This is an eccentric book. Much like, I'm guessing, most of Muriel Spark's books. I've only read three now, including The Girls of Slender Means.
I had a difficult time initially, getting into to the novel. It starts out with a very broad narrative voice, and then moves through a series of scene fragments with many different characters. Time shifts were not particularly easy to follow. I found myself grasping, trying to hold onto something for a little perspective. To my frustration, I didn't really get that until I was 30-something pages in, when the story really gets going. Which, I have to say, is a little late in the game for a novel of 142 pages. And, is in direct contrast to Spark's magnificent grenade of of a novel, The Driver's Seat, which draws the reader in with ferocity, from the first page.
Once in, I was in, though. Spark took me by the elbow, right into The May of Teck Club in 1945 London. I could hear the echoing voices - the elocution lessons, the giggles, the doors slamming, the gossip, the visitors. The women's hostel is brought to life in these pages, and the characters within are drawn with humour and wit. There's a lot of jolliness here, under which lies a deadly serious story.
The title says it all: the women in the May of Teck Club are of "slender means". They trade clothing and food coupons and live in post-war modesty. Some are more slender than others, of course. Some can fit through the little skylight that leads to the roof where they can sunbathe, and where one has nightly trysts with an enamoured poet. Yes, a few can slide through easily while others have to endure the indignity of slathering themselves with butter to help them along... and then there are those who just won't get through no matter what.
That brings me to the worst part of the title's meaning, worse than being poor or overweight. The worst thing is the slenderness of these women's potential and power. If they can't get through a damn skylight, what hope is there?
The glass ceiling has never held more literal and symbolic importance than one day in 1945, in this strange, complex little novel.