I have just finished '
The Fair Miss Fortune' by
DE Stevenson. I picked it up in the library (large print as it happens), had not heard of this particular one of hers before. I just loved it - it's the story of twin sisters, one of whom decides to move to a small English village and open a tea shop (being a 'lady in reduced circumstances' - this is the 1930s). There is a full cast of village residents, all brilliantly drawn with not the slightest nod to PC-ness. Charles, a captain home on leave from the army, falls for the tea-shop sister. The other sister then arrives, having fled her job in London because the French owner of the hat shop in which she was working has taken an unhealthy shine to her. She doesn't want him to find her, so the sisters pretend to be one person, with only one of them going out at at time. The shy son of a rich busybody falls in love with the second sister. You can probably imagine the rest.
The joy of this book for me was in the detail. The various supporting characters are hilarious, with Stevenson's usual vicious one-liners - eg "her long thin hand....was as clammy and boneless as a filleted sole"; "he saw no reason to spare a fallen foe, not having had the advantage of a public school education". Everyone (even the ladies in reduced circumstances) have no apparent money worries whatsoever (the tea shop, for example, is never opened, and the two sisters are looked after by their old nanny - who is presumably paid for her services - even though they are now 19 years old - so they never cook, clean or do any laundry.)
On looking for a link to this novel, I also discovered a wonderful-sounding new shop in Edinburgh, specialising in just these kind of books:
http://www.greyladiesbooks.co.uk/Can't wait to go and have a browse.
Rosemary