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Description edit see section history

A delightful new setting—London—a delightful new cast of characters, and one incredibly clever dog.   Corduroy Mansions is the affectionate nickname given to a genteel, crumbling mansion block in London’s vibrant Pimlico neighborhood, and the home turf of a new cast of captivating, quirky,... read more

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Characters/People edit see section history

  • William: A wine merchant. Lives at the top of Corduroy Mansions. A widower. He is the father of a son who refuses to fly the nest.
  • Eddie: William's son. Lives with him and shows no sign of ever being ready to leave.
  • Marcia: William's friend. A caterer with a company called Marcia's Table.
  • Dee: 'vitamin addict and avid subscriber to Anti-Oxidant News'; works in a health food shop; William's neighbour - one of the girls sharing the first-floor flat.
  • Caroline: 'twinset-and-pearls'; studying art; William's neighbour - one of the girls sharing the first-floor flat.
  • Jenny: works for Oedipus Snark MP; she is William's neighbour - one of the girls sharing the first-floor flat.
  • Freddie De La Hay: a dog on loan.
  • Oedipus Snark: An MP. 'possibly the world's only loathsome Lib Dem'
  • Berthea Snark: Oedipus Snark's mother. A psychiatrist.
  • Barbara Ragg: Oedipus Snark's girlfriend. A literary agent.
  • Terence Moongrove: Berthea's Snark's brother. Very sweet, though not quite in touch with reality :)
  • Rupert Porter: Barbara's partner in the Ragg Porter Literary Agency.
  • Lennie: Add a description of this character.
  • Paul: William's assistant
  • Stevie: A friend of Eddie
  • Martin: Works with Dee in the Pimlico Vitamin and Supplement Agency.
  • Hugh: A man who Barbara gives a lift to.
  • Tim Something: A photographer who once took Caroline's photo for a magazine.
  • Peter Deunov
  • Basil Wickramsinghe: William's neighbour who lives in the ground floor flat.
  • Mr. Marchbanks: Terence Moongrove's car mechanic
  • Tom: Caroline's boyfriend - or ex boyfriend?
  • Mason
  • Monty Bismarck: Lives near Terence Moongrove. Drives a Porsche.
  • Minnie
  • Jo: Fourth of the girls living in the flat share with Dee, Caroline & Jenny.
  • Errol Greatorex: An author whom Barbara Ragg is representing.
  • Gregory
  • James: Is studying with Caroline
  • Rufus Jarvis: Carolines's father
Show all 30 characters
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Quotes edit see section history

  • “'It was a fifty-one-year-old face chronologically, but would it pass, he wondered, for a forty-something-year-old face?'”
    William
  • Popular Highlights from Kindle Customers
  • “Art comes from a desire to make sense of the world and one’s experience in it,” he intoned. “It’s intended to make up for the separation that we feel between us as humans and beauty. The artist tries to re-create beauty—to make it whole again.”
    Highlighted by 14 Kindle customers
  • “The contemplation of the toothache of another in no way relieves one’s own toothache.”
    Highlighted by 13 Kindle customers
  • You should talk about the thing that frightens you and in that way you deprive it of its power.”
    Highlighted by 11 Kindle customers
  • Proustian synchronicity, where the stream of consciousness of one person matches another’s and where, for a few moments, both flow in the same direction and at the same pace, like waters conjoined.
    Highlighted by 11 Kindle customers
  • Who among us wants anything more than to be appreciated by some and loved, we hope, by a few? Why is the world so constructed that some find this modest goal easy to achieve and others find that it for ever eludes them? The essential unfairness of the world? Yes. Its heartlessness? Yes. Its unkindness to a certain sort of brisk and competent woman? Yes again.
    Highlighted by 11 Kindle customers
  • Why should everybody embrace the herd instinct, which required one to regard one set of politicians as being always in the right while demonising another set?
    Highlighted by 11 Kindle customers
  • Nothing really remarkable happened to most of us, she thought; we grew up, we got a job, we fell in love—if we were lucky—and then we went into decline and eventually disappeared. And at the end of the day, what did we achieve? Well, perhaps it was an achievement just to get through life without any conspicuous disasters. If we did that, then we were pulling off at least something.
    Highlighted by 8 Kindle customers
  • The word “enough” can be potent. It can begin as a statement of dissatisfaction and rapidly become a call to arms. In the minds, or the mouths, of the oppressed it becomes the trigger of resistance, the rallying cry which signals the turning of the worm. Henry VI, Part 3, Barbara Ragg’s thoughts now turned to: “The smallest worm will turn, being trodden on / And doves will peck in safeguard of their brood.” Well, she thought, I have had enough.
    Highlighted by 7 Kindle customers
  • solipsistic. If he paid no attention to her feelings, it was because he did not see her. For one who was constantly adding “See?” to his observations, he saw remarkably little. That afternoon, as Caroline and James embarked on the baking of Nigella’s lemon gems, Jenny found herself just a
    Highlighted by 5 Kindle customers
  • paneurhythmy. What if somebody inadvertently trod on his toes and he said some of the things that Terence Moongrove
    Highlighted by 4 Kindle customers
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Setting & Locations edit see section history

First Sentence edit see section history

'Passing off, thought William.'

Series & Lists edit see section history

This is book 1 of 3 in Corduroy Mansions. (standard series)

Followed by The Dog Who Came in from the Cold.

Authors & Contributors edit see section history

  1. Alexander McCall Smith (Author)

First Edition edit see section history

Original Language: English
Publisher: Polygon
Country: Add the country of publication.
Publication Date: 2009
ISBN: 1846971217
Page Count: 320

Classification edit see section history


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