Muriel Hine (1874-1949) |
Want an example this ‘comedy of life’? How about this, from A
Different Woman (1936):
Mrs Jeremy Waldo had been told that after the operation she
would be a “different woman,” but this morning the surgeon had said kindly: “You
will soon be feeling yourself.”
After Muriel’s grandfather - the great Nottingham architect TC
Hine - retired in 1890, her father George started his own practice in
Westminster moving the family to London. But Muriel’s time in Nottingham, where
she was born and raised, shaped much of her writing. Several of her novels are
set in 1880s Nottingham – or, as she calls it, Lacingham – and they provide
insight into life here at that time.
Hine’s semi-autobiographical A Great Adventure (1939) covers the period up to her family’s move to the capital. In the author’s Nottingham, The Park is named The Chase. On The Park/Chase she writes:
All the roads and circles were lined with trees, and the
houses backed by irregular gardens that gave the illusion of the country, the
result so different from the normal dull rows of the period that Lacingham had
cause to be proud of “The Chase”.
The Hine’s Regent Street house, on the corner of Oxford Street near the Playhouse, is also described accurately in the book.
In the novel, Frances is the ruling passion of George Henty’s
life, and for her sake he embarks on a get rich scheme. How can a man,
handicapped as a junior partner in his grudging old father’s firm and forbidden
any initiative, satisfy his wife’s ambition?
Their fine home also features in Hine’s Wild Rye (1931), in which a young woman breaks with expectations.
And in its sequel Jenny Rorke (1932).
Hine had a “gift of infusing life into the characters and an
equally striking gift for description.” The Times.
In A Man’s Way (1933) Hine has an author and his unsuitable wife spend most of the year, over which the book’s drama takes place, in Lincolnshire, giving the writer the chance to take us on journeys to Lincoln Cathedral, Tattershall Castle and various other places.
In many of her thirty-five novels, Muriel Hine explored the challenges
faced by women, including the fight for the vote.
One of her books, The Best in Life (1918), was made into the silent film Fifth Avenue Models, produced by Universal Pictures in 1924. She also wrote plays and song lyrics.
A Different Woman (1936) is a romance novel about a woman married to an older man ("a rounder and extremely selfish"), who finds herself falling in love with a scientist.
Muriel Hine’s architect father and grandfather worked
together on many projects in Nottingham, such as the renovations of the
burnt-out Nottingham Castle, which they turned into the first municipal museum
of art outside of London.
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