I galloped through this page-turner. Would it end tragically? Gibbons had a beady eye for manners, mores, decor and silly ideas. Constance Fielding (mistress of Sunglades) embraces a form of "New Thought". She tries to think positive, but is the nastiest character of those displayed.
The war has brought disparate characters together, even forcing them to share houses. Most of the action takes place at Sunglades, both a haven and a prison. Gibbons waxes lyrical about the light of the changing seasons, the flowers in the garden and in vases. Sometimes she goes on a bit too long. I prefer Bachelor Kenneth's damp garden to the positively Disney light that envelops Alicia and Richard.
Late in the story, Kenneth visits London to look for Vartouhi, the unusual "Bairamian" refugee who made all their lives comfortable and even happy. This gives Gibbons a chance (via Kenneth) to critique the "new" Britain. London was much emptier than it is now, many buildings were flattened, others stood in ruins, there was no light after sundown. But what really gets Kenneth down is the garishness of brightly coloured soft drinks, and "cheap" shops full of "gaudy" dresses.
Vartouhi herself is no caricatured foreigner. (I skipped the chapters set in Bairamia - Gibbons was inclined, like many Brits of the time, to be sentimental about "peasants".) No "how you say in your language" clichés for her. She loves things that are "vary pratty", and "too, also". When she finally loses her temper with Constance, she points out the lack of "prattiness" at Sunglades. After she flounces out in the rain Betty, another house guest, remarks understatedly that her behaviour was "not pretty". Sunglades is, of course, decorated in subdued good taste.
Anyway, a ripping read.