A Saturday Life by Radclyffe Hall – #1925Club

A Saturday Life

Radclyffe Hall’s name echoes through any history of early 20th century women’s writing, or queer writing. We all know that The Well of Loneliness was banned for its portrayal of a lesbian relationship (in the so so saucy words ‘that night they were not parted’) – but what is Hall actually like as a writer? While I’ve read some of her short stories, A Saturday Life is my first novel by Hall. And, wow, it is so much freer and funnier than I was expecting.

I’d sort of assumed Hall would be worthy and earnest, and the more I read the less time I have for earnestness in fiction. In A Saturday Life, though, she is neither of those things. And we might be able to grasp that from an opening scene, where young Sidonia is experimenting in naked dancing, and her absent-minded mother is called upon to look away from Egyptian research and do some parenting.

Sidonia is an extremely gifted child, given to whole-hearted creative expression – for a time. Over the course of the novel, she embraces dance, singing, the piano and sculpture with wild enthusiasm that fades almost as soon as the commitment to pursue them has been made. The slightly odd title is only explained when the novel is well past the halfway mark: a ‘Saturday life’ relates to ‘an Eastern tradition’, which suggests certain spirits have seven incarnations on earth – and, in the final stage, someone is ‘said to exhibit remarkable talent for a number of different things; but since they have many memories to revive, they can never concentrate for long on one’. I have no idea if such a theory exists, but it does feel rather like Hall read about it and wondered what a character like that would be in reality, in an upper-middle-class home, and what their impact might be on the people around them.

In the very good introduction to my Virago Modern Classics edition, Alison Hennegan describes Sidonia as ‘wilful, enchanting, exasperating and ultimately ambiguous’, and I think that is an excellent way of putting it. As a person, she is all those things – but as a character to read about, she is chiefly (at least at first) very funny to read about. I didn’t expect Hall to be so dry and funny, with such a deadpan tone. We see how ridiculous Sidonia can be, without losing the simultaneous sense of how tricky her life might be to live. And a lot of the humour comes from the ways in which her mother, Lady Shore, struggles to really pay attention to Sidonia’s development – even while caring. Here’s a conversation she has with Frances, an unmarried friend who is a go-between for mother and daughter, a confidante for both, and a source of reason and sense that both need and both often disregard.

A year slipped by, and another year. Lady Shore began a new book.

‘It’s so peaceful, I think I could work again.’

‘Sidonia’s seventeen,’ said Frances.

Lady Shore looked puzzled.

‘So she is, my dear. I shall write my hand-book on scarabs.’

‘Some people would think Sidonia quite lovely.’

‘Yes, of course. Have you seen my spectacles?’

‘Here they are. We don’t know many men, do we, Prudence?’

Lady Shore was trying hard to breathe a scratch off her glasses. ‘There’s Professor Wilson,’ she murmured abstractedly.

‘I said men, not ichthyosauri,’ snapped Frances.

‘But why do we want to know men, my dear?’

‘There’s safety in numbers,’ Frances remarked thoughtfully; ‘the thing to be dreaded and feared is one man. One man is usually the wrong one.’

Lady Shore put down her glasses.

‘Oh, dear!’ she complained, ‘I know, you want to discuss something tiresome.’

‘Sidonia’s seventeen,’ repeated Frances stubbornly. ‘Sidonia’s no longer a child.’

Lady Shore looked frightened.

The actual man arrives on the scene rather later, after Sidonia has had an ill-fated beginning to some sort of scholarship to sculp elsewhere. The man she meets wouldn’t be out of place in a made-for-Netflix romantic comedy:

He was tall, quite six-foot-two, thought Sidonia, and his shoulders were flat and broad. His waist and flanks were excessively slim, his close-cropped hair waved a little. His eyes were grey, not intelligent, but kind, his features blunt and regular. His clean-shaven face would have looked well in bronze. He had a deep cleft in his chin.

Ok, yes, it does feel rather like a queer writer being all, “Idk what makes men hot; I guess I’ll describe a statue” but with added flanks, which I have only encountered elsewhere in horses. But maybe she is making a point? Anyway, David (!!) is cut from the kind-but-stupid mould, and increasingly wants Sidonia to conform to his outlook on life. And she is pretty willing to do so. The comedy of the novel gets a little tempered as we see what a strong-minded, unartistic, determined man can do to a woman who is creative and clever but unsure of herself – particularly if she is in love with him.

But the real love story in the novel, in my opinion, is between Frances and both Sidonia and Lady Shore. There are moments in the novel where Sidonia is very clear in her love for Frances, even if it framed as friendship – “Frances, look at me! Don’t you love me? Frances, won’t you be my friend? All, all my friend? I don’t want to marry anyone, I tell you; I just want to work and have you, all of you.” I suspect these lines would have been more heavily censored if A Saturday Life had been published after The Well of Loneliness, rather than before. But even beyond these heightened moments (that are not really reciprocated), the relationship that Frances manages to sustain with both mother and daughter is fascinating, moving and sometimes beautiful. The three women are so different, and the three sides of the relationship triangle could scarcely differ more, and Hall does it all so well.

My 1925 Club read was a series of surprises. First, that Hall was so funny. Second, that the comic novel had such melancholy undertones. Third, that the real star of the novel would be Frances, who lives so much in the background.

18 thoughts on “A Saturday Life by Radclyffe Hall – #1925Club

  • October 20, 2025 at 12:06 pm
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    Hooray for the first day of the 1925 club; my tbr is ready to topple some more!
    This is the first review I have read this week and I have already reserved a copy of this from my library on the strength of your reflections! I have not read anything by Radclyffe Hall, and did not feel particularly drawn to do so – I thought there was no danger in reading this, but, how wrong I was. It sounds quite wonderful, funny yet not too silly with some astute, insightful observations and dialogue. I liked the quotes you cited very much.

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    • October 21, 2025 at 12:57 pm
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      Haha! Sorry, nobody is safe… Really hope you enjoy it. It was such a revelation to me.

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  • October 20, 2025 at 3:34 pm
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    I’m so glad to hear that she isn’t earnest and worthy as I have her on my classics list; a discovery I made earlier this year with Vita Sackville West, actually all just charming!

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    • October 21, 2025 at 12:58 pm
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      Oh yes, VSW is wonderful, and often extremely witty!

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  • October 20, 2025 at 3:39 pm
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    Interesting Simon – despite owning several of her books, I’ve never got to them so I’m cheered that she’s not as straight-faced as I suspected. Like the sound of this a lot!

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    • October 21, 2025 at 12:58 pm
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      Yes, the intro to this edition does suggest her tone shifts quite a lot in different books, but I definitely enjoy her in lighthearted mode.

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    • October 21, 2025 at 12:58 pm
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      thanks Emma!

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  • October 20, 2025 at 10:30 pm
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    What an extraordinary name to give a child. Don’t think I’ve ever come across a Sidonia before,

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    • October 21, 2025 at 12:59 pm
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      True! I quite like it… maybe one for a cat!

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  • October 21, 2025 at 4:45 am
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    I also would have guessed she was earnest and not funny from what I’ve seen of the Well of Loneliness. The makes her sound very appealing.

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    • October 21, 2025 at 12:59 pm
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      Yes, I suspect she can be much more earnest elsewhere, and I was delighted she was not

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  • October 21, 2025 at 4:31 pm
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    Like others have commented, I presumed Hall to be dry and serious. Glad she is not (at least in this book). I want to read it.

    Thanks for submitting it for the challenge. Have linked it up.

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  • October 21, 2025 at 5:57 pm
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    What a fascinating post, Simon! I’ve never read any Radclyffe Hall, knowing her only by reputation – ‘worthy and earnest’ was my impression, too, along with ‘overwrought’ although that might be very unfair on my part. This does sound fun – also more layered and nuanced than I would have expected. She’s now on my list if I happen to come across any green spines in the future!

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  • October 21, 2025 at 6:40 pm
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    This was one of the four I had lined up for this week – alas, its also my final week in my job and I’m swamped! Still, I want to get to my 1925 reads soon and you’ve definitely encouraged me with this one.

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  • October 22, 2025 at 6:20 pm
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    I read this years and years ago and remember finding it surprisingly light and jolly after Well. I mean, I love Well, but it’s quite hard going. Lovely to see it highlighted here!

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  • October 25, 2025 at 6:43 pm
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    Despite Radclyffe Hall having one of the best names as an author (or anyone, for that matter) I’ve ever heard, I’ve never been very interested in her work. But this review might make me change my mind. I love your comment about thinking what makes a man hot.

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  • October 28, 2025 at 8:07 am
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    The gorgeous VMC cover caught my eye and now I’m intrigued by this story – one to watch out for in secondhand bookshops.

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