Jill Paton Walsh died last fall. I had been a fan of her Imogene Quy and Lord Peter mysteries and been engrossed by her "Knowledge of Angels." Somewhere I found mention of this earlier book which has, it seems to me, some autobiogrpahical details. Bright young woman is the first in her family to go to Oxford--strong Roman Catholic whose beliefs are beginning to be explored and opened to questioning in the 1950s, particularly beliefs about relationships, intimate (marriage and love) and societal (church and world). The setting and its times are well portrayed, with flashbacks of being sent to Cornwall during the war as a child, and forward at the end to time on the East Coast of the US.
Tessa is going through some of the usual emotional growth challenges of university students, but things are magnified by her Catholicism, and there are spots where she appears to be reflecting back on her naivete. It is helpful to remember that Catholicism is different in England than in the US, much more of an outsider religion (as was Methodism and anything that was not the state church in the 1950s). Fascinating study of faith in a particular time, lived out from particular intentions for a holy and meaingful life, muddled by being human.