ThreeaPenny, Lucy Malleson
ThreeaPenny, Lucy Malleson
List: $24.99 | Sale: $17.50
Club: $12.49

Three-a-Penny
Radio 4 Book of the Week

Author: Lucy Malleson

Narrator: Lucy Scott

Unabridged: 6 hr 52 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 12/12/2019


Synopsis

THREE-A-PENNY describes what it is like to be a woman in a man's world - about the ups and downs of earning a living as a writer in the 1920s and 30s.

Lucy Malleson wrote over 70 crime novels and was part of what is often referred to as the Golden Age of crime writing. But in order to be published she used a male pseudonym, and successfully concealed her true identity for many years.

From the poignancy of the First World War and its aftermath to the invitation to join the infamous Detection Club, this re-discovered classic gives a fascinating insight into what life was like as a woman living and working in a largely male world during and after the First World War.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Paula

I listened to the hour+ omnibus by the BBC. I enjoyed the descriptions of daily life and just how one gets on during and after the war, and would be interested in reading the book for that alone. If that turned out to be a minimal amount, I probably wouldn't pursue finishing it, as the pursuit of be......more

Goodreads review by John

In part this is about being a woman in a man's world, as the blurb claims, but it's about many other things as well -- her need to write to feel more than half-alive, the First World War and its terrible social effects, rampant poverty, the precarious life of the professional writer who is not a bes......more

Goodreads review by Ellen

Good in parts.......more


Quotes

Both a fascinating account of how a middle-class family was affected by the social upheavals caused by the Great War and a highly appealing self-portrait of a woman determined to make her mark in a profession dominated by men ... she writes superbly about how a world turned topysy-turvy by war remained the wrong way up long after the conflict ... THREE-A-PENNY is a book you read because you are charmed by the author and enjoy her company ... Reading it feels, to a rare degree, like making a wise and funny new friend SUNDAY TELEGRAPH

With a useful introduction by Sophie Hannah, this reissue of the autobiography of a lesser-known Golden Age English crime writer is something of a revelation and not so much as rewrites history but provides an invaluable insight into a different perspective on being a woman author trying to make a living through writing crime in the often traumatic days after World War One... If this fascinating memoir sends the reader back to picking up an Anthony Gilbert novel and marvel at its modernity, then it will have more than deserved its purpose in keeping Malleson's name alive. CRIME TIME

When Lucy Malleson wrote 70 thrillers during the Golden Age of crime, she went by the name Anthony Gilbert. This memoir, first published in 1940, is a compelling insight into what it was like to earn a living as a woman writing in the 30s The I paper