...you couldn’t give half the population a gun and send them away for five years and then expect their slippers still to fit when they came home. [loc. 1456]
Set in 1945, this novel centres on Dimperley Manor, the gently crumbling ancestral seat of the Vere-Thissett family. Felix, the dashing RAF squadron leader, has been declared dead; his wife and two teenage daughters have returned from California, where they've spent the war. His younger brother Valentine, who's dyslexic, returns from his own wartime service to find that he's now Sir Valentine, who has to deal with a damaged hand, death duties, and elderly relatives lamenting the fall of civilisation. ("...the appalling, inexplicable events of July, when the populace had flung aside Mr Churchill and filled Parliament with baying reds, there was no knowing how far or how quickly the descent would continue, how soon before the tumbrils came clattering through the lodge gates...") He also encounters the quietly efficient Zena Baxter, who was evacuated to Dimperley when it was requisitioned as a maternity hospital during the war, and has stayed on -- with her little girl, Allison -- to type up the family history being written by Uncle Alaric.
I didn't like this novel as much as Evans' other novels, but it was a calm and cheerful read. Valentine's nieces, with their weird American notions -- deodorant! talking to boys! showers! -- are a delight, as is Valentine's childhood friend Deedee, who spent the war ferrying aircraft and now faces penury and boredom. The romance is gentle and credible, the twist in Zena's story all too believable, and the underlying theme of social class never too laboured. (Pun intended.)