Long after the work's publication, Warner began the novella The Salutation. Now adrift and starving on the Brazilian pampas, Mr. Fortune is rescued by an elderly widow, who delights in having an Englishman about the house. Her heir, however, may beg to differ.
Brilliant and subversive, Mr. Fortune's Maggot and its sequel are now available in one volume. They show Sylvia Townsend Warner at the height of her powers.
ADAM MARS-JONES was born in London, where he lives and works. His fiction includes Monopolies of Love (1992) and The Waters of Thirst (1993). He writes about films and books for London newspapers.
Literature Cambridge offers courses on great literature in English, taught by academics and open to the public. Summer courses and online study sessions.
Women Writers of the 1920s. Online course with Alison Hennegan, 2023: • Elizabeth von Arnim, Vera • Agatha Christie, The Murder of Roger Ackroyd • Sylvia Townsend Warner, Mr Fortune’s Maggot • Elizabeth Bowen, The Hotel https://t.co/6n1Q30vLe2 https://t.co/gYEp8ShT2R
The good-looking, intelligent & slightly eccentric magazine & podcast for book lovers | Publishers of classic memoirs & children’s books | Worldwide shipping
‘When the journal begins Sylvia is 33, living in Bayswater & enjoying the success of her first novels, Lolly Willowes and Mr Fortune’s Maggot. The phrase ‘social whirl’ has rarely seemed so apposite.’ Jonathan Law on The Diaries of Sylvia Townsend Warner https://t.co/e7jc0mQJ8T https://t.co/6lvzr1IjfG
avid reader w/focus on women writers • ‘curiosity & wonder are my religion’ • ‘my library is an archive of longings’ • (she/her) 📚👣🌗 #NYRBWomen23 #DeWitt2023
“Sylvia Townsend Warner is one of those rare writers who cannot be “placed,” a delightful, warm, original whose every book became an event for her admirers…I remember very well when I read Lolly Willowes & Mr. Fortune‘s Maggot how astonished & delighted I was.” — May Sarton https://t.co/n03UHeKVFs
"At long last I pulled down from its place on the shelves
Sylvia Townsend Warner's plump little novel impishly titled Mr. Fortune's Maggot and was once again amazed by what a witty, poetic, clairvoyant writer this English woman was."
--John Updike
"Mr. Fortune's Maggot is satire at its best. There are pas-
sages here--particularly those delightfully malicious ones, of which there are many--that still cause the reader to laugh out loud. There is so much truth here in regard to Christianity, innocent love, and English reticence that it is easy to dismiss Mr. Fortune's Maggot as a novel without a clear content. Truth can be very simple and very engaging."
--Anthony Slide