cover image After the Party

After the Party

Cressida Connolly. Pegasus, $25.95 (272p) ISBN 978-1-64313-126-9

Connolly (The Happiest Days) goes back to pre-WWII England in this eye-opening drama of class division and political opposition to war. In 1938, Phyllis Forrester; her husband, Hugh; and their three children, 14-year-old Julia, 12-year-old Frances, and youngest Edwin return to England after three years abroad. While they look for a home of their own, they stay with Phyllis’s sister Patricia; her husband, Greville; and their daughter and settle into the Sussex social scene. Patricia and Greville introduce Phyllis and Hugh to their aristocratic friends at dinner parties; Patricia and Phyllis’s sister Nina enlists Phyllis’s help at a local summer camp that Julia, Frances, and Edwin attend. Nina also gets Phyllis and Hugh involved in local political action, advocating for British restraint in entering into another war. Their involvement in the Party Peace Campaign results in Phyllis and Hugh’s arrest. Despite efforts by Greville to use his connections to get Phyllis and Hugh released and the fact they are not convicted of any crime, they are forced to endure difficult detainment conditions. Phyllis desperately misses her children and hopes for a future when she can be reunited with them. Phyllis’s nuanced first-person narration is nicely juxtaposed against the fast-paced narrative. Connolly skillfully chronicles some of the little-known consequences to those opposed to Britain’s involvement in WWII, resulting in a vivid, introspective tale. [em]Agent: Kimberly Witherspoon, InkWell Management. (May) [/em]