British Library Women Writers 13: A Pin To See The Peepshow by F. Tennyson Jesse

I think A Pin To See The Peepshow (1934) is probably the British Library Women Writers title that was best-known before being republished. It wasn’t a household name, of course, but a lot of people have come across it for various reasons – the 1980s Virago reprint, a couple of TV adaptations, or the fact that Sarah Waters cited it as helping inspire her novel The Paying Guests.

We were really lucky to get it for the British Library Women Writers series. Or, rather, the people at the British Library who are in charge of such things are very talented – I think it was complicated to sort out the rights (since the copyright holder from the 1980s has since died). But they did it, and this much-sought-after book is once again easy to get hold of!

If you’re new to the novel, it is heavily based on the 1920s Thompson/Bywaters murder case. To quote the opening paragraphs of my afterword…

Like many novels, A Pin to See the Peepshow starts with a disclaimer: ‘Every character in this book is entirely fictitious, and no reference whatever is intended to any living person.’ The note is more disingenuous than such notes usually are, but one part is true: neither of the two main characters on whom the novel is based were any longer ‘living persons’. Edith Thompson and Frederick Bywaters had both been killed by hanging 11 years before the novel was published.

Not all the details of their lives match those of Julia and Leo. Edith had a sister, and her father outlived her, for instance, and Tennyson Jesse slightly closes the age gap between the lovers. But the gist of the case was the same: a husband was murdered by a jealous man in the throes of an adulterous affair – and a jury determined that both halves of the affair were responsible, and should be hanged. The trial was a cause célèbre that everyone was talking about and everyone had an opinion on.

It is clear that Jesse is very sympathetic to Julia/Edith. Julia is an intelligent, articulate woman who suffers from a poor background, unsympathetic family, and unpleasant husband. When she starts an affair with Leo, it feels taboo but also like an escape from the drudgery that she has been unfairly condemned to. When the murder case starts – surprisingly late in the novel, and it would feel like more of a spoiler if the novel weren’t so closely based on fact – we remain on Julia’s side. But Jesse doesn’t paint a simple black and white case. Julia may be ultimately an innocent, but she is a complex, flawed one. She’s very good on class – and the fact that Julia’s precise place in the class pecking order condemned her fate:

If only she had been higher or lower in the world! In the class above hers the idea of divorce would not have shocked, and a private income would even have allowed her and Carr to live together without divorce, and no one would have been unduly outraged. Had their walk in life been the lowest, had they been tramps or part of the floating population of the docks down London River, they could have set up in one room together, and no one thought twice about it.

I think A Pin To See The Peepshow is an astonishing work – it might not be my favourite of the titles in the series, but I think there’s a strong argument that it’s the best.

In writing my afterword, I enjoyed delving into the details of the original case more – seeing which bits Jesse chose to leave out, or amplify. Comparing Julia’s prose and Edith’s actual love letters was particularly illuminating. I found it quite complex to write the afterword while keeping reality and fiction separate, but hopefully it all made sense and it was certainly easy to choose which topic to write about. (Incidentally – the episode of ‘Tea or Books?’ that I’m proudest of is episode 34, where Rachel and I compared Jesse’s book with E.M. Delafield’s novel about the same case, Messalina of the Suburbs.)

I’m always wary of suggesting too many books for the series that have previously been reprinted, and there are three or four that were Virago Modern Classics at some point – so those ones have to really justify their place in this series. A Pin To See The Peepshow inarguably does that. I really hope that, now it is back in print, it stays there.

Others who got Stuck into this Book:

A Pin to see the Peepshow is a memorable and sometimes chilling work which gets under the skin; and it’s also a brilliantly written and constructed novel, which is compelling reading.” – Karen, Kaggsy’s Bookish Ramblings

“The most remarkable thing about this book though is the sustained insight it offers into a woman’s life and way of thinking, and how convincing the portrait of Julia is.” – Hayley, Desperate Reader

10 thoughts on “British Library Women Writers 13: A Pin To See The Peepshow by F. Tennyson Jesse

  • March 23, 2022 at 4:31 pm
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    Thanks for the shout out, Simon! This is one I was soooooooooooo happy to see back in print because I do, of course, rate it highly. A most powerful book and wonderfully written!

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    • March 29, 2022 at 9:48 am
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      It was quite a task, but well done to the BL team!

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  • March 23, 2022 at 8:33 pm
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    I always liked the OULIPO disclaimer : ‘Every character in this book is entirely fictitious, and no reference whatever is intended to any living person. If any living person believes they resemble a character in the book they are guilty of pre-emptive plagiarism and will be sued accordingly.’

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    • March 29, 2022 at 9:48 am
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      Haha, very good!

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  • March 23, 2022 at 8:45 pm
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    I had this on my shelves for about thirty years before reading it in one go.Loved it,especially as I had completely misunderstood the title.The actual reference sad and completely appropriate.

    Shared it with friends and hope it comes back,original cover and all.

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    • March 29, 2022 at 9:47 am
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      Yes, the title is quite weird until you find out what it is about! I don’t think I’ve seen the original cover, only the Virago reprint one. But it has come back now!

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  • March 24, 2022 at 6:31 pm
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    I have not ever fancied this one (I did tell the nice man who sends out the books and he said it was OK to give it away, which I have done), I don’t really like retellings of true events in novels. But it’s an important book and I’m glad it’s been reprinted and hope it will stay in print now.

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    • March 29, 2022 at 9:45 am
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      Hopefully it will, yes!

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  • March 29, 2022 at 1:29 am
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    Ohh, I absolutely loved this one. I mean, I don’t think I’ve ever disliked a VMC that I’ve read, but there are some that are more immediately to my taste than others. This one, I didn’t even have time to debate over inwardly; it quite unexpectedly became a page-turner for me. (Which rarely happens with these classics, does it!)

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    • March 29, 2022 at 9:40 am
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      Yes, it is a really important and special book – so glad it’s back in print.

      Reply

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