Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

England, their England

Rate this book
Banished from his native Scotland by a curious clause in his father’s will, Donald Cameron moves to London and decides to conduct a study of the English people; a strange race who, he is told, have built an entire national identity around a reverence for team spirit and the memory of Lord Nelson...

What follows is one of the funniest social satires ever written. Whether Cameron is haplessly participating in a village cricket match, being shown around an exclusive golf course, or trying to watch a rugby match in the thick London fog, his affectionately bemused portrait of his new countrymen is a joy to read.

Reminiscent of the gentle wit of P. G. Wodehouse and Jerome K. Jerome, England, Their England offers a delightful portrait of Britain in the 1920s."

208 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1933

56 people are currently reading
1251 people want to read

About the author

A.G. Macdonell

29 books8 followers
Archibald Gordon Macdonell was a Scottish writer, journalist and broadcaster, whose most famous work is the gently satirical novel England, Their England (1933).

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
150 (24%)
4 stars
205 (33%)
3 stars
177 (29%)
2 stars
45 (7%)
1 star
26 (4%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 85 reviews
Profile Image for Griselda.
49 reviews8 followers
September 17, 2022
Written in the 1930s, this is a Scotsman's idiosyncratic portrait of the English. Something of a roman a clef, the book includes veiled vignettes of public figures of the day against the typically English backdrops of the country house, the cricket match and the London pub. Whether one reads it as satire or 'takes it straight', the book is absolutely mesmerising - apart from the famous chapter depicting the cricket match which, all too true to life, is interminable. It is worth hunting down the Folio Society edition which is bound to look like a copy of Wisden.
Profile Image for Marius van Blerck.
200 reviews34 followers
May 19, 2009
This book is an absolutely pleasure when you want cheering up. It's humour is close to that of "Three men in a boat" which is saying something. The description of the village green cricket match is a classic - I can't read the scene without laughing till my ribs hurt.

Profile Image for Jan.
677 reviews1 follower
August 30, 2016
I loved this little book. Written in the 1930s and terrifically old fashioned, it was beautifully worded and a joy to read. Ostensibly about a scotsman coming to London to observe the English in preparation for writing a book about them, it is actually a lovely selection of glimpses into a bygone lifestyle of ill prepared diplomats, country house weekends and sport in its various guises amongst other things. A fascinating rich use of language and hilarious characters with unlikely sounding names. If you fancy a little something different - this could be what you are looking for.
Profile Image for Ian.
982 reviews60 followers
July 23, 2017
“Our fathers of old were robust, stout and strong,
And kept open house, with good cheer all day long,
Which made their plump tenants rejoice in this song –
Oh! The Roast Beef of Old England!”

The above extract from a popular song of the 18th century probably sums up A.G. Macdonell’s view of what would constitute Utopia. Billed as social satire, this book is more like an extended love letter to the idea of Olde England, although there are one or two chapters, notably the one on fox hunting, that I would count as actual satire.

The book popped up in my GR recommendations because I recently read “Three Men in a Boat” and this indeed has a very similar type of humour. If you thought “Three Men…” was hilarious then you will probably also find this funny. It didn’t really work for me. For much of the book I found the humour repetitive and at times quite tiresome. Be warned there are also some very dated attitudes and language around racial and sexual issues. There were a few chapters that brought on a smile, mostly in the second half of the book, but even at its best I found this no more than mildly amusing.

Profile Image for Eleanor.
614 reviews58 followers
October 21, 2017
Gentle, tongue-in-cheek humour about England and Englishness from the perspective of a Scot back in the 1920s. Good fun and a book I was very pleased to get hold of. Thanks Nancy for being instrumental in bringing that about!
Profile Image for Lyndsay.
54 reviews
March 5, 2020
The very gentlest of satire - in fact it's really just a fawning, book-length love letter to the English. It's interesting as a time capsule of a period and place that no longer exists (and includes the racism and sexism from that time), but I didn't enjoy it as much as I expected. The first chapter (which is set in France in WW1) is excellent, genuine satire and I only wish it carried on in this vein. I do think the English would enjoy this more than I did, particularly those with a sense of pride and nostalgia for a lost Olde England.
Profile Image for Deb.
598 reviews
March 20, 2018
3.5*

I put this on my to-be-read list sometime last year and promptly forgot about it, so when I came across it again, I wasn't quite sure why I was reading it, but what I found was a lovely, gentle, whimsical satire which is well worth a read.
Profile Image for S.P. Moss.
Author 4 books18 followers
September 20, 2018
Written as a novel from the point of view of a young Scotsman who is commissioned to write a book about the English after WW1, this is a charming and quaint reflection on the paradoxes inherent in the English character. Some of these are still apparent today.

The scenes include a country house weekend, a visit to the theatre, cricket and rugby matches, a voyage to Danzig, the village pub, political meetings ("... you don't need facts or tommy-rot of that sort..."), a theatre trip and a diplomatic conference in Geneva. Of these, I'm afraid I didn't find the cricket match nearly as funny as it's cracked up to be, but the comments on, for example, schools of novelists or the pretentiousness of modern theatre were much more amusing.

In parts, the book reminded me of H.V.Morton's "In Search of England" and there are some lovely, sumptuous sentences that run into pages. "At 7 o'clock the sky over Lambeth was all pigeon-blue and mother-of-pearl and jade-green and citron and topaz" - gorgeous.

Minus points: the book is of its time so not particularly enlightened or PC - to be avoided if you are easily upset. The ending seemed terribly abrupt, as if the author desperately wanted to finish somehow or another. Finally, the Kindle edition I had had all manner of typos and odd grammar in the intro, which nearly put me off reading the whole thing.
Profile Image for Bryn.
2,185 reviews36 followers
November 7, 2020
A satirical novel from the 1930s that is still funny in places today, although the most famous chapter (the cricket one) inevitably went right over my head, as despite years upon years of reading British novels from this period I still do not understand the first thing about cricket. It has already faded a lot in the six weeks since I read it, but the one large thing I am taking away from it is an introduction to the work of J. C. Squire, whose 1920s satirical poetry I am now reading and loving.
Profile Image for Peter Mathews.
Author 12 books173 followers
December 15, 2020
The concept of this book was so promising, but it didn't deliver at all. Donald Cameron, a Scotsman, is commissioned to write a book about how strange the English are, but he focuses primarily on how odd it is that they like cricket and scones. An opportunity wasted.
Profile Image for Allan Wellings.
139 reviews
April 12, 2025
AG Macdonell's gentle satire of English life between the two World Wars is a perfect quick read for an unseasonably warm English spring afternoon. It's not necessary to decode the portraits of long forgotten characters from the period. It's simply a bit of fun and should be enjoyed as such.
Profile Image for Kris.
1,652 reviews241 followers
did-not-finish
March 7, 2021
Nope. Dropping this. Not for me. Too much babbling and not enough story.
Profile Image for Bahram.
64 reviews2 followers
December 25, 2025
Very disappointing! I picked it up following an interesting review in a podcast; however, I was extremely let down.
Profile Image for Teaspoon Stories.
145 reviews2 followers
April 11, 2025
I came across this novel as a 1990s re-print with a quaint drawing on the cover of a village cricket match. I’d never heard of the novel nor its author. So I was surprised to discover that it was one of the most popular books of its time (reprinted virtually every month following first publication in 1933).

My second surprise was that, despite the cosy picture on the cover of my copy, the novel wasn’t quite the nostalgia-fest I’d been expecting.

The story opens with a satiric reminiscence of the trenches towards the end of the First World War. Even worse than the “maelstrom of noise and mud and death” (p14) was the callous indifference and stupidity of those in charge. Not a class divide (the novel sardonically records, for example, the stupendously suicidal bravery of a Tatler-reading Colonel who takes on 58 German machine gunners with his walking stick). The bitter divide lies between the men of all ranks on the frontline and the johnnies from High Command, snug and safe back at HQ.

But just as in RC Sherriff’s “Journey’s End” (written five years earlier, which I’ve only just recently reviewed) it’s the intense companionship that makes dug-out life just about bearable - the dark humour and appreciation of the sheer absurdity of life that binds chums in the face of the slaughter and destruction.

And so out of the grim gallows humour of the trenches comes the premise of the novel: a Welshman commissioning a Scotsman to carry out a study of the Englishman …

This study involves the bewildered former artillery officer, Donald Cameron, reluctantly finding himself launched on a tour of the English Ruling Classes, to experience and record first-hand their strange characteristics and rituals.

Donald’s tour of posh England leads to a series of satirical and sometimes downright bizarre incidents including:

- The preparation for his first Country House weekend, involving 12 second-hand suitcases filled with stage props and rubbish that convinces fellow guests he’s a millionaire magnate.

- Being interviewed by a series of seriously eccentric Fleet Street editors including one whose “giant skull, dwarfing as it did the four-foot body, was itself dwarfed by a chin that was shaped […] like the front end of a torpedo boat photographed in a dry dock, like an instrument for bashing in the gates of medieval cities.” (p31/32)

- Lady Ormerode’s weekend house party with its ill-matched and idiosyncratic selection of the Great and Good from the Stage, Fleet Street, Westminster and the City.

- A rugby match at Twickenham played in the fog so that no one can keep track of the score.

- Going to the theatre to see a pretentious play involving “a powerful bit of the most modern sort of Symbolism in which a salt-digger’s mistress was confronted with a lot of the Thoughts which she would have thought if she had been, instead, a champion tricyclist.” (p178)

- The garrulous, bilingual engineer from Leeds with his ingenious machine “for pumping out a five-thousand-gallon sewer in eighty-five seconds, all by steam vacuum.” (p206)

- Politicians winning over voters with crowd-pleasing blandishments and (familiar sounding) empty promises: “Sir Henry rose, thanked the gentleman who had asked the question, and congratulated him, and stated that policy was to get the maximum number of houses built at the minimum cost in the shortest possible time.” (p198)

- An encounter with “grisly” Patience Ormerode who “was in no way disconcerted when, half-way through dinner, she deduced from a gleam of pale pink above her stocking that she had forgotten to put on any knickers.” (p82)

Donald’s study involves many mordantly humorous observations of English Ruling Class types whose foibles a century ago seem barely to have changed over the years:

- Saving the world rather than sorting out problems nearer home: “If an earthquake devastates North Borneo, they dash off […] to hand over money for earthquake-relief, but do you think they’ll lift a finger to abolish their own slums?” (p11)

- Doing as I say, not as I do, like the editor of the newspaper with “leanings towards a mild form of intellectual Socialism” who “despised money and made very lethargic and intermittent efforts to acquire any, nevertheless was heartily fond of many of the things which money can buy.” (p28)

- The privileged and well-connected wangling top jobs on international secretariats and commissions, like Mr Carteret-Pendragon, Mr Carshalton-Stanbury and Mr Woldingham-Uffington, “all three wearing Old Etonian ties.” (p156)

- Out of touch head-office types, like the opinionated Major-General who “had even, once or twice, visited front-line trenches, or at any rate got as far as battalion headquarters.” (p83)

- Grovelling to celebrities like the self-made tycoon who had “made an enormous fortune by a most ingenious dodge” and “was of course knighted for his public services” before being exposed for fraud and “shot himself to avoid an absolutely certain fourteen years.” (p129)

- Keeping up with the latest novels, however vacuous: “The new fashion was more shadowy and elusive and emasculate, like faded ladies or very modern poets.” (p184)

- Pandering to the superficial and the phoney, like the golf pro who adopts an infeasibly thick Scottish accent because “it’s good for trade. They like a Scot to be real Scottish. They think it makes a man what they call ‘a character.’ God knows why, but there it is. It makes the profits something extraordinary.” (p133)

- Virtue-signalling support for disarmament and appeasement in the face of bullying and aggression by clearly hostile and dangerous states.

In contrast to the Armageddon of the trenches in the opening pages, there are also passages of poignant lyricism:

- “The cricket field itself was a mass of daisies and buttercups and dandelions, tall grasses and purple vetches and thistle-down, and great clumps of dark-red sorrel, except, of course, for the oblong patch in the centre - mown, rolled, watered - a smooth, shining emerald of grass, the Pride of Fordenden, the Wicket.” (p101)

- The railway line out of Marylebone “runs through lovely, magical rural England. It goes to way-side halts where the only passengers are milk-churns. It visits lonely platforms where the only tickets are bought by geese and ducks. It stops in the middle of buttercup meadows to pick up eggs and flowers. It glides past the great pile of willow branches that are maturing to make England’s cricket-bats. It is a dreamer among railways, a poet, kindly and absurd and lovely.” (p221)

- “A magpie flapped lazily across the meadows. The parson shook hands with the squire. Doves cooed. The haze flickered. The world stood still.” (p103)

- Donald’s vision on the hillside outside Winchester, reimagining his dead war pals as medieval warriors transformed into poets - before vanishing away, leaving only “the muted voices of grazing sheep, and the merry click of bat upon ball, and the peaceful green fields of England, and the water-meads, and the bells of the Cathedral.” (p299)

This world of timeless, pastoral beauty seems curiously at odds with the darkness hinted at in the chapter set in peacekeeping Geneva, where inept diplomats turn a blind eye to the reality of aggressive tyrant states already scaling up armaments in defiance of grandly-named disarmament committees.

Indeed, with the easy benefit of hindsight its’s intriguing, and saddening, to see “England their England” in the wider context of disturbing world affairs. Just a few weeks before the novel was published, Hitler had been appointed Chancellor of Germany with an agenda, and consequences, that would transform forever the world that Macdonell captures here with his random, rambling mix of satire and affection.

Perhaps the last word on life, death and other metaphysical matters should go to Old Mr Darley (“ninety-eight come Martinmas”) down at the “Crooked Billet”: “I earn that I eat, get that I wear, owe no man hate, envy no man’s happiness, glad of other men’s good, content with my own harm; and the greatest of my pride is to see my ewes graze and my lambs suck. War! What good is war to us?”


Profile Image for Realini Ionescu.
4,073 reviews19 followers
November 1, 2025
England, Their England by Archibald Gordon Macdonell is included among The 1,000 Novels Everyone Must Read https://www.theguardian.com/books/200... and on Realini’s Top 100 Comedies, a book you must read indeed http://realini.blogspot.com/2022/02/u...





In my humble view, this is a Magnum opus that will delight any reader that has an open mind and some sense of humor – indeed, it is considered to be one of the 1,000 books we all must read, and seeing that it is a comedy, it could be taken even further to the top, if that is the favorite genre, and it probably is for most audiences – and it is ever so remarkable, if we consider that a good many pages, a whole chapter is dedicated to…cricket, and most of us have no idea about this complicated game…



Which means we do not get the humor, those of us that live outside the Anglo- Saxon world and are unfamiliar with its attitudes - even if we have read the chef d’oeuvre Anglo-Saxon Attitudes by magical Angus Wilson http://realini.blogspot.com/2022/01/a... - do not even understand what is going on in the village – albeit it hilarious when we see the American doing the maneuvers, steps or is it strategies of baseball on a field for cricket, although what the difference might be is again a challenge for most of the world (yes, India will be soon the most populous country in the word, surpassing China on that point and I can only wish they would become superior militarily and mainly economically, culturally, in influence in the world, when they get rid of obnoxious Modi) seeing as both baseball and cricket have strange rules for Germans, Brazilians and Belgians…

Apparently, this masterpiece is ‘famed for its portrayal of cricket’ and therefore we can only imagine what catharsis it is for those who know the game and can thus enjoy the intricacies of the jokes, the mirth of what is going on when two teams are confronting each other in the fields of England…lieutenant Donald Cameron is the main character, the one we meet on the battlefield of World War I, where he meets Evan Davies and the idea of a foreigner writing about England is first mentioned…



After an explosion, Donald went home in the spring of 1921, with 85 pounds per annum, in between, he had also spent time in a mental institution, when his father died, he has left seven thousand pounds, on condition he spends no more than a month in the year north of the Tweed until he was fifty and hence, Donald resolved to try journalism and for one to know if he ‘has the makings of a literary man, there are two ways of finding, either write something good, or start as a journalist’ says one character

Donald Cameron meets with Davies again, and the notion of writing about the English is discussed and they come to the conclusion that research will be needed, but it would be done, however puzzling, hermetic the subject matter would be, it would indeed prove difficult to decipher the character of the English



Many, if not most of those encountered and studied show an extraordinary amusing side to their eccentricities, or even in their habitual, common traits and habits, they all become flippant – one loses a fog horn container and he places an ad in a philatelic newspaper for finder of fog-horn container to keep it, the figure of Boris Johnson appears here, the clownish personage that seems to epitomize the more ridiculous side of the English, mind you, he is not just a jester, and this is the reason why he could represent his electorate for so long (more than two years, which is much less than many of his predecessors, more remarkable men and women, I do not think we can add here other, or Two Spirits for these days) for in spite of the ludicrous downfall, the man was no Trump, no matter how many similarities we can find between the two men, Johnson has had a solid education and for all his immense flaws, there is much merit and character strengths to find inside, just like with the typical English, or Mexican man, woman or other…

In his quest to find the spirit, essence, or at least some of the surface of the English, the hero travels to a League of Nations conference in Switzerland, and the satire, the humor again reward the public, for we can find traits of politics that are eternal, the evasiveness – England stands for…nothing, they avoid taking a stand and they let the other squabble over different topics, when the question of brothels is brought up, the delegates express a fuzzy disapproval of organized indecency (these were not the terms, but I just hope it was words to that effect) while the South Americans and Latino in general are ridiculed for their apparent (or serious) perversity, for they are known to assault the women at the conferences (they can take anything from the others, if they have come across the South Americans), which would result in indictments and prison terms today, but we are talking about standards that were valid one century ago, and when atrocities are mentioned, rape and sexual crimes, the Latino delegates rush to be involves, but that is because they want the gory details, they want to see the pictures, the evidence, which in this sardonic take shows they were hoping to enjoy themselves…



One episode has the protagonist visiting a mansion and Tommy Huggins, becomes pivotal in this part, for the Freak takes appalling accumulation of luggage, Secret Dispatches and he addresses Donald as Excellency, at the station and he makes sure to phone the residence multiple times, ensuring that the hero has a reputation that varies according to the moods of the prankster and his creativity, for he pretends to call from Hollywood, claiming that he is in communication with a very important producer and executive, and this ensures the overwhelming interest of a beauty that is the focus of attention and is followed and coveted by multiple men, then the call is for the best forward at Chelsea and in England, and the staff show their respect, there is also the French Embassy on the line at another conjecture…



One figure at the table, one has no topic and just one adjective at a time, grisly for now, and then later it would be won, but all this cosmic laugh allows for some serious, dramatic moments, such as when we have a fox hunt, where the odds are 274, horses, hunters and dogs, against just one poor, soon to be destroyed animal, called vermin back then, and the contrast could be amusing, if it is not also horrifying, when the hunters attack a farmer for kicking his horse (which is clearly bad) and all in the name of their ethics, they are against cruelty to animals, but see nothing in having a poor creature torn to pieces by sixty dogs…



Signed by the participant in the 1989 Revolution, Realini…read and ask for more details and stories if you like:

http://realini.blogspot.com/2022/03/r...

Profile Image for Sarah Ensor.
206 reviews16 followers
November 14, 2020
"But can you tell me sir, what national honour does for me? I've worked on the land all my life, and the least I've ever earned is four and six a week and the most is twenty nine shillings.. In 1914 a man comes down to the green here, and he makes a speech about just that very national honour that you've been talking about. Mind you, sir, in 1914 the nation and all its honour was giving me twenty two shillings a week and I was working seventy four hours a week for it. But I had to give three sons and eight grandsons to fight for the national honour. Eleven of them. And three were killed and two lost legs. And what good did that do to them or Mr Davis here or Mr Darley? Cost of living is higher. Beer is more expensive and so is tobacco. And my grandsons, the ones that weren't killed, can't get work. And all that for what you call national honour."
Profile Image for Jake Goretzki.
752 reviews155 followers
December 1, 2013
Moments of decent satire and occasionally - when he stops fannying around and dials down the panto silliness - a little lyrical. But very, very much 'of its time' (quite entertainingly racist at points), dated and just, well, tiresome. Like a not-as-clever 'Decline and Fall'.

I somehow came across it mentioned as a pointed Scottish 'take' on the English, but it's really an affectionate and unfalteringly loyal letter of love. Harmless, but nowt special.
147 reviews5 followers
August 23, 2024
An absolutely hilarious satirical novel of the 1920s, about a Scottish war veteran trying to define what makes the English tick. Definitely not to be taken seriously. There are very funny and sometimes quite scathing passages about cricket, fox-hunting, and other quintessentially English pastimes. The only reason I'm not giving five stars is because of the ending, which fizzles out in a sort of abstract philosophising.
Profile Image for John Mccullough.
572 reviews59 followers
April 12, 2014
Well, not a good book from, an English point of view. That is, a Sassanach point of view. OK - it pokes fun at the English from a Scottish point of view which ought to be edifying for those of us on this side of the pond. Anyone for cricket?? Macdonnell pokes fun at himself, too! A good, quick read, a pleasant read and very entertaining. Well enjoyed.
Profile Image for Trilby Black.
28 reviews1 follower
Read
February 19, 2013
It takes a special sort of genius to describe cricket ball going up in the air, then keep us riveted by sharp, fast narrative for three pages until it comes down again.
Profile Image for Cyndi.
2,450 reviews122 followers
July 20, 2015
Cute wee story. Reminds me of the Jeeves stories.
Profile Image for Mike.
Author 46 books194 followers
July 9, 2023
A warm and affectionate comedy. A Welsh publisher commissions Donald Cameron, a young Scot, who he met in a pillbox in Belgium during World War I, to write a book about the English from the point of view of an outsider. The Welshman's theory is that they are a nation of poets (which is what many people would say about the Welsh); Donald thinks, at least at one point, that they don't have a national character, "they're all different". But they are probably mad, and definitely (in many cases) kind, although he doesn't shy away from highlighting the exceptions. The fox-hunting chapter is particularly biting, and a masterpiece of "show, don't tell" applied to satire.

With many sparkling comic moments, this book somehow manages to combine brilliant satire with warmth, even sentimentality. It's well known for the description of the village cricket match, and deservedly so, but there are plenty of other wonderful chapters: the country-house stay where an eccentric English friend of the hero "helps" him by ringing up and pretending to be various important people leaving messages for him with people who'll be impressed that he knows those important people, leading to conversations which poor Donald finds either incomprehensible or deeply embarrassing; the hotel fire, in which the English partygoers trapped on the roof behave with complete calm under the command of the Major-General; the fox-hunting chapter already mentioned; the episode at the League of Nations, an organization the author worked for at one time, where the English delegate gives speeches that are so careful to say nothing that they get attached to the wrong issues and nobody notices. There are some marvelous characters, too: the English landowner who, after agreeing with his wife that they won't collect the full rent (or, in some cases, any rent) from tenants who are having a hard time of it, insists vehemently that he's a good businessman; the Yorkshire engineer who has been all over the world delivering machines and teaching the recipients to use them, sometimes for years at a time; the varied literary eccentrics; the secretly virtuous film star, true to the precepts of her father, the vicar; the noncommittal trio of young men who work at the League of Nations, and whose answer to any question is "yes and no"; the young man and woman, siblings, who have no topics of conversation and only one adjective at any given time (currently the adjective is "grim").

It closes with a sentimental chapter set at Winchester, where the author (but not his character) went to school, in which one of the boys (or "men," as they're known at Winchester; this particular man is about 12 years old) explains that a piece of terminology used at the school is based on something that used to happen "until quite recently," and when pressed clarifies that by this he means 70 or 80 years ago. Given that Winchester was founded in 1382, 70 or 80 years does count as recent in terms of its history. (I went to a school founded 5 years before I started there, so by the time I left I had witnessed half its history to that point, and the country I was born in was only founded in 1840, so it's hard to imagine what it would be like to go to a school with such a depth of history.) I was reminded of Wodehouse's Psmith in the City , where the viewpoint character visits Wodehouse's old school (which is not the character's old school).

I was left with the impression that Donald thinks that the English are kind largely because he is kind. A lot of the time, he has no idea what is going on, what his English acquaintances are talking about, or why they are doing what they're doing, but he struggles on as best he can.

If the book has a fault, it's that it's very much about its own time (which is also a strength, if you're interested in getting an insight into that time), and a lot of the contemporary references have lost their resonance in almost a century. But you can generally pick up from context what's being referenced, at least in general terms, and the Wikipedia feature on my Kindle was helpful in many cases too.

Genuinely witty in its observations and phrasing, with hilarious set-pieces and mostly affectionate portraits of a dozen varieties of eccentricity and oddness, this is a book for fans of Wodehouse and Jerome K. Jerome, or anyone who wants a comedic exploration of the England of the 1920s.
Profile Image for Brian Metters.
23 reviews
February 5, 2020
England, Their England by A. G. Donell is a novel classed as “social satire” set in 1920s England and written in 1933. I bought it having read a short positive critique of it by John Carey in his book The Reluctant Professor. The central character is Donald Cameron, a Scotsman, who has been invalided out of the army towards the end of WW1 and returned home to Scotland where his father “bans” him from living there and sends him to England. Once there he begins writing for a number of London newspapers before being commissioned to write a book by a Welshman. The book, he is told, is to be about the English, their social life and their related institutions, and written in such a way as to be enlightening for foreigners. By now you should be getting the idea....... that England, Their England is going to be farcical to say the least!
There are chapters that focus on a single aspect of English life including The Dinner Party, The Cricket Match, The Golf Club, Parliament, Theatre, The Hunt, The Pub for example.

“The cricket field itself was a mass of daisies and buttercups and dandelions, tall grasses and purple vetches and thistle-down, and great clumps of dark-red sorrel, except, of course, for the oblong patch in the centre—mown, rolled, watered—a smooth, shining emerald of grass, the Pride of Fordenden, the Wicket. The entire scene was perfect to the last detail.”

“All round the cricket field small parties of villagers were patiently waiting for the great match to begin—a match against gentlemen from London is an event in a village—and some of them looked as if they had been waiting for a good long time. But they were not impatient. Village folk are very seldom impatient.”

“At last the ball came down. To Mr. Hodge it seemed a long time before the invention of Sir Isaac Newton finally triumphed. And it was a striking testimony to the mathematical and ballistical skill of the professor that the ball landed with a sharp report upon the top of his head. Thence it leapt up into the air a foot or so, cannoned on to Boone's head, and then trickled slowly down the colossal expanse of the wicket-keeper's back, bouncing slightly as it reached the massive lower portions. It was only a foot from the ground when Mr. Shakespeare Pollock sprang into the vortex with a last ear-splitting howl of victory and grabbed it off the seat of the wicket-keeper's trousers. The match was a tie.”

The style of the book echoes other novels by Evelyn Waugh, P. G.Wodehouse and Jerome K Jerome. It describes England at a time when everyone knew their place in a class ridden society, one dressed for dinner parties and played bridge after port and cigars; when there was no political correctness to worry about and expressions like “old bean”, and “I say old chap” were commonplace, and doors were opened for ladies. It’s an easy read, no central plot, a bit like a series of short stories in each location or scenario but where the central theme is a Scotsman trying to understand what makes the English so ........ English!
Profile Image for Sarah Hearn.
771 reviews5 followers
June 5, 2020
Despite the fact that this is quite a dated book, having been written about an England that no longer exists, it is still an amusing, well-written story about Donald Cameron, a Scot from Buchan, who sets out to write a book about the English. Written in the mid-30s, we are given a view of an older, more bucolic, more assured England; a country that knows its place at the head of a huge Empire and yet whose own history as an agricultural land is just beneath the surface. Subversively, against this Macdonnell places “bright young things” who are still partying, still determinedly having fun as a reaction to the deaths of the Great War. The book starts in the trenches of that same war but leaps forward into the 30s. Here and there are sprinkled reminders of the cataclysmic 14-18 war but there are no indications of the worse one coming in a few short years. Macdonnell remains resolutely in the time in which Cameron is experiencing England. I can’t say this book gives a good idea of the “real” England but more, a picture of England as a “type”: the cricketers, the fox-hunters, the footballers, the rugby-players in mud and cold rain, the diplomats, the country “gaffers”, the city slickers, the parliamentarians, the factory-hands, the Yorkshiremen who are good at engineering, the land-owners, the village dwellers. All of these are stereotypes but utterly identifiable as English in a specific time-and-place; this book is now, almost, a Sociological treatise. Delightful to read but not to be taken seriously.
17 reviews2 followers
June 3, 2025
England, their England

England, their England, written by Archibald Gordon Macdonell, was first published in 1933. It is still available both in print and electronic format.

The action starts during the First World War in 1917, documenting the horrific, bloody, brutal and muddy battle in the Passchendaele trenches.

When the war comes to an end, Donald Cameron, the protagonist, suffered from psychological effects and spent three years on his father’s Aberdeenshire farm recovering.

Our hero moves from Scotland to London to embark on a literary career. At this point the prose changes from being serious to become sartirical and humorous, chronicling life in the upper echelons of English society at the time.

In his researches, the author sardonically dissects the League of Nations and its associated committees. He moved on to a completely hilarious village green cricket match which has been widely quoted elsewhere.

Later in the book we are provided with descriptions of country house weekends, a fox hunt, elegant London receptions, and much more.

The book is a lighthearted microcosm of life in England in the 1920s, exactly a century ago. I loved the novel and I am sure you, dear reader of this review, will likewise enjoy reading it and its sardonic humour.
Profile Image for Kate.
2,324 reviews1 follower
November 16, 2020
"Banished from his native Scotland by a curious clause in his father’s will, Donald Cameron moves to London and decides to conduct a study of the English people; a strange race who, he is told, have built an entire national identity around a reverence for team spirit and the memory of Lord Nelson . . .

"What follows is one of the funniest social satires ever written. Whether Cameron is haplessly participating in a village cricket match, being shown around an exclusive golf course, or trying to watch a rugby match in the thick London fog, his affectionately bemused portrait of his new countrymen is a joy to read.

"Reminiscent of the gentle wit of P. G. Wodehouse and Jerome K. Jerome, England, Their England offers a delightful portrait of Britain in the 1920s."

I can see that this book is satire. The problem is: I'm not a native of Britain so most of the references went right over my head. Obviously it was first published in the 1930s, which makes the references even more esoteric. I'm sure it was spot on in its day, but unfortunately ...
Profile Image for Bill Tress.
279 reviews13 followers
June 18, 2018
A very enjoyable experience that allows the reader to escape this angry, money hungry world for a little flight to a peaceful time and place. MacDonell creates a little adventure seen through the eyes of Donald Cameron who is required by his employer to write a book about the English. He experiences a few of the essential traits of being English as he progresses from Fox hunts, to weekend parties, to gatherings in pubs and other typical English ritualistic behavior ; all done with good humor and jolly spirit.
Some of what MacDonell writes is witty, some is also hard to understand unless you are English, kind of like an inside joke. The subtle little message of this book is that life's pleasures come from simple pleasures, family friends, etc.
If the purpose of this book is to escape and live in a world that does not exist anymore, the goal is achieved. The joy found in reading this book is heartfelt and merits being kept on hand for the gloomy time when one needs a lift of spirit, well done MacDonell.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 85 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.