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  <title><![CDATA[Private Enterprise]]></title>
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  <description><![CDATA[Originally published in 1947, Private Enterprise opens with the news that a young war widow and her sister-in-law are to become residents of Barsetshire county. Here, as everywhere else in the country, despite shortages of everything, all are trying cheerfully to make do. The denizens of the estimable enclave are abuzz with speculation when the lovely Mrs. Peggy Arbuthnot arrives with her sister-in-law, the stalwart Miss Arbuthnot, to take up residence in Editha Cottage. Lydia Merton, whose brother, barrister Colin Keith, has enlisted her aid, takes the ladies under her wing, introducing them into the proper social circles. Colin nurses a poorly disguised desire for the pretty widow and spends much time in sulks when she flirts with the eligible gentlemen of the village. In the meantime, other bachelors and young ladies play out a social minuet; nannies mind their young charges; and the clergy debate matters both spiritual and practical. There is many a pairing and re-pairing, and a startling secret from the past is revealed before several of the ladies and gentlemen of Barsetshire at last find their hearts' desires. Those who savor the sly English humor and gentle social satire of Stella Gibbons's Cold Comfort Farm and E.F. Benson's Mapp and Lucia novels will find similar delights here.]]></description>
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    <![CDATA[Private Enterprise]]>
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    <![CDATA[Originally published in 1947, Private Enterprise opens with the news that a young war widow and her sister-in-law are to become residents of Barsetshire county. Here, as everywhere else in the country, despite shortages of everything, all are trying cheerfully to make do. The denizens of the estimable enclave are abuzz with speculation when the lovely Mrs. Peggy Arbuthnot arrives with her sister-in-law, the stalwart Miss Arbuthnot, to take up residence in Editha Cottage. Lydia Merton, whose brother, barrister Colin Keith, has enlisted her aid, takes the ladies under her wing, introducing them into the proper social circles. Colin nurses a poorly disguised desire for the pretty widow and spends much time in sulks when she flirts with the eligible gentlemen of the village. In the meantime, other bachelors and young ladies play out a social minuet; nannies mind their young charges; and the clergy debate matters both spiritual and practical. There is many a pairing and re-pairing, and a startling secret from the past is revealed before several of the ladies and gentlemen of Barsetshire at last find their hearts' desires. Those who savor the sly English humor and gentle social satire of Stella Gibbons's Cold Comfort Farm and E.F. Benson's Mapp and Lucia novels will find similar delights here.]]>
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    <body><![CDATA[An attractive widow settles in Barchester, and the young men are falling over each other to get near her. Unlike most such novels, Mrs Arbuthnot isn't a designing temptress; she has readers' sympathy.<br/><br/>PRIVATE ENTERPRISE is the longest-seeming Thirkell novel I have read. She spends a lot o...<a href="http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/62417624">more...</a>]]></body>
    
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    <![CDATA[Originally published in 1947, Private Enterprise opens with the news that a young war widow and her sister-in-law are to become residents of Barsetshire county. Here, as everywhere else in the country, despite shortages of everything, all are trying cheerfully to make do. The denizens of the estimable enclave are abuzz with speculation when the lovely Mrs. Peggy Arbuthnot arrives with her sister-in-law, the stalwart Miss Arbuthnot, to take up residence in Editha Cottage. Lydia Merton, whose brother, barrister Colin Keith, has enlisted her aid, takes the ladies under her wing, introducing them into the proper social circles. Colin nurses a poorly disguised desire for the pretty widow and spends much time in sulks when she flirts with the eligible gentlemen of the village. In the meantime, other bachelors and young ladies play out a social minuet; nannies mind their young charges; and the clergy debate matters both spiritual and practical. There is many a pairing and re-pairing, and a startling secret from the past is revealed before several of the ladies and gentlemen of Barsetshire at last find their hearts' desires. Those who savor the sly English humor and gentle social satire of Stella Gibbons's Cold Comfort Farm and E.F. Benson's Mapp and Lucia novels will find similar delights here.]]>
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    <body><![CDATA[I am biased in favour of any book with so much Lydia.]]></body>
    
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    <![CDATA[Originally published in 1947, Private Enterprise opens with the news that a young war widow and her sister-in-law are to become residents of Barsetshire county. Here, as everywhere else in the country, despite shortages of everything, all are trying cheerfully to make do. The denizens of the estimable enclave are abuzz with speculation when the lovely Mrs. Peggy Arbuthnot arrives with her sister-in-law, the stalwart Miss Arbuthnot, to take up residence in Editha Cottage. Lydia Merton, whose brother, barrister Colin Keith, has enlisted her aid, takes the ladies under her wing, introducing them into the proper social circles. Colin nurses a poorly disguised desire for the pretty widow and spends much time in sulks when she flirts with the eligible gentlemen of the village. In the meantime, other bachelors and young ladies play out a social minuet; nannies mind their young charges; and the clergy debate matters both spiritual and practical. There is many a pairing and re-pairing, and a startling secret from the past is revealed before several of the ladies and gentlemen of Barsetshire at last find their hearts' desires. Those who savor the sly English humor and gentle social satire of Stella Gibbons's Cold Comfort Farm and E.F. Benson's Mapp and Lucia novels will find similar delights here.]]>
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    <![CDATA[Originally published in 1947, Private Enterprise opens with the news that a young war widow and her sister-in-law are to become residents of Barsetshire county. Here, as everywhere else in the country, despite shortages of everything, all are trying cheerfully to make do. The denizens of the estimable enclave are abuzz with speculation when the lovely Mrs. Peggy Arbuthnot arrives with her sister-in-law, the stalwart Miss Arbuthnot, to take up residence in Editha Cottage. Lydia Merton, whose brother, barrister Colin Keith, has enlisted her aid, takes the ladies under her wing, introducing them into the proper social circles. Colin nurses a poorly disguised desire for the pretty widow and spends much time in sulks when she flirts with the eligible gentlemen of the village. In the meantime, other bachelors and young ladies play out a social minuet; nannies mind their young charges; and the clergy debate matters both spiritual and practical. There is many a pairing and re-pairing, and a startling secret from the past is revealed before several of the ladies and gentlemen of Barsetshire at last find their hearts' desires. Those who savor the sly English humor and gentle social satire of Stella Gibbons's Cold Comfort Farm and E.F. Benson's Mapp and Lucia novels will find similar delights here.]]>
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    <![CDATA[Originally published in 1947, Private Enterprise opens with the news that a young war widow and her sister-in-law are to become residents of Barsetshire county. Here, as everywhere else in the country, despite shortages of everything, all are trying cheerfully to make do. The denizens of the estimable enclave are abuzz with speculation when the lovely Mrs. Peggy Arbuthnot arrives with her sister-in-law, the stalwart Miss Arbuthnot, to take up residence in Editha Cottage. Lydia Merton, whose brother, barrister Colin Keith, has enlisted her aid, takes the ladies under her wing, introducing them into the proper social circles. Colin nurses a poorly disguised desire for the pretty widow and spends much time in sulks when she flirts with the eligible gentlemen of the village. In the meantime, other bachelors and young ladies play out a social minuet; nannies mind their young charges; and the clergy debate matters both spiritual and practical. There is many a pairing and re-pairing, and a startling secret from the past is revealed before several of the ladies and gentlemen of Barsetshire at last find their hearts' desires. Those who savor the sly English humor and gentle social satire of Stella Gibbons's Cold Comfort Farm and E.F. Benson's Mapp and Lucia novels will find similar delights here.]]>
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    <![CDATA[Originally published in 1947, Private Enterprise opens with the news that a young war widow and her sister-in-law are to become residents of Barsetshire county. Here, as everywhere else in the country, despite shortages of everything, all are trying cheerfully to make do. The denizens of the estimable enclave are abuzz with speculation when the lovely Mrs. Peggy Arbuthnot arrives with her sister-in-law, the stalwart Miss Arbuthnot, to take up residence in Editha Cottage. Lydia Merton, whose brother, barrister Colin Keith, has enlisted her aid, takes the ladies under her wing, introducing them into the proper social circles. Colin nurses a poorly disguised desire for the pretty widow and spends much time in sulks when she flirts with the eligible gentlemen of the village. In the meantime, other bachelors and young ladies play out a social minuet; nannies mind their young charges; and the clergy debate matters both spiritual and practical. There is many a pairing and re-pairing, and a startling secret from the past is revealed before several of the ladies and gentlemen of Barsetshire at last find their hearts' desires. Those who savor the sly English humor and gentle social satire of Stella Gibbons's Cold Comfort Farm and E.F. Benson's Mapp and Lucia novels will find similar delights here.]]>
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    <![CDATA[Originally published in 1947, Private Enterprise opens with the news that a young war widow and her sister-in-law are to become residents of Barsetshire county. Here, as everywhere else in the country, despite shortages of everything, all are trying cheerfully to make do. The denizens of the estimable enclave are abuzz with speculation when the lovely Mrs. Peggy Arbuthnot arrives with her sister-in-law, the stalwart Miss Arbuthnot, to take up residence in Editha Cottage. Lydia Merton, whose brother, barrister Colin Keith, has enlisted her aid, takes the ladies under her wing, introducing them into the proper social circles. Colin nurses a poorly disguised desire for the pretty widow and spends much time in sulks when she flirts with the eligible gentlemen of the village. In the meantime, other bachelors and young ladies play out a social minuet; nannies mind their young charges; and the clergy debate matters both spiritual and practical. There is many a pairing and re-pairing, and a startling secret from the past is revealed before several of the ladies and gentlemen of Barsetshire at last find their hearts' desires. Those who savor the sly English humor and gentle social satire of Stella Gibbons's Cold Comfort Farm and E.F. Benson's Mapp and Lucia novels will find similar delights here.]]>
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