![]() This page provides links and comments about each book, a brief reminder of which is which.
Our list provides the original date of publication and publisher, for those readers who are
collecting First Editions. Books in alphabetical order and
chronological order are provided in a shopping list,
designed to be printed. This list was suggested by a member to take along in a purse or pocket, marked with books on your "to-buy" list. |
Book Name |
Year |
Publisher | Story Line |
Three Houses |
1931 |
Oxford University Press |
The story of Angela Thirkell's childhood homes and memories. |
Ankle Deep |
1933 |
Hamish Hamilton |
Fanny Turner turns her attention to finding a bride for her husband's friend, Valentine Ensor. |
1933 |
Hamish Hamilton |
The introduction of Barsetshire, Mrs. Morland, and her publisher. | |
1934 |
Hamish Hamilton |
At Rushwater House, Lady Emily Leslie and her family are entertaining an assortment of houseguests, including some French monarchists. | |
Trooper to the Southern Cross |
1934 |
Faber & Faber |
Published in the US by A Common Reader as a Common Reader Edition. Her trip to Australia aboard a troop ship, originally written under a pseudonym, Leslie Parker. |
The Demon in the House |
1934 |
Hamish Hamilton |
This book devoted to the adventures of Tony Morland as a 12 year-old. . |
O These Men, These Men! |
1935 |
Hamish Hamilton |
Assumed to be autobiographical, this non-Barsetshire novel chronicles the end of an unhappy marriage and a new beginning. |
The Grateful Sparrow |
1935 |
Hamish Hamilton |
Not easy to find. Out of print. Her only children's book. Non-Barsetshire. |
The Fortunes of Harriette |
1936 |
Hamish Hamilton |
Published in the US by the Common Readeras a Common Reader Edition under the title "Tribute for Harriette: The Surprising Career of Harriette Wilson." The biography of a Regency Courtesan. |
1936 |
Hamish Hamilton |
Mrs. Palmer stages a Greek play, the actors fall in love, and general misunderstandings and family adventures occur in Worsted (just down the road from Winter Overcotes). | |
Coronation Summer |
1937 |
Oxford University Press |
A fictionalized account set in the summer when Queen Victoria was crowned (with pictures). |
1937 |
Hamish Hamilton |
Barsetshire sets the stage for lovely Rose Birkett and her engagements. | |
1938 |
Hamish Hamilton |
The Pomfrets and their heir, Gillie Foster, are the centerpiece of this Barsetshire story. | |
1939 |
Hamish Hamilton |
Mrs. Brandon and her children deal with the illness and death of her deceased husband's wealthy aunt. | |
1939 |
Hamish Hamilton |
The Middletons and Stoners combine with Lord Pomfret to stop construction on Pooker's Piece, and, of course, people fall in love. | |
1940 |
Hamish Hamilton |
The Barsetshire families in the early days of WWII, and Lydia Merton and others watch the departure of loved ones to the front. | |
1941 |
Hamish Hamilton |
The rector's wife in Northbridge must deal with the realities of grocery shopping during WWII, and a variety of soldiers who are quartered there. | |
1942 |
Hamish Hamilton |
Lettice, a young widow with children, returns to her parents' home in Barsetshire. | |
1943 |
Hamish Hamilton |
The war brings much uncertainty to the Warings. |
|
1944 |
Hamish Hamilton |
Angela Thirkell's most acclaimed novel, the story of a strong woman in wartime. | |
1945 |
Hamish Hamilton |
The old and new mingle when Anne Fielding and the daughter of Sam Adams renew old acquaintances. | |
1946 |
Hamish Hamilton |
Barsetshire deals with the return of the troops and England after the war. | |
1947 |
Hamish Hamilton |
A widow and her sister-in-law settle in Barsetshire, as family threads intertwine, and the Brandons are showcased. | |
1948 |
Hamish Hamilton |
Sam Adams and the Beltons provide some contrasts in the Barsetshire series. | |
1949 |
Hamish Hamilton |
Sam Adams settles permanently in Barsetshire and the house and the county see a way of life that is changing. |
|
1950 |
Hamish Hamilton |
More eventual engagements and entanglements in Barsetshire. |
|
1951 |
Hamish Hamilton |
Angela Thirkell works very hard to marry off the grown-up Barsetshire children who are still unattached. | |
1952 |
Hamish Hamilton |
Swan, Lord Lufton, and Grace Grantly are all growing up. | |
1953 |
Hamish Hamilton |
Margot Phelps, the Admiral's daughter, is taken in hand by the ladies of Barsetshire, with astonishing results . | |
1954 |
Hamish Hamilton |
Mrs. Brandon, Bishop Joram, and other Barsetshire families and their improved fortunes are presented. We follow Miss Pemberton and Mr. Downing's academic efforts. | |
1955 |
Hamish Hamilton |
Lady Graham and her daughter provide the background for this book. | |
1956 |
Hamish Hamilton |
Could there be a late blooming romance between Lord Crosse and Mrs. Morland? | |
1957 |
Hamish Hamilton |
Miss Merriman takes the center stage and other romances blossom. | |
1958 |
Hamish Hamilton |
Tubby Fewling is the parson in this later Barsetshire novel. | |
1959 |
Hamish Hamilton |
Most of the ingenues have been married off, but the remaining ones are paired up to remain in Barsetshire. | |
1961 |
Hamish Hamilton |
Completed by C.A. Lejeune after AT's death. |
PRIVATELY PUBLISHED
Baby, Mother, and Grandmother |
1982 |
Lance Thirkell | Lance Thirkell, deeply upset about criticism of his mother, published these letters written by Angela Thirkell to her mother (his grandmother). They show her kindness as a mother. |
Letters to Margaret Bird |
1950-1960 |
Angela Thirkell Society | Angela Thirkell corresponded frequently with her secretary who typed her manuscripts over many years--not in book form; published in the Angela Thirkell Journal in installments. |
Mrs. Morland & Son |
1960 |
Angela Thirkell Society | A book of four Angela Thirkell short stories. |
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Contact : Thirkellmembership@gmail.com Copyright © 2009 Angela Thirkell Society, North America, last updated 10/2013 All rights reserved. |