Esther Williams is thirty and single. She has been nowhere, done nothing, loved no one except her recently deceased grandfather. Her life is one of routine and order, following the same pattern week after week. That is, until she meets Raymond Banks.
Raymond is unassuming but insistent, and each conversation with him brings Esther further out of her shell. He alters her awareness of the world, and their budding love is soon cemented with a proposal. For the first time ever, she feels truly alive.
But marriage to Raymond brings a different kind of order, one of increasing control and possession. When Esther discovers something that threatens their happiness, she is forced to decide whether true love really should conquer all.
An unsettling portrait of love in all its guises, A Spring of Love asks the most sinister question of all – can we ever truly know anyone?
Not very much is known about the author Celia Dale except for a few scant details. Celia Dale was born in 1912 and she was daughter of the actor, James Dale and was married to the journalist and critic, Guy Ramsey until his death in 1959. She worked in Fleet Street and as a publishers adviser and book reviewer. Some of her books were dramatised on radio and TV. Dales first book appeared in 1943 but it was her later novels where she branched out in to the realms of psychological crime. In all, Dale produced thirteen novels and a collection of short stories.
Celia Dale took everyday domestic situations and gave them a bitter twist. In Helping with Enquiries there are only three main protagonists, their story revolving around the murder of the mother. In A Helping Hand the vulnerability of the elderly is masterfully portrayed. Dale won the 1986 Crime Writers Association Veuve Cliquot Short Story Award for Lines of Communication which appears in her short story collection, A Personal Call and other stories which show that Dale had the short story down to a fine art. Her final book in 1988 was Sheeps Clothing.
Celia Dale died on the 31st December 2011, just short of her hundredth birthday. - Excerpted from FantasticFiction
Novels The Least of These (1944) To Hold the Mirror (1946) The Dry Land (1952) The Wooden O (1953) Trial of Strength (1955) A Spring of Love (1960) Other People (1964) A Helping Hand (1966) Act of Love (1969) A Dark Corner (1971) The Innocent Party (1973) Helping with Enquiries (1979) aka The Deception Sheep's Clothing (1988)
I am SO glad that Daunt Books are reissuing books by this author, who I'd otherwise never have heard of. Celia Dale is *such a good writer* oh my god. The quiet anxiety that slowly builds in this. The precision with which she captures behaviour and relationships. The way she lets the reader get just ahead of the characters, but not too much. I flipping love the covers they've put on these, too.
(3.75) celia dale was a powerhouse! her character studies in this and ‘sheep’s clothing’ are truly fascinating. for me this is less a thriller or a crime novel and more a psychological horror slice of life in which a man exploits a small family’s vulnerabilities for his own gain. the way in which esther and her grandmother continue to trust and adore raymond despite sensing red flags quite early on is chilling, yet it is easy to see how they might push these signs to the back of their minds when they are both just so pleased to feel loved and cared for.
the moment that esther realises raymond has hidden depths she has never seen and might never truly know is one of the most quietly terrifying passages i’ve ever read:
“His monstrous words echoed in a huge solitude; she could find no cause for them, no meaning within the Raymond she thought she knew. She felt a great loneliness gathering at her back. Everything seemed terribly still, the furniture standing, the curtains hanging, the light burning, herself sitting looking at her cold clasped hands. […] Raymond had gone beyond the bounds of her knowledge.”
i will say however that the resolutions felt somewhat crammed in the final chapter, easily could’ve had another 50 pages at least drawing the realisation of raymond’s true nature out further. but overall another really solid dale, excited to read ‘a helping hand’ next!
Eerie and haunting. Normality with a hint of unease. Domestic bliss with a nagging sensation that things don’t quite add up. Married life that isn’t exactly how you’d planned.
A delightful 1950s story about a prim and proper spinster in her 30s, living with her lively granny in 1950s Camden Town, whose quiet and constant lives are suddenly stirred by the arrival of a much unexpected man. The story is tense and very well written, alhough the ending was a bit dissapointing, it doesn't take away from the deliciously fun characters—especially the granny! She's always finding cheeky joy in being home alone or sneaking off to a young people's bar for a sticky gin and lime. The characters are truly delicious and so relatable, and it's exciting to discover this female author for me, who lived to 99 years. I will delve into more asap. Found this book in the crime section of Waterstones and it couldn't have been further from its home. Check all the sections of your bookshops peeps, gems are to be found lost in every nook n cranny!
Another captivating novel by Celia Dale. The characters are so nuanced and well written. You are never quite sure where the story is leading, and you must read on to find out. Esther is a character I will think about for a long time- how happiness came to her, how she grew it, how she was able to hold on to it in the end.
Celia dale is the queen of surburban horror! No one is doing domestic eeriness like her PERIODT
So much to unpack in this book but I enjoyed exploring the characters especially the grandma and the transformation of the main protagonist Esther.
A marriage that alters the lives of Esther and her gran in their own unique ways.
The themes of feminism, British values, paternalism and patriarchy echo through this book as well exploring community and finding yourself in your late twenties - thirty!! So much on relationships and expectations and that STIFF UPPER LIP. I thoroughly enjoyed, the only let down is the ending in my opinion but the book gave you enough to think on that I can overlook the ending in a way
4 stars for sure, cementing miss dale as one of my favourite writers!! CHEERSI-BYE
Celia Dale is fast becoming a regular feature in my annual reading highlights. Having made the list in 2022 with A Helping Hand and again in 2023 with Sheep’s Clothing, she looks set for another appearance this year with the reissue of A Spring of Love, another utterly compelling story of suburban deception, similar in style to Patricia Highsmith’s best domestic noirs.
Dale specialises in showing us how vulnerable individuals – particularly the elderly and the naïvely trusting – can be preyed upon by malicious confidence tricksters in the safety of their own homes. There is something particularly chilling about a seemingly innocent figure inveigling their way into the domestic space, and Dale leverages this violation to the hilt with her icily gripping tales of greed and deception. In A Helping Hand and Sheep’s Clothing, the scammers’ victims are female pensioners, often reliant on care and support; but in Spring, the predator targets a much younger single woman – thirty-year-old Esther Wilson, who lives in London with her widowed grandmother, affectionately known as Gran.
Esther’s life is a narrow one, governed by regular routines. She works full-time in the invoice department of a local store, leaving Gran – a somewhat petulant, overbearing woman – to amuse herself during the day. Luckily for Esther, money is not a worry. Her late grandfather left her the house – including the upstairs rooms, which she rents to a lively young couple, Gloria and Terry – plus a newsagents’ shop, efficiently managed by Mr and Mrs Grover. Esther’s only concessions to frivolity are her Thursday nights out alone, typically spent over a solo meal at a tea shop followed by a film at the cinema. Gran resents Esther’s Thursday nights as she hates feeling left out; nevertheless, Esther needs an escape, even if it soon becomes another one of her routines.
Everything changes one Thursday night when Esther meets Raymond in what appears to be a chance encounter at the tea shop. They start chatting, go to the cinema together, and meet again the following Thursday, seemingly by chance. At first, Esther is somewhat reticent; no other man has ever shown much interest, and her life experience is limited to say the least. Nevertheless, Raymond’s polite, chatty manner soon wins her over.
He was obviously so pleased to have found her, a lonely, nice-spoken young man with no friends; and she – after all, what was she herself but a lonely, nice-spoken young woman in just the same case? There could be no harm in it. You could see he wasn’t a nasty type at all. (p. 25)
In the past, Esther had not considered the possibility of a relationship with a man, steeling herself against the world and any emotional attachments. But now, with Raymond on the scene, she is swept along by the attention, opening a world of possibilities that didn’t exist for her before.
It was as though until now she had wilfully blinkered herself against living humanity because she was afraid that to look at it would hurt her. She had thought she was content, a woman without much need for love, envying no one, desiring nothing; now she stared about her hungrily, amazed by the joy of possessing what she had not known she lacked. (p. 78)
With his old-fashioned manners and kind, chatty approach, Raymond charms Gran, quickly getting her onside. Gran, for her part, takes to Raymond immediately (initially at least), viewing him as a sort of son or nephew to joke with. A masculine man conscious of his status, but not one to be feared. Only later, as Esther and Raymond become closer, does Gran start to feel left out…
At first, everything in the garden seems rosy. Esther and Raymond get engaged, and preparations for a quiet wedding are soon underway. Gradually, however, alarm bells start ringing – certainly for the reader and possibly for Esther herself, although somehow Raymond seems to be able to explain them away without arousing too much suspicion. It all starts when Raymond shows signs of wanting to control Esther’s money, ostensibly because it’s the man’s domain to manage – a small ‘loan’ at first and hints about wanting a car for his job as a travelling salesman. Nevertheless, Esther persuades him to wait for his bonus, which is due fairly shortly.
She saw with clear eyes, as he justified and excused, that he loved money, deeply, obsessively, and the knowledge seemed to her quaint and sad, growing from a past of which, although he told her much, she knew so little. (p. 108)
Celia Dale has apparently been rediscovered and very much deserves to be. She has a great talent for building tension and her characters are deftly drawn. The reader can see how Esther and her grandmother will both fall prey to the charming confidence trickster but the book is still gripping. Beautiful observation of time and place adds to the reading pleasure.
However, I was baffled by the introduction by Sheena Patel which is surprisingly critical and I think unwarranted. I never read the introduction until I've finished a book and I'm very glad I didn't on this occasion as I would have found it off-putting. She complains that Dale makes no reference in her picture of London in the early 1960s to black or brown characters. I would argue that it is quite possible that Esther and her grandmother did not encounter any and/or took them completely for granted when they did. They didn't need to feature in the story. And in her search for minority characters I note that Patel ignores the occasional disdainful reference to Jews.
Oh.... my..... goodness! I am speechless! Yet another tense, spine tingeling thriller from the Queen of suburban thriller. At so many points during this book I had to remind myself that this was only a story and not real! So often I was left squirming, almost shouting for Esther to run away..... I mean I wanted to run away I was that uncomfortable! Although I knew Ray was a massive asshole, I didn't realise just how much! This was like a car crash, you know the car is going to cause devestation one way or another but don't have the ability to stop it happening! Celia Dale is really good at making the reader feel really uncomfortable, whilst writing about things that may seem inane whilst reeling you in, the slow burn effect! My heart was in my stomach so often I can't tell you! This is the third of her books that I've read and each one has gripped me, had the hair on the back of my neck stand to attention. Creepy, thrilling and satisfying! An easy five star read! I can't wait to read more of her books, once I've recovered from this one! TW Domestic abuse.
Was quite taken aback that this is a 1950s original, because I bought this new edition thinking it was a brand new book. We're in post-war Britain, everybody has some link with the war and is trying to carve out a living. The protagonist Ether is rather plain and very reasonable and believes in the fairy tale of this young man entering her life against all expectations. Very quickly there is a marriage proposal. When things are too good to be true... The scenes where he tries to take control over Esther's money are memorable, and the suspence is real... A pleasant and entertaining read, reminded me of Anita Brooker's Hotel du Lac. Is this the British Patricia Highsmith?
Oh wow, just brilliant! I first read Celia Dale in the 1980s. Then she was featured on the Backlisted podcast and I re-read a couple and enjoyed them immensely all over again. I was thrilled to see A Spring of Love had been re-issued by Daunt Books and inhaled it over a couple of evenings. The introduction in this edition is by Sheena Patel, who says that while reading the book she felt as if Esther was a friend. I felt exactly the same way. I see that this was televised by the BBC in the 80s – would love them to show it again, or remake it. I think I’ve read somewhere that Celia Dale was an influence for Ruth Rendell and if that's true, it makes complete sense.
Celia Dale evokes the streets, customs and social conventions of 1950s Britain as vividly as Shirley Jackson does in her America of the same era. This dark little romantic tale of our heroine Esther finding love unexpectedly in the upstairs tearoom of a West End department store is utterly absorbing.
Devotion, trust, kindness, betrayal, courage, loyalty are just some of the themes explored at a time when for a woman, getting married usually meant quitting her job to 'make a home'. In Esther's case, this is the start of giddy journey where her hitherto perfectly happy but, as she is soon to realise, empty life is very rapidly filled by new husband Raymond...
Terrific! Celia Dale has such a light touch and yet she constructs stories of such power. She is especially interested in people on the edge of life, longing to enjoy the pleasures that others enjoy. This deceptively simple thriller tells the story of Esther, a spinster of 30 in late 1950's London and what happens after she meets a young man named Ray in a tearoom. I wont say much more to avoid spoilers, but highly recommended as an easy but satisfying read with beautiful rendering of time and place and most of all, character!
3.5 ⭐ The third book from Celia Dale I have read and indeed appreciated. Admittedly not her strongest piece of work. It’s a slow builder of a story that is set in Camden Town (love that as it’s my favourite part of London), and follows Esther and her journey through unwittingly finding love in Raymond. I enjoyed the meandering pace of 60s London and though I wished there were more twists, you could agree that there are just as much hidden depths and darkness in someone’s day to day marriage that you can’t see at first glance. Thrilling.
Outstanding I finally got around to this book after it had been quietly lurking in my TBR pile for a small age. Now I have finished this outstanding novel, I can't wait to get my hands on another offering from Celia Dale. The plot itself is not new, but the writing is stunning; subtle phrases and observations that absolutely breathe life into the small cast. The examination of needs and wants and jealousies, that add layers to this straightforward but luxurious read. I absolutely adored this - all the stars.
I've enjoyed Dale's books in the past but found this one mainly boring. I almost gave an extra star for Gran, who is a great character, but she can't save this for me. It got to the point where I was hoping Raymond would throw Esther off that bloody cliff at the end of part one, just to relieve the tedium. I was almost roused to be annoyed by Esther's clinging to the love she found with Raymond - never mind he's killed four women eh, YOU managed to save yourself by loving him enough (wow). But by then I was just glad I'd reached the end of the book.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
A Spring of Love is a lovely book, it’s written nicely and the characters are all very likeable. I’d have rated the novel higher if it were a little more gripping - the breadcrumbs of clues about the real Raymond were too few and far between to entice you into the story. It took me a while to read this for this very reason. The ending was actually very good and I think when you consider this book was from the 1950’s, it’s a nice little read.
A book of understated 1960s suburban domesticity with an undercurrent of menace, of lonely lives shared but unknown to one another. A great writer to see me through to the end of the year, a female writer with the sensitivity to capture the psychology of her characters in a beautiful. understated, evocative and timeless manner. A strong 3.75 and a writer to add to the collection of great British female writers.
This book was truly revolutionary for its time—not only because it was written by a woman, but also for its unflinching portrayal of the everyday horrors woven into ordinary life. As an avid thriller reader, I was intrigued by the idea of a suspense novel from the 1950s. However, I found it lacked the momentum and gripping, page-turning quality typical of the genre. Perhaps that’s the point: it highlights the terror in the mundane. But for today’s readers—accustomed to more extreme narratives—it may not quite quicken the pulse the way it once did.
This was my belated Halloween read. I love Celia Dale and her writing - her stories are captivating and carry a really sinister undertone that I can’t enough of. This was no exception. Esther is 30 and unmarried when she meets Raymond, a travelling salesman. The whole book has an undertone of threat and the end of part one had me holding my breath. An excellent book from start to end.
I hope that the publishers reissue all the books by this terrific crime writer who draws you into the story which is dark , unsettling, and disturbing as well as being very realistic. I discovered some of her books in a second hand store over twenty years ago and have started rereading them again and I am glad to report they have stood the test of time.
This is a slow burn as the writer paints a vivid picture of the lonely world of a spinster and how she is easily lured into marriage with a man who behaves strangely. And there is Gran who observes them from her own perspective. If you expect a ‘suspense-ridden thriller’ look elsewhere. The ending comes as a bit of a surprise.
loved this book, Esther is such a pleasant person, easy to relate to, so trusting. am so glad she got to experience marriage and motherhood, she deserved happiness and hopefully went on to live a contented life even after Ray went to prison. I like to believe he really did love her, and certainly he adored his daughter, despite being a cad in every other way!
Perfect period detail which creates just the right atmosphere for this dark story. The characters are terrific and that goes for the secondary cast too. I felt I was right inside their heads and hearts. I thought Esther's take on it all at the end was very interesting.
Very much enjoyed this book. Despite being written in the sixties, the writing still felt fresh. I felt fond and protective of Esther. It was excruciating waiting to find out how, when or if Ray would turn bad. So glad Esther survives.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
The writing was grand but the story lacked any unsettling elements. So much comes out at the end, but very little is even hinted at on the way there. It seems the reader is left to assume wrongness based on the author's reputation and the type of characters she creates. Disappointing.