Mrs. May's Lectures

Mrs. May's Lectures

$20.00 AUD

Availability: in stock at our Tullamarine warehouse

Condition: SECONDHAND

This is a secondhand book. The jacket image is a photograph of the exact copy we have in stock. This image shows the condition of this book. Further condition remarks are below.

Author: Thomas Le Breton
Binding: Hardback
Published: HERBERT JENKINS, 1925

Condition:
Book: Good
Jacket: No dust jacket - some marks on spine and corners
Pages: Tanning and foxing
Markings: No markings

This satirical fiction title presents a sharp and witty portrait of Mrs. May, a self-appointed moralist whose lectures skewer the social pretensions and domestic absurdities of early 20th-century British life. Thomas Le Breton constructs a series of mock-sermons that illustrate the contradictions and comic hypocrisies of middle-class values, using Mrs. May’s exaggerated propriety as a vehicle for broader cultural critique. The book argues against blind conformity and instructs readers in the art of seeing through social veneers with humor and intelligence. Its episodic structure and biting tone position it within the tradition of Edwardian satire, echoing the likes of Saki and Jerome K. Jerome.

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Description

Author: Thomas Le Breton
Binding: Hardback
Published: HERBERT JENKINS, 1925

Condition:
Book: Good
Jacket: No dust jacket - some marks on spine and corners
Pages: Tanning and foxing
Markings: No markings

This satirical fiction title presents a sharp and witty portrait of Mrs. May, a self-appointed moralist whose lectures skewer the social pretensions and domestic absurdities of early 20th-century British life. Thomas Le Breton constructs a series of mock-sermons that illustrate the contradictions and comic hypocrisies of middle-class values, using Mrs. May’s exaggerated propriety as a vehicle for broader cultural critique. The book argues against blind conformity and instructs readers in the art of seeing through social veneers with humor and intelligence. Its episodic structure and biting tone position it within the tradition of Edwardian satire, echoing the likes of Saki and Jerome K. Jerome.