Mrs Palfrey achieves a grandson and a visitor and establishes her status among the residents. Ludo, who is lonely himself and attracted by the adventure of play-acting agrees to stand in as Mrs Palfrey’s grandson. Having fallen in the street, she is rescued by Ludo, a young writer. Her grandson Desmond has failed to visit her at the Claremont. She moves into the Claremont Hotel on the Cromwell Road in London, joining a small group of elderly residents upon whom Mrs Palfrey practices a deceit. Mrs Palfrey is a genteel widow, needing to live somewhere, not invited and not minded to share a home with her daughter in Scotland. She uses wit and humour to point up how people respond to each other to protect themselves from these difficulties. She doesn’t lump all older people together, shows us individuals coping in the face of difficulties. Published in 1971, in this delightful novel Elizabeth Taylor does a great job of respecting older people and sympathetically revealing the challenges they face. The first in my choice of older women in fiction around the world in the UK is Mrs Palfrey at the Claremont by Elizabeth Taylor.
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