The Friendly Young Ladies

The Friendly Young Ladies by Mary Renault, published by National Geographic Books in May 2003, is a romantic comedy set in 1937. This first paperback printing spans 304 pages and is presented in English. The narrative follows eighteen-year-old Elsie as she leaves her sheltered life in Cornwall to find her sister, Leo, who has been living a bohemian lifestyle on a houseboat with the enchanting Helen. Elsie’s arrival sets off a chain of events that disrupts the lives of the three women, introducing elements of romance and unexpected complications.
Readers will discover a story that explores themes of friendship and desire within the context of LGBTQ+ relationships. As Elsie navigates her new surroundings, the dynamics between her, Leo, and Helen evolve, revealing hidden emotions and past connections. The novel captures the essence of 1930s London, providing insight into the lives of emerging writers and artists who challenge societal norms. Through its lighthearted and charming characters, The Friendly Young Ladies offers a witty perspective on love and artistic ambition during a transformative era.
Official synopsis Publisher
Set in 1937, The Friendly Young Ladies is a romantic comedy of off-Bloomsbury bohemia. Sheltered, naïve, and just eighteen, Elsie leaves the stifling environment of her parents’ home in Cornwall to seek out her sister, Leo, who had run away nine years earlier. She finds Leo sharing a houseboat, and a bed, with the beautiful, fair-haired Helen. While Elsie’s arrival seems innocent enough, it is the first of a series of events that will turn Helen and Leo’s contented life inside out. Soon a randy young doctor is chasing after all three women at once, a neighborly friendship begins to show an erotic tinge, and long-quiet ghosts from Leo’s past begin to surface. Before long, no one is sure just who feels what for whom.
Mary Renault wrote this delightfully provocative novel in the early 1940s, creating characters that are lighthearted, charming, and free-spirited partly in answer to the despair characteristic of Radclyffe Hall’s The Well of Loneliness or Lillian Hellman’s The Children’s Hour. The result is a witty and stylish story that offers exceptional insight into the world of upcoming writers and artists of in 1930s London, chronicling their rejection of society’s established sexual mores and their heroic pursuits of art and life.
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