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Lucy Carmichael
  • Published: 14 August 2025
  • ISBN: 9781405982832
  • Imprint: Penguin eBooks
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 496

Lucy Carmichael





Celebrating 90 Years of Penguin Michael Joseph publishing with the Mermaid collection: Margaret Kennedy's Lucy Carmichael with a foreword by Lucy Mangan

‘People seem to get over things, don’t they? I don’t know how, but they do – ordinary people. I’m very ordinary, so I expect I shall do what they do.’

Lucy Carmichael is jilted at the altar. But no matter. Her loving and kind family never liked her explorer fiancé anyway.

Instead of moping or falling into her supportive family’s arms, however, Lucy abandons their suburban home. Heading for the country, she takes up a teaching position in the industrial town of Ravonsbridge.

There, she finds solace in her work, in her new (rather gossipy) colleagues – and rediscovers her sensible young self. But if Lucy has, despite everything, kept her head – where lies her heart?

  • Published: 14 August 2025
  • ISBN: 9781405982832
  • Imprint: Penguin eBooks
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 496

About the author

Margaret Kennedy

Margaret Kennedy was born in London on 23 April 1896, the eldest of four children. Her first book, a commissioned work of history, was published in 1922 and was soon followed by her first work of fiction, The Ladies of Lyndon (1923). Her second novel, The Constant Nymph (1924), became a worldwide bestseller, and with it Kennedy became a well-known and highly praised writer. Kennedy went on to write fifteen further novels, many of which were critically commended – Troy Chimneys (1953) was awarded the James Tait Black Memorial Prize. She also wrote plays, adapting both The Constant Nymph and its sequel The Fool of the Family very successfully. The former opened in the West End in 1926, starring Noel Coward followed by John Gielgud, to great acclaim. Three different film versions of The Constant Nymph, featuring stars of the time such as Ivor Novello and Joan Fontaine, were equally popular. She also published a study of Jane Austen (1950) and a work of literary criticism, The Outlaws on Parnassus, in 1958. Kennedy died 31 July 1967.

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Praise for Lucy Carmichael

She is not only a romantic but an anarchist, and she knows the ways of men and women very well indeed

Anita Brookner

Kennedy was immensely popular in her heyday

Washington Post

Margaret Kennedy's poised style, cool wit and skilful characterization kept her novels welcome for three decades

Cambridge Guide to Literature in English

Praise for Margaret Kennedy

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There is a wildness [in her mind]; a galloping, untutored spirit

Beverley Nichols
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