by Lord Julian Fellowes (Author)
'Fellowes doesn't try to hide his love of the funny, sealed, above-stairs world of dukes, duchesses, marquesses, nursery maids, herbaceous borders and breakfast kedgeree, all of which makes Snobs such a a good, fresh read' Mary Wakefield, Daily Telegraph Edith Lavery is a woman on the make. The attractive only child of a middle-class accountant, she leaves behind her dull job in a Chelsea estate agents and manages to bag one of the most eligible bachelors of the day - Charles Broughton, heir to the Marquess of Uckfield. But is life amongst the upper echelons of 'good' society all that it seems? Edith soon discovers there's much more to the aristocracy than dancing in Anabel's, shooting small birds and understanding which fork to use at dinner. And then there is Charles's mother, the indomitable Lady Uckfield, or 'Googie' to her friends, who is none too pleased with her son's choice of breeding partner. With twists and turns aplenty, this is a comical tale worthy of a contemporary Jane Austen.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 320
Edition: New Ed
Publisher: Phoenix
Published: 01 Jul 2004
ISBN 10: 0753820102
ISBN 13: 9780753820100
Book Overview: A SUNDAY TIMES TOP FIVE BESTSELLER in hardback OVER 30,000 copies of hardback sold Julian Fellowes is a dream for publicity - an Oscar-winner and leading British actor, he is also busy writing musicals and screenplays Snobs is everything you would hope for from the writer of Gosford Park. A delicious thoroughbred delight, a guilty treat that is awake to every maddening and appallingly attractive nuance of English social life... Julian Fellowes has written a book that is destined to grace all the bedside tables of all the better houses in the land. Stephen Fry 'It's subtle, stylish, knowing, deliciously witty, wickedly well-observed. Jane Austen meets Evelyn Waugh for the Armisted Maupin generation' Gyles Brandreth 'A wildly funny novel about aristocrats and social climbers... Not since Proust has a novelist worked so hard to decipher the tiny clues that enable toffs to spot the arrivistes who ape their manners' Damian Thompson Daily Telegraph 'I absolutely loved SNOBS. It is a wicked comedy of lack of manners, a brilliantly malicious portrait of upper class society' Jilly Cooper