In her novel trilogy,
Mirror in Darkness, Storm Jameson re-introduces Hervey Russell, the semi-autobiographical character whom Jameson claimed “is and is not me”, and whose fictional family first appeared in the earlier
Triumph of Timetrilogy. Although written in the 1930s, the
Mirror in Darknessnovels (
Company Parade,
Love in Winterand
None Turn Back) depict the developments of Hervey's private life, literary career, and awakening political consciousness against the complex political backdrop of 1920s London. Recent feminist criticism of the interwar period has revived interest in these neglected texts, which were well-received in their day and are now appreciated as examples of Jameson's insightful Leftist, pacifist, and anti-Fascist perspective. In their conflation of 1920s…
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Citation: Sponenberg, Ashlie. "Company Parade (Mirror of Darkness part I)". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 19 June 2003 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=9395, accessed 26 November 2024.]