
A novel without a plot or a protagonist, STW's The Corner That Held Them is an absorbing account of the daily comings and goings at an English Benedictine convent in the 14th century. The Black Death makes an appearance, as do various peasant uprisings, but it is the small, ordinary day to day matters that truly immerse the reader in the times.
I'm a great fan of Rumer Godden's In This House of Brede--a look at the life of a 20th century English Benedictine abbey, and I enjoyed seeing the many parallels between these two books. A community of women, whether in the 1300's or five hundred years later, is subject to the same strains and revelations.
Then there's Warner's Lolly Willowes. Set in England in the early 1900's, it's the story of Laura, aka Lolly, a dutiful child and later a dutiful spinster aunt who, after forty years of dutifulness sets out to live on her own terms.
Warner's prose is engaging and precise in detailed description. The novel caught me by surprise in the second half, when Lolly, fighting to maintain her autonomy, becomes a witch.
Warner is known as an early feminist and certainly such themes are apparent in both of these novels. But for me, what stood out was the beauty of the prose and the finely drawn characters.
Good reads, both of them.

