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The Sugar House by Antonia White
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The Sugar House (original 1952; edition 1985)

by Antonia White, Carmen Callil (Introduction)

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291990,286 (3.66)73
The year is 1920, Clara Batchelor, the heroine of Frost in May and The Lost Traveller, is an actress touring with a repertory company. Now of age, she has forgotten the benevolent tyranny with which her Catholic parents treated her relationship with the actor, Stephen Tye. Yet when Stephen betrays her, Clara marries Archie, the fiance she discarded four years ago. A friendship but not a love match, this marriage proves a desperate attempt by Clara to rekindle the safety of childhood. However neither party is a child, and their dream sugar house soon begins to dissolve as their fragile marriage proves hopeless.… (more)
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» See also 73 mentions

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What could be more appealing than living in a sugar house? This pleasant image turns sinister as young bride Clara equates her situation with that of Hansel and Gretel. After bad luck on the stage and in love, Clara impulsively marries a childish, alcoholic young man of indeterminate sexuality. The two are miserable together in every way. Finally, Clara seeks--and finds--a way out of the sugar house.

Clara is an unusual heroine; she's both naïve and determined, messy but honest about her faults. No doubt she is based on Antonia White herself.

This novel is the third installment in White's Frost in May quartet. I'm looking forward to reading the fourth one, Beyond the Glass. ( )
  akblanchard | Oct 12, 2020 |
In The Sugar House, the 3rd book of the Frost in May quarter, Clara Batchelor has fallen in love with an older actor, while still pursued by her ex-fiancé. This was the best book so far in the series and I was drawn inexorably into the little tragedy of this novel. Really well done. ( )
  LisaMorr | Dec 11, 2019 |
The Sugar House, the third novel in Antonia White’s Frost in May quartet, picks up four years after the events of The Lost Traveller. It can be read as a stand-alone; however, the context the previous book provides is useful. Now 21, Clara, having recently completed training at The Garrick School of Drama, is working as an actor with a travelling theatre troupe. She believes herself to be in love with an older actor whom she met at drama school, a WWI vet with a drinking problem, and she seems unaware (or unwilling to accept) that Stephen Tye mainly likes the reflection of himself he sees in her naïve, young eyes. When the relationship with Stephen—if you can call it that—does not work out, Clara allows dissolute oddball Archie Hughes-Follett back into her life. She had been on the brink of marrying him four years earlier, but her mother had been able to talk some sense into her. Now, Clara makes the fatal error she’d earlier avoided. With the urging and approval of two ardent Catholics—her father and Lady Theresa Follett, whose ten-year-old son accidentally died when Clara was his governess—Clara marries Archie.

Archie is from an extremely wealthy old Catholic family, and he is to come into his full inheritance at the age of 25. Until that time, his father’s will dictates he is under the guardianship of his uncle. Archie believes this is due to pure malice on the part of his father, whose hatred of Archie prevails beyond the grave, but everyone else is aware that Archie is an impractical misfit, full of dreams and unworkable schemes. For now, he receives an allowance, most of which he fritters away on drink, for Archie has an even more serious problem with booze than Stephen. Though I know that social awareness of alcoholism (and addiction in general) in the time White is depicting (the 1920s) was not what it is today, I was still slightly taken aback that two adults who ought to have known better would’ve encouraged Clara in making such a marriage.

Most of The Sugar House tells the story of Clara’s—and Archie’s, too—entrapment in an absolutely disastrous marriage. Although Clara experiences a certain sexual revulsion towards Archie, she hadn’t quite bargained for him falling into bed completely sloshed on their wedding night (and many nights thereafter) either. The fact is: Archie is asexual—something noted very early in the book by Clara’s fellow actor and roommate, Maidie. (In fact, the marriage is never consummated.) At one point, Clara’s domineering and controlling father blames her for Archie’s problems, which makes for some pretty enraging reading. Otherwise, the overbearing pater familias, Claude, plays a far less significant role in this book than the one that preceded it.

While I enjoyed this novel, I found that it lacked the narrative momentum of the other two I’ve read in the quartet. The reader knows from the start that Clara’s marriage doesn’t stand a chance; therefore, its unravelling is not overly compelling. Characterization, however, remains a real strength. ( )
  fountainoverflows | Nov 21, 2018 |
excellent ( )
  mahallett | Jun 22, 2018 |
The Sugar House is the third novel in Antonia White’s Frost in May quartet. At the end of The Lost Traveller, Clara Batchelor had just freed herself from an impetuous engagement to Archie Hughes – Follett. As The Sugar House opens, Clara is about to embark on a tour of a play with a theatrical company. She is head over heels in love with Stephen Tye, a fellow actor who will be touring with a different company.

“At last the whole company stood yawning and shivering on York platform. In the murk under the sooty roof on which rain drummed steadily, it was hard to realise that it was half past four on a summer morning. Everyone was longing for a cup of tea, but no buffet was open at that hour”

As Clara endures a series of drab provincial boarding houses, sharing a room with the irrepressible Maidie, a fellow catholic, she dreams of meeting up with Stephen, determined to marry him even if, as she suspects, he makes her unhappy in the process. Clara receives a letter from her father, informing her that Archie is back from South America and wants to see her, she prepares herself to see the man she jilted four years earlier, the man who can’t but help remind her of the tragedy that had preceded it.
Following their awkward meeting in Birmingham, Archie, cynical and drinking too much, hooks up with Clara’s theatre company. Archie is often childlike, his enthusiasms and sulks extreme and often unrealistic. He still loves Clara, declaring he would still marry her – on any terms. Despite being twenty-three – Archie’s family money is held in trust for another two years – he is hopeless at managing his allowance and is constantly looking around for a quick money making scheme. When Stephen betrays Clara, reeling and hurt Clara marries Archie, much to her father’s delight and her mother’s dismay. Taking a tiny house they can ill afford in a Chelsea populated with artists, Clara is desperate to find the safety she once knew in childhood and to win her father’s approval. Archie and Clara are like children playing at house. Clara comes to think of her dream house as a sugar house, like that of Hansel and Gretel. However they are not children anymore, and the realities of their situation and the world they live in starts to turn to a nightmare.

“Now!’ said Archie, in a tone of immense satisfaction. She opened her eyes. Spread out on the floor were two magnificent Bassett-Lowke model engines; a tail of coaches for each; stations, signal boxes and a glittering heap of rails. She could do nothing but stare open mouthed.
‘Thought that would knock you flat,’ said Archie, grinning with pleasure.”

Judging by other reviews I have seen of this book, The Sugar House may be the least popular of the four novels. Having loved The Lost Traveller so much when I read it a couple of months ago – I was looking forward to this novel, and for me it didn’t disappoint, although The Lost Traveller is still my favourite to date. I loved the first half of the novel, with Clara touring with the theatrical company. Antonia White brilliantly depicts the life of provincial boarding houses and the actors that made their living by going from town to town on late night trains. There is much less emphasis on Catholicism in this novel, although Clara’s religion still helps guide her through her life and marriage. As this novel ends Clara is still only twenty-two – and I long to know what life holds in store for her. ( )
1 vote Heaven-Ali | Oct 15, 2013 |
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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Antonia Whiteprimary authorall editionscalculated
Callil, CarmenIntroductionsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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The train call for the Number One Company of A Clerical Error was for nine o'clock.
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The year is 1920, Clara Batchelor, the heroine of Frost in May and The Lost Traveller, is an actress touring with a repertory company. Now of age, she has forgotten the benevolent tyranny with which her Catholic parents treated her relationship with the actor, Stephen Tye. Yet when Stephen betrays her, Clara marries Archie, the fiance she discarded four years ago. A friendship but not a love match, this marriage proves a desperate attempt by Clara to rekindle the safety of childhood. However neither party is a child, and their dream sugar house soon begins to dissolve as their fragile marriage proves hopeless.

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The year is 1920

Clara Batchelor, the heroine of Frost in May and The Lost Traveller is now twenty-one. Clara is an actress with a touring repertory company, living out of a suitcase, the benevolent tyranny of her Catholic parents forgotten in her passion for the actor Stephen Tye. But when Stephen betrays her, Clara betrays herself -- she marries Archie, the discarded fiance of four years ago, a man of whom her father thoroughly approves. This symbolic gesture is Clara's desperate attempt to re-enter the safety of childhood, but neither Archie nor Clara are children now. Their dream of life in the little house in Chelsea turns into a nightmare, its sugar walls too fragile to sustain their hopeless fantasies. Clara has to grow up ...

First published in 1952, this moving account of a woman striving to come to terms with a doomed love and her own sexuality is the second volume of the trilogy sequel to Antonia White's famous novel, Frost in May. The Lost Traveller and Beyond the Glass complete the trilogy, each a novel complete in itself, all four published by Virago. together they represent the finest work of a writer whose novels are an extension of life itself.
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