Most Recommended Books

Track reading, wishlists & new-book alerts

Get
Skip to content
Share:

Angela Thirkell Books in Order

Find Angela Thirkell books in order, from Barsetshire to the standalones, with short summaries, series notes, and simple help on where to start.

Last updated: June 7, 2026

As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases (at no extra cost to you).

View

Publication Order

Sort:

37 books

Three Houses

by Angela Thirkell

1931

In this memoir, Thirkell revisits the London and country houses of her childhood, especially the homes linked to her grandfather Edward Burne-Jones. It is intimate, observant, and full of late Victorian family life.

Ankle Deep

by Angela Thirkell

1933

A country house weekend turns tricky when Fanny Turner tries to manage the love lives around her husband’s friend Valentine Ensor. Old feelings, new attractions, and social games make this a sharper, more intimate Thirkell novel.

High Rising

by Angela Thirkell

1933

Widowed novelist Laura Morland watches village life, literary egos, and romantic muddles collide in the Barsetshire hamlet of High Rising. A meddlesome secretary and Tony Morland's nonstop chatter keep everyone on edge.

The Demon in the House

by Angela Thirkell

1934

This linked set of stories follows Tony Morland at his most exhausting and funny. Schooldays, visits, and family occasions all become comic battlegrounds once Tony starts talking.

Trooper to the Southern Cross

by Angela Thirkell

1934

Based on Thirkell's own voyage to Australia, this novel follows English and Australian passengers crowded onto a troopship after the First World War. The mood is comic, sharp-eyed, and occasionally bitter.

Wild Strawberries

by Angela Thirkell

1934

One summer at Rushwater House brings the Leslie family, French guests, and several hopeful suitors into the same orbit. Amid Lady Emily's lovely confusion, Mary Preston must sort charm from steadiness.

O, These Men, These Men

by Angela Thirkell

1935

This semi-autobiographical novel follows a woman trying to think clearly at the end of an unhappy marriage. Family pressures, money, and the arrival of a forceful outsider push her toward a different future.

The Grateful Sparrow

by Angela Thirkell

1935

Thirkell translates a small collection of German folk and fairy tales, where kindness is tested and generosity is often rewarded. The stories have the simple, old-fashioned magic of fireside reading.

August Folly

by Angela Thirkell

1936

In the village of Worsted, amateur theatricals set off flirtations, jealousy, and comic misunderstandings across one hot summer. A Greek play gives everyone a role, onstage and off.

Tribute for Harriette

by Angela Thirkell

1936

Thirkell turns to nonfiction for this lively portrait of Harriette Wilson, the Regency courtesan who moved among famous men and public scandal. It is brisk, curious, and alert to the social theater of the period.

Coronation Summer

by Angela Thirkell

1937

Set in London in 1838, this historical novel follows young friends through the excitement of Queen Victoria's coronation season. Outings, courtship, and a sudden financial shock test their hopes.

Summer Half

by Angela Thirkell

1937

Young Colin Keith tries life as a master at Southbridge School, only to find that school routines and romantic entanglements are equally demanding. Cricket, holidays, and a disastrous engagement keep the term lively.

Pomfret Towers

by Angela Thirkell

1938

A house party at Pomfret Towers throws shy Alice Barton, capable Sally Wicklow, and the Pomfret heir Gillie Foster together for a weekend of nerves, scheming, and romance. Country house comedy does the rest.

Before Lunch

by Angela Thirkell

1939

In East Barsetshire, a village campaign to save Pooker's Piece overlaps with complicated courtships and quiet emotional reckonings. Catherine Middleton sits at the calm center of all the fuss.

The Brandons

by Angela Thirkell

1939

Lavinia Brandon and her family gather under the shadow of Aunt Sissie's illness, and her money. Inheritance worries, village entertainments, and several courtships turn a tense situation into social comedy.

Cheerfulness Breaks In

by Angela Thirkell

1940

As war begins, Barsetshire adjusts to evacuees, refugees, uniforms, and hurried decisions. The familiar county is still funny, but now the stakes feel closer and more uncertain.

Northbridge Rectory

by Angela Thirkell

1941

At Northbridge Rectory, billeted officers, rationing, and village committees press in on everyday life. The novel balances wartime strain with a wonderfully odd cast, especially Miss Pemberton, Mr. Downing, and Mrs. Turner.

Marling Hall

by Angela Thirkell

1942

During the middle of the war, the Marling family juggles farming, guests, committees, and romantic confusion. Outsiders arrive, chickens cause chaos, and David Leslie proves as troublesome as ever.

Growing Up

by Angela Thirkell

1943

War reaches Beliers Priory in the form of soldiers, convalescence, and long absences. As adults and servants alike face uncertainty, several younger characters are pushed into maturity faster than they expected.

The Headmistress

by Angela Thirkell

1944

When the Beltons lease Harefield Park to a girls' school, wartime village life gains a new center in Miss Sparling. Thirkell mixes class tension, local committees, and unexpected tenderness with perfect control.

Miss Bunting

by Angela Thirkell

1945

Retired governess Miss Bunting spends one last season tutoring delicate Anne Fielding, while old class barriers and new social realities keep rubbing together. Hallbury is full of sharp talk, anxious parents, and comic uproar.

Peace Breaks Out

by Angela Thirkell

1946

The war is ending, but peace brings shortages, politics, and fresh romantic confusion. David Leslie keeps meddling with hearts until Barsetshire finally turns his charm back on him.

Private Enterprise

by Angela Thirkell

1947

Pretty widow Peggy Arbuthnot and her capable sister-in-law Effie arrive in Southbridge and quickly attract admirers, advice, and complications. The book weaves together old families and new possibilities with a light touch.

Love Among the Ruins

by Angela Thirkell

1948

Postwar Barsetshire is full of mismatched affections, delayed proposals, and social readjustment. Charles Belton, Oliver Marling, and several other familiar faces circle toward clearer choices.

The Old Bank House

by Angela Thirkell

1949

When Sam Adams buys and restores the Old Bank House at Edgewood, the whole countryside treats the project like public business. Beneath the comedy, returning soldiers and changing fortunes give the story real weight.

County Chronicle

by Angela Thirkell

1950

New marriages, new money, and local politics reshape Barsetshire's old social map. The book follows several long-running threads as younger characters step forward and older habits come under pressure.

The Dukes Daughter

by Angela Thirkell

1951

The younger Barsetshire generation is suddenly very marriageable, and the county gets busy arranging outcomes. Old favorites, new pairings, and a burst of social energy keep the pages moving.

Happy Return

by Angela Thirkell

1952

Parties, dinners, dances, and long-awaited decisions fill this late Barsetshire novel. Even as some romances finally settle, Thirkell keeps an eye on the quiet fading of an older country world.

Jutland Cottage

by Angela Thirkell

1953

A whole network of friends conspires to help the proud Phelps family without making it look like charity. Their plain, dutiful daughter Margot becomes the center of one of Thirkell's kindest comic plots.

What Did it Mean?

by Angela Thirkell

1954

Coronation fever sweeps Northbridge, and committees, pageants, and local ambitions bring old friends back together. Miss Pemberton, Mr. Downing, and Mrs. Turner give the book much of its heart.

Enter Sir Robert

by Angela Thirkell

1955

Lady Graham waits for the return of the almost mythical Sir Robert, while church business and family expectations generate plenty of elegant dithering. Edith Graham, meanwhile, finds herself surrounded by possible suitors.

Never Too Late

by Angela Thirkell

1956

With estates changing and older certainties under pressure, this novel looks at late life, widowhood, and unexpected chances. It is gentler and more reflective, but still full of Barsetshire crosscurrents.

A Double Affair

by Angela Thirkell

1957

Beginning with one wedding and ending with two more, this novel ties up several romantic threads at once. In between, Mrs. Halliday's struggle for independence gives the story extra bite.

Close Quarters

by Angela Thirkell

1958

Recently widowed Margot Macfayden moves among friends in Greshambury, Southbridge, and Harefield while wondering what comes next. Grief, family duty, and the chance of late happiness sit side by side.

Love at All Ages

by Angela Thirkell

1959

This late novel gathers older and younger generations for one more round of dinners, visits, and gentle matchmaking. The plot is slight, but the pleasure lies in spending time with familiar people.

Three Score and Ten

by Angela Thirkell

1961

Laura Morland returns to the center as Barsetshire gathers around her seventieth birthday. Old friends, younger schemers, and one last burst of county business make this a warm farewell.

Christmas at High Rising

by Angela Thirkell

2013

This collection brings together magazine stories from the 1930s and 1940s, several featuring Laura Morland, Tony, and George Knox. Winter outings, Christmas mishaps, and sharp social comedy make it a good sampler.

Where should I start?

If you want the classic Barsetshire entry point: High RisingWild StrawberriesPomfret Towers
If you like school and village comedy: August FollySummer HalfBefore Lunch
If you want the wartime books: Cheerfulness Breaks InNorthbridge RectoryMarling HallThe Headmistress
If you want her non-Barsetshire side: Three HousesTrooper to the Southern CrossCoronation Summer

Author bio

Angela Thirkell was born Angela Margaret Mackail in Kensington, London, on January 30, 1890. She grew up in a family where books, art, and conversation mattered. Her father, John William Mackail, was a scholar and later Oxford Professor of Poetry. Her mother was Margaret Burne-Jones, daughter of the painter Edward Burne-Jones. She went to school in London, then spent a year in Paris, and carried that mix of culture, comedy, and close observation into her fiction.

Her early adult life was much less tidy than the calm worlds she later wrote about. In 1911 she married the singer James Campbell McInnes. They had three children, though their daughter Mary died as a baby, and the marriage ended in a public divorce. In 1918 she married George Lancelot Thirkell, an Australian engineer. Two years later she sailed with him to Australia, and their son Lance was born in Melbourne.

Australia changed her life, though not in the easy way she might have hoped. She felt homesick there, and money was often tight. She began writing articles, short pieces, and radio work for children, partly because she needed the income. Those early jobs taught her how to move quickly, notice people, and make a scene live on the page.

Money pushed her toward the page.

She returned to England for good in 1929 and set about earning a living by writing. Three Houses, her childhood memoir, appeared in 1931. Soon after came High Rising, the book that really opened the door. It introduced readers to Laura Morland, Tony Morland, and the county of Barsetshire, borrowed from Anthony Trollope and carried forward into the twentieth century. Thirkell would go on to write twenty-nine Barsetshire novels.

That became her real territory.

In books like High Rising, Wild Strawberries, and Pomfret Towers, readers find village life, country houses, prep schools, clergy, widows, children, and people making a great deal of fuss over courtship, rank, and social slips. The plots can look light at first glance, but the writing is exact. She is very good on vanity, muddle, class nerves, and the quiet competence that keeps households and communities going. Laura Morland is one of her best-loved creations, but Barsetshire works because it is crowded with memorable secondary people too.

She also wrote outside Barsetshire. Trooper to the Southern Cross, first published under the name Leslie Parker, draws on the voyage that took her to Australia. Ankle Deep and O, These Men, These Men! feel closer to raw personal experience, especially around marriage and disappointment. Coronation Summer steps back to London in 1838. Even when the setting changes, the pleasures stay much the same: wit, strong social detail, and the sense that every room already has a history before the reader walks into it.

The war years changed her fiction without breaking it. Novels such as Northbridge Rectory, Marling Hall, The Headmistress, and Miss Bunting bring in evacuees, rationing, billets, committees, and the long strain of waiting for news. She remained funny, but the home front gave her books a deeper note. She was still interested in tea tables and village meetings, just with more at stake around them.

She kept going.

For years she published at a remarkable pace, often producing a book a year. Her later novels track a changing England, where old county families lose money, new people move in, and the children from the early books grow up and start making their own mistakes. She died in Bramley, Surrey, on January 29, 1961, leaving Three Score and Ten unfinished. It was later completed by C. A. Lejeune. What remains is her gift for making ordinary social life feel rich, funny, and worth paying attention to.

Edited by

Richard Reis

Software engineer whose passion for tracking book recommendations from podcasts inspired the creation of MRB.

Anurag Ramdasan

Lead investor at 3one4 Capital whose startup expertise and love for books helped shaped MRB and its growth.

Comments

Did we miss something? Have feedback?

Help us improve this page by sharing your thoughts

We only use your email to notify you about replies.

All comments are moderated.

Discover and track your reading on the go

Track your reading, manage wishlists, and get notified when new books are added.

All 37 Angela Thirkell Books in Order (Complete List 2026)