In the third of his six "Mapp and Lucia" novels, Benson shifts the scene from the village of Riseholme to that of Tilling. Here the social queen is not the redoubtable Lucia Lucas of the first two books but rather one Elizabeth Mapp, who rules with rather a heavier and more judgemental hand.
Mapp is one of the great unlikeable-but-fascinating characters in all of comic literature. She is nosey, pretentious, mean spirited, and small minded. Yet she's as fascinating as a cobra. Benson, of course, is setting readers up for the great battle of the titans that ensues in the fourth book, when Lucia moves to Tilling and goes head-to-head with Mapp. Before doing that, however, Benson gives free rein to Miss Mapp in this novel, coincidentally introducing the denizens of Tilling. We meet the whiskey-and-golf-loving Major Benjamin Flint, his cohort Captain Puffin (who drowns in a bowl of soup), the eccentric and dandified Mr Wyse, who marries pretentious Susan Poppitt MBE, the unabashedly butch artist "Quaint" Irene Coles, and hapless and bumbling Godiva Plaistow, along with the affected Scotch-speaking Padre and his "Wee Wifie." These memorably eccentric characters more or less comprise Tilling society.
Describing the plot of a Benson novel makes not a great deal of sense as the books are very episodic. However, the basic set scene invariably revolves around Miss Mapp (or someone else) trying to lord it over others, appear to be more than one truly is, or save face, with the requisite amounts of gossip, idle speculation, and unbridled envy thrown in for good measure. Despite the all-too-human failings of the Tilling-ites, Benson is never spiteful; instead he seems to positively relish his characters' imperfections and quirks. Keen observers of human foibles, particularly anglophiles, are especially susceptible to this intimate little world.
As Nancy Mitford wrote in her famous introduction to these novels, "None of them [Riseholme or Tilling residents] could be described as estimable, and they are certainly not very interesting, yet they are fascinated by each other and we are fascinated by them....The art of these books lies in their simplicity. The jokes seem quite obvious and are often repeated: we can never have enough of them."
Indeed, those who fall under the spell of these delightful books can never have enough of them. I've read the series at least four times over, with many forays into Benson's other works, but I inevitably end up coming back to the Mapp and Lucia saga itself.