Phyllis Bentley is one of the “Famous British Authors” who feature on the 1937 set of Wills cigarette cards - and shamefully yet another female author I hadn’t heard of before.
Apparently “Inheritance” was her most popular novel. The vintage copy I found was a 26th re-print from 1948 which shows the novel was still in demand 16 years after it was first published in 1932.
I was thoroughly gripped by “Inheritance” and spent a whole series of November afternoons enthralled by this gutsy, inter-generational tale of the rise and fall (and rise again?) of a West Riding textile family.
It’s a kind of “Forsyte Saga” of Halifax – starting with William Oldroyd, murdered by the Luddites in 1812, and ending with his three-times great grandson David, a young man coming of age in Phyllis Bentley’s own time and wondering what the future might hold for the textile industry in the North West of England.
I definitely want to read this novel again, if only this time to draw a family tree as I go to help me keep track of the interconnecting branches of the family through the various generations.