- Published: 15 March 2009
- ISBN: 9780552772389
- Imprint: Black Swan
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 512
- RRP: $45.00
Madresfield
One house, one family, one thousand years
- Published: 15 March 2009
- ISBN: 9780552772389
- Imprint: Black Swan
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 512
- RRP: $45.00
Madresfield is a scholarly, evocative and beautifully written study, in which Jane Mulvagh builds up a thrillingly vivid historical portrait . . . Madresfield is a little masterpiece, as rich and rare as the house itself and all its fabulous store of treasures.
Selina Hastings, Daily Mail
Fascinating history of this very private house . . . Mulvagh is a tactful tour-guide with a convincing appreciation of the periods and materials that have enriched the place . . . she sets the reader at ease, and generally knows how to prick our interest . . . lays out for the first time the full heartbreaking background.
Nicholas Shakespeare, Telegraph
Covers 1,000 years or so of country house history, and comes crammed with eccentric earls and fanatic law-suits . . . the seductions of the house itself: its lavishly ornamented chapel, its antique Book of Hours, its relics from the heady days of the Oxford Movement . . . burned in Waugh's imagination for over a decade, eventually emerging to give Brideshead Revisited its setting and a fair amount of its cast and paraphernalia . . . a high-class guidebook in which the human exhibits can be quite as exotic as the objets d'art.
D J Taylor, Independent on Sunday
A delightful work of social history, beautifully written.
Daily Express
Imaginatively at last, Madresfield was the consummation of Waugh's epic love affair with the upper classes...An affectionate and lavishly illustrated history of the house and family.
New Statesman
Madresfield, a sprawling moated pile, is "an arrestingly romantic home" according to Mulvagh, a sensitive biographer who has clearly fallen under its ancient spell...Madresfield's story is rich, and Mulvagh tells it with a beguiling blend of personal enthusiasm and scholarship...a mansion whose unbroken family chain goes deep into England's past,Madresfield has a character greater than the sum of its human parts...an emblem of endurance and a sort of spiritual enchantment more fascinating even than its owners.
Rosemary Goring, Glasgow Herald
The real Brideshead, as Jane Mulvagh points out, is Madresfield in the Malvern Hills, the family home of Waugh's illfated friend Hugh Lygon, the model for Sebastian Flyte...her achievement in this disreputably beguiling book: her animating touch resuscitates the past and reclads a troop of haughty ghosts in fallible flesh. I loved the tour.
Peter Conrad, Observer
Mulvagh is an assiduous researcher and writes in an engaging style of graceful anecdote...where facts are sparse, she is well able to supply the deficiency with imaginative colour.
Jane Shilling, The Times
A brilliant book, one of the best recent monographs on an English family and their country house...approached with great intelligence...It is, moreover, beautifully written. The author's comment about the Pre-Raphaeilite artists employed at Madresfield - 'how confident they were in their views and how elegrantly they expressed them' - is as applicable to her own prose. I wholeheartedly recommend this book. It is clever and beautiful.
Country Life
The house has its own tantalising tales to tell...Mulvagh vivdly brings to life the dramatic history of one of Britain's oldest landed families.
Tatler