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reprint, called the tone of the book "mocking" – shifting from the funny and farcical to the bleak and bizarre. Du
Maurier's publishers were worried by the implausible plot, and it bemused many of her readers. Yet, Westland said, the novel is held together by its very absurdity. She noted that the
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Du
Maurier started work on the novel early in 1972, following up an idea she had had for "a funny novel … mocking everything". It was to be "a mockup of what this country may be like in the mid-seventies”, and on its completion she was sure that she had pulled off a fast and funny piece of satire
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Andy, 12, one of Mad's adopted boys who has an obsession with bows and arrows and a hazy understanding of the concepts of right and wrong, shoots and kills one of the
Marines. Mad, Emma and some of the locals cover up the death, and throw the body over the cliff into the sea. It is not found for
197:. Emma notices Mad standing in welcome at her porch, but when she realises that nobody else can see her she tells the doctor that he had better go down into the basement, where Mad has been asleep for a very long time. The novel concludes with the helicopters still flying eastward into the sun.
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Mad and her family retreat to their cellar, where they subsist for several days on apples and beetroot, and water from a re-opened well. Early one morning, Emma and the boys are woken by aircraft and what appears to be gunfire, explosions and depth charges, while Mad sleeps on. Power has been
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Westland suggested that du
Maurier's motive in writing the book was to explore her own feelings about the Britain that her grandchildren would inherit. She hated the superior attitude of London, and the crass interventions from up-country. In the novel she tried to give Cornwall back to the
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restored, and a television announcer states that the sinking of the warship may have been caused by torpedo action. In any event, the security regulations have been relaxed, and the
Marines are to leave the local area. A stream of helicopters flies overhead, leaving Cornwall.
151:. They share a large house near the coast with Mad's six ‘maladjusted’ adopted sons who range in age from 3 to 18. One morning, Emma wakes to the sound of aeroplanes overhead. An American warship has anchored in the bay and
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Reviewers did not share the author's opinion of her work, and most notices were unenthusiastic. There was general consensus that, at best, the novel was pedestrian and, at worst, it was plain silly. Du
Maurier's biographer,
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several days, and in the absence of a culprit the military authorities crack down on the local population by cutting food, electricity and water supplies, and arresting and taking into custody all the local men and youths.
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celebrations. Shortly afterwards, there is a huge explosion which sinks the warship in the bay. Nobody knows the cause, but in a televised speech the prime minister hints of sabotage "by unknown agents hostile to USUK”.
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on stage since before Daphne was born, and she held that the novel can be read as “Peter Pan meets the
Marines, with Emma playing Wendy to Mad’s Peter Pan”. Mad's boys are the six
170:, institutes roadblocks, and cuts local telephone and postal communication. To Mad and her family the US Marines appear less like invited friends than a hostile invading force.
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Mad encourages the local farmers to an act of civil disobedience in which huge piles of rotting manure are dumped in front of the local
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Emma, 20, lives with her elderly grandmother, Mad (short for Madam), a famous retired actress, in the small village of
Poldrea in
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adopted by the
Darlings. But she considered that du Maurier had put more of her own character into Mad than she had realised.
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are marching over the fields. They are trigger-happy, and one of them shoots and kills a local farmer's dog.
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Rule
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where the American military authorities have arranged their
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has brought the country to the verge of bankruptcy.
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317:"British Library Item details"
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749:Invasion literature
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661:(husband)
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593:The Birds
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