"YnSF:A̐y̓PwηR-ӞXbfOS Vw=GuWb;V`3#zrԵ3>P>΢2pf%;Y3Pga|^fr]V S*٨ü2q]=VbEv[ ڿ"v5GŦ!f"'̬n> ix61hݸ6{T/OΉ\d=|q:~ S_դK(]æ')\ Ȫwe>Djm_t9YG^BiR0=sǚXPjI ,yk{~ x'U.Bu,?˹)_5WjzLR #[;%h׽ur%̊!kZY>sݝPp@RPo&&MsҚ#&#}BذZ-ng;6mj?"ܙC6&Rwܿħ vܓ9[c7\Y?o鰗0*K[ hfBT!*W;Z.oRex H/9B[z{3+eqkrRdȥϣs vqCv‘r+M,>RdY 1,k+UuoYVT^Z Gn:_u*s+r}r].+UvʫPnXo,sbgRǢ_prޱR l'jۭYXظy "K6CȺ9.(6Zk:^bIϸ0 egJG!n͚.\L˄3zˠ,Obcە!\gR_ (;BMFI.rzbcK 2 R]0"1ZG|7|]{X4,k`__ʵ%~f[vV:W׹=G܍4m\Iq{ڋp(C~jKrK&&V6oT˴>xғ)e|0LÉ8^/8R>/ I7a)MJl}2VU#s(oL߮hR;
Enjoying the preview?
Page 1 of 1