"The Bride Comes To Evensford" 1943 BATES, H.E.

BATES, H.E.

[60] pp.

Jonathan Cape

1943

Second Impression

7 3/4" x 5 1/4"

Jacket design by Tisdall

A tale written and published in the midst of Bates's work for the Air Ministry, but hearkening back in style and subject matter to his pre-war stories. It follows a woman from her arrival in a small town (modeled after Bates's native Rushden) to work for a draper, to her marriage to him, her increasing command over the business and the household, and finally to an infatuation with a young man as a widow in her fifties. This and the remaining Air Ministry stories were Bates's last offerings to his long-time publisher, Jonathan Cape, which published it singly (in which form it enjoyed huge sales due to Bates's success with the "Flying Officer X" stories) and as the lead story in a 1949 compilation. The title would appear to reference "The Bride Comes to Yellow Sky," by Stephen Crane (an author Bates greatly admired).

Philip Toynbee writes "Mr. Bates's long short story has a fine elegant shape, covering with formidable skill a period of thirty years in only twice as many pages...Mr. Bates is a master of restraint...in a period of over-exuberance." R.D. Charques writes that "what makes the tale so unsatisfactory is the rigid and mechanical elaboration of the woman's character."


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