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The Good Companions

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Probably the most popular of Priestley's novels, The Good Companions was an instant best-seller when it was first published in July 1929, and, while JBP came to feel its success subsequently overshadowed many more important works, the book has remained popular. It was his third novel and it is certainly well-written and very readable. It is, too, an enjoyable romp, all about a stranded theatrical group the Dinky Doos rescued by Miss Trant and coverted into the Good Companions, and involving their adventures with such characters as Jess Oakroyd, the middle-aged joiner from Bruddersford, who breaks free from his miserable domestic existence, Susie Dean and Inigo Jollifant.

618 pages, Paperback

First published July 1, 1929

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About the author

J.B. Priestley

306 books254 followers
John Boynton Priestley, the son of a schoolmaster, was born in Bradford in September 1894, and after schooling he worked for a time in the local wool trade. Following the outbreak of the Great War in 1914, Priestley joined the British Army, and was sent to France --in 1915 taking part in the Battle of Loos. After being wounded in 1917 Priestley returned to England for six months; then, after going back to the Western Front he suffered the consequences of a German gas attack, and, treated at Rouen, he was declared unfit for active service and was transferred to the Entertainers Section of the British Army.
When Priestley left the army he studied at Cambridge University, where he completed a degree in Modern History and Political Science. Subsequently he found work as theatre reviewer with the Daily News, and also contributed to the Spectator, the Challenge and Nineteenth Century. His earliest books included The English Comic Characters (1925), The English Novel (1927), and English Humour (1928). His breakthrough came with the immensely popular novel The Good Companions, published in 1929, and Angel Pavement followed in 1930. He emerged, too, as a successful dramatist with such plays as Dangerous Corner (1932), Time and the Conways (1937), When We Are Married (1938) and An Inspector Calls (1947).
The publication of English Journey in 1934 emphasised Priestley's concern for social problems and the welfare of ordinary people.
During the Second World War Priestley became a popular and influential broadcaster with his famous Postscripts that followed the nine o'clock news BBC Radio on Sunday evenings. Starting on 5th June 1940, Priestley built up such a following that after a few months it was estimated that around 40 per cent of the adult population in Britain was listening to the programme.
Some members of the Conservative Party, including Winston Churchill, expressed concern that Priestley might be expressing left-wing views on the programme, and, to his dismay, Priestley was dropped after his talk on 20th October 1940.
After the war Priestley continued his writing, and his work invariably provoked thought, and his views were always expressed in his blunt Yorkshire style.
His prolific output continued right up to his final years, and to the end he remained the great literary all-rounder. His favourite among his books was for many years the novel Bright Day, though he later said he had come to prefer The Image Men.
It should not be overlooked that Priestley was an outstanding essayist, and many of his short pieces best capture his passions and his great talent and his mastery of the English language. He set a fine example for any would-be author.

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250 (34%)
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125 (17%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 89 reviews
Profile Image for Jane.
13 reviews34 followers
November 23, 2009
I found a 1986 copy of The Good Companions tucked in the "sad, abandoned books" closet in the common room of our dormitory. I was desperate for a novel that wouldn't depress me--for some reason, the books I grabbed on my way up to Boston were all intelligently and academically unhappy, a little rubbing and joyless, or otherwise just unsettling. This story filled a literary need I didn't know I had. Brilliant characterization, brilliant storytelling, characters developed quickly, deftly, danced across the page and then cut loose at exactly the right time. I adored reading it. It was brilliant. I don't know if I'd recommend it to other people--it's possible it just hit what I needed, personally, at one specific moment--but this impulse find is now one of my favorite novels of all time.
Profile Image for Adrian Buck.
284 reviews52 followers
December 8, 2021
This book has been a good companion to me over the last two months. I'm no longer used to reading such long novels in a single stretch, and so took a week on, week off approach, fitting shorter books into the off weeks. It may have been better for that, there is a hint of serial production about it. Priestley was a big Dickens fan, and there is a distinctly Dickensian cast to this. There is the attempt to bring in the full scope of English society, from landed gentry (Miss Trant), via prep school teacher (Inigo Jollifant) to industrial labourer (Jess Oakroyd) with all points between, below and above. The novel is picaresque in it's presentation of series of episodes connected only by the passing of time. But the focus on three main characters, Trant, Jollifant, and Oakroyd is something of an innovation for me. This triumvirate share something in common, none of them are actually interested in the stage as a career, and stumble upon it by accident. The plots in which they are caught up are driven by the socio-economic strivings of the minor theatrical types around them.

What is most surprising about The Good Companions is its lightness of tone. Earlier this year I read Priestley's English Journey which written five years later, covers much of the geographic ground the Companions go over. The impact of industrial depression of the early thirties was obvious enough to knock Priestley out of his complacency, and the descriptions of industrial towns in the later book are almost apocalyptic. Last year I read Lost Empires which is set in the same milieu as the Companions, the lowest level of the repertory stage. Lost Empires was disturbing in its presentation of the sexual abuse and even sexual violence that was part of that milieu. This is not surprising to us reading Priestley in the midst of the Me Too movement, but it casts a shadow over Priestley's presentation in the Companions. Did he see the theatrical world of the 1930s as far more wholesome than the one he had participated in in the 1910s, or was he saving the public from some of the bitterness of his experience in 1929 only to reveal it in 1965. What had happened in between, the Lady Chatterley case? Perhaps it is simply his perception of what public taste will tolerate. Dickens himself struggled with this, and you have to read him closely to pick up the sexual realities he wrote about.

Finally, I read this from my grandfather's first edition. The dust jacket is lost, the covers have suffered water damage, but each page was thumbed over by my grandfather, ninety-two years earlier. That added to my enjoyment of reading this. At the end of the book, he wrote "12.29": I can't tell now whether he meant December, 1929 or the 29th of December. I used to do likewise when I finished a book, but it's something Goodreads does for me nowadays. The servers have to stay up, or my grandchilden will mis out. I'm not optimistic.
Profile Image for Emily.
946 reviews165 followers
January 12, 2020
A slightly dated charmer featuring an oddball group of travelling theatrical types in 1920s England, that I'm really surprised I never heard of before my goodreads friend Kathy brought it to my attention. I enjoyed it a lot, and I'm not sure if I should say despite or because of its being so very long. I felt completely immersed in the travels of these people, it was often funny, and many of the characterizations delicious. For some reason though, I was quite happy to read just a bit at a time, so this 600 page door-stopper took forever to get through, and I'm already behind on my quite modest 2020 goodreads challenge.
Profile Image for Timothy Hallinan.
Author 37 books429 followers
July 26, 2016
If you're thinking about reading this wonderful novel, you've got to be prepared for an extremely long period piece (written immediately after World War I)that's a little slow getting started, that's about the lives of Britain's long-forgotten music-hall troupes, and that's devoid of any really sensational plot developments. If that doesn't stop you, GET THIS BOOK.

It's one of my best reads of 2013 and maybe 2012, as well. Priestley introduces us to three discontented people -- a lonely unmarried woman who's just sold all the furnishings in the family home and moved into a cottage, a discontented factory laborer in the North, and a well-born, underemployed music teacher in the worst (and funniest) fictional school since Dotheboys Hall in Dickens' MARTIN CHUZZLEWIT. Well, maybe the university in Kingsley Amis' LUCKY JIM should be on the list, too, but that's about it.

One by one, the members of this mismatched trio leave their unsatisfying lives behind and take to the road. Inevitably, their lives intersect. Extremely evitably, if there is such a word, they all wind up involved in trying to resuscitate a failing variety troupe that's working the rag-end of British vaudeville in its final, melancholy days. It's show business, but just barely.

Among Priestley's many gifts are indelible characterization, a powerful sense of place, a fine, understated sense of humor, and the ability to write stories without villains. Adversity itself is villain enough in this world. The book reminds me of Dickens in both its humor and its theatricality but that's not to take away from Priestley's individuality. THE GOOD COMPANIONS was a sensational best-seller in its day, it's been the basis of several stage plays and half a dozen movies (Judi Dench, who starred in one of the films, provides an introduction to this excellent Kindle edition) and Priestley spent the rest of his life trying to write something that would make people stop thinking of him as the author of THE GOOD COMPANIONS. He got quite sticky about it and probably wound up regretting having written it.

Just in case I haven't made myself clear, I love this book.
Profile Image for Bobbie Darbyshire.
Author 8 books22 followers
April 24, 2022
Published in 1929. A working-class Yorkshireman, a disreputable young schoolmaster, and a colonel’s daughter – each abandons an unsatisfactory life for the open road. They come across each other, fall in with a failing theatrical touring company and set about making it a success.
My heart sank when I found this reading-group choice had 621 pages, but I’m really glad to have read it. Against the advice of his publisher, and with the collaborative and financial support of Hugh Walpole, Priestley said, ‘I saw no reason why the picaresque novel should vanish with the stagecoach. Why not one about my own England of the 1920s?’ The publisher was wrong – it fast achieved huge sales and has since been adapted several times for stage, screen and radio.
Exquisitely written, wryly amusing, intricately plotted, it is deservedly a twentieth-century classic.
Profile Image for Kath.
50 reviews3 followers
September 7, 2012
I loved the way that Priestley drew you into this story and his portrayal of the Northern character. His descriptions of the various events which lead to the formation of the 'Good Companions' was wonderful and I couldn't put the book down. I now have to read more Priestley!
11 reviews2 followers
December 30, 2009
I re-read this book last summer and loved it just as much as the first time. It was first published in 1929 and I hope it's not out of print. It's a road book, which I love, and involves a cast of memorable characters all drawn together into one traveling theatrical company. It probably helps to be able to decipher Yorkshire and cockney accents, but once you can do that, it's as full of good things as a plum pudding (hmmm... full of plums?) I recently read in Private Battles (a selection of first hand accounts of England and Scotland during the Blitz)that Priestly was much loved at the time for his radio broadcasts, and seen as the voice of the working people. If anyone knows more about this, let me know.
Profile Image for Harini Gopalswami Srinivasan.
Author 8 books68 followers
August 31, 2011
A delightful book, with lovable and memorable characters and lots of local colour. Follows the adventures of a troupe of music hall performers in what must be the 1920s, as they travel through small-town England. The diverse cast of characters is viewed mainly through the eyes of two 'outsiders' -- Jess Oakroyd, a working class middle-aged man from Yorkshire who has run away from home and unsympathetic wife; and Miss Trant, a middle aged lady who has come into a small fortune and decides to follow her dream and support the stranded troupe. Not a great book but thoroughly enjoyable.
Profile Image for Anna Kļaviņa.
803 reviews201 followers
Shelved as 'books-books'
May 2, 2014
I am at last reading The Good Companions. I love it. That's the sort of book I would like to write.
P.G. Wodehouse
Profile Image for Colm Mccrory.
61 reviews
January 2, 2018
Didn't think it was as good as 'Angel Pavement' and was possibly longer than it needed to be, but I'll miss Mr Oakroyd. I'd have been happy to see a bit more of him!
Profile Image for Catie.
1,467 reviews54 followers
Want to read
May 13, 2017
Mentioned in, The Diary of a Provincial Lady by E. M. Delafield
Profile Image for Trisha.
740 reviews47 followers
March 1, 2020
Another book on my read-through-the-20th-century project, this one was published in 1929 and is a great example of why it’s such a good idea to read old books.

It’s a “picaresque” novel, meaning it has to do with the adventures of characters who travel from place to place. In this case they’re a colorful group of theater people originally known as the Dinky Doos who have changed their name to The Good Companions. They belong to “concert party” (also known as a Pierrot troupe) who make their living traveling across England putting on shows.

Most likely this book would never be published these days primarily because of its length (over 600 pages) and Priestley’s leisurely style of including a great deal of descriptive information about people and places that's not all that necessary. If he were writing today much of it – like the charming paragraph about how to make Yorkshire Pudding - would probably be edited out in order to keep the pace moving.

But that leisurely pace is part of the reason this novel is so much fun to read. It’s set in a series of small English towns in the 1920s and provides an entertaining glimpse into what it was like to belong to a travelling troupe of music-hall entertainers at a time when such groups were beginning to be eclipsed by motion pictures.

Part of the fun of this novel comes from the cast of colorful characters and the way Priestley describes them: “Miss Potter had a sleek, almost electro-plated, blonde head; no eye-brows; very round blue eyes; a button of a nose, so small and heavily powdered that it resembled the chalked end of a billiard cue…”

It can be argued that this novel is definitely dated, and yet that’s one of the things that makes it so charming. Its characters travelled by “rail, and “lodged” in boarding houses. They wore ’jumper suits” when riding in “motor-cars” to protect their clothing from dust and they spent their money on sheet music or "gramophone records."

This is definitely a character-driven novel and Priestley had a knack for bringing them to life. At first I had a hard time deciphering some of the dialogue that took place between characters who spoke with Yorkshire or Cockney accents, but it didn’t take long to get used to it. And I enjoyed the fact that Priestley is an omniscient narrator who often interrupts the story to address readers directly. I got the feeling that he probably enjoyed writing this novel as much as I enjoyed reading it!

Profile Image for Bill Lawrence.
302 reviews4 followers
November 20, 2019
It's taken me a few years to get around to this. I tried a few years ago but didn't get very far, but this time I made it. It takes a while to get going, 200 pages to get 3 of the characters on their separate journeys to meet up with the abandoned concert party and then it meanders around the country before building to a well expected finale. However, there is a charm to the story that is engaging, as are many of the characters, and once the story starts to flow - I did find the first three split narratives a struggle - it is a pleasant read. Then there are Priestley's insights, his descriptions of England, the towns and villages, the people, rogues and heroes, saints and sinners, marriages and friendships, all create a wonderful sense of a country coming to terms with itself and things being possible. His summation of football alone (less than 0.1% of the book) is worth the read and is used regularly by the better football journalists even today. Priestley enjoys bringing together strangers from different class, age, ambition and tradition and seeing what they will do together for the greater good. It is of its time, but remains an entertaining feast, albeit overcooked.
Profile Image for Mark Rubenstein.
43 reviews17 followers
July 21, 2019
A bit less charm and a bit more grittiness would’ve done the job of earning it five.
January 2, 2024
So many well written , sympathetic , thought provoking characters in this book . Even the peripheral players are believable and often very funny
Profile Image for Shelly L.
761 reviews10 followers
June 27, 2019
Break a leg! Madcap is not my cup o’ tea. But this adorable book does it right. I'd never've discovered it if not for our Matilda. Manages to create characters of character, ones you care about, ones you root for and love. Zany situations here are of a human pattern and heartfelt purpose. The play’s the thing, and alls well that ends well, rooted in the heart’s desire for something real. Something more.
Profile Image for Realini.
3,665 reviews79 followers
November 5, 2023
The Good Companions by JB Priestley
10 out of 10


This novel is exhilarating, enchanting, fantastic , hideous kinky, adjectival, medicine – this term is defined and exquisitely used in Little Big Man http://realini.blogspot.com/2015/12/l... by Thomas Berger - and it is a marvelous good luck that I took it on, notwithstanding the skepticism connected with its large size, and the passages that are less than enthralling.

Indeed, this enhances the sheer magnificence of the master work, given that it is long and still extremely entertaining (I have cut down into my evening film program to continue to travel with The Good Companions, which is unusual, but hopefully it could become an established superb ritual again, so gratitude to Susie and Inigo in particular) with all those difficult to read portions, where Jess Oakroyd is concerned especially
This is one of the most important personages, but he talks in a way that is difficult to follow, an aspect that could well add spice and interest to various readers, trying to figure out what he says, feeling the righteousness of Cordelia’s attitude, we need salt and all for a better tasting experience, perhaps…

However, in my case, I enjoyed the fellow for some time, but later on, I must say that I sort of gave up on his parts, and jumped from line to line, and yet this proves to me (I do not know about you) that the book is majestic, if it can afford to have in the narrative such a massive presence as Oakroyd and still sail through, mainly for the interest in Susie Dean and Inigo Jollifant which this reader found increasing with every chapter
Miss Elizabeth Trant is another presence that enchants the public, her father dies and she inherits the house, which will be rented, and she receives an expected sum of money, probably a few hundred thousand pounds today, maybe closer to a million, considering the expenses and troupe of ‘pierots’ she would take on

To The Hermitage http://realini.blogspot.com/2022/09/t... is a blessed volume by Malcolm Bradbury in which he states that ‘fiction is infinitely preferable to real life’ a longer quote is included at the end of this note…The Good Companions has made me feel that for most of the adventures of the troupe, when they are invited for a private performance with this lady, that is one episode that is worth reading for it brings ecstasy…they hire a bus that breaks down repeatedly, it does not rain, but it pours and the cover of the vehicle serves to redistribute the deluge, not to protect passengers – Morton Mitcham has by now the Silver King on his body –

When they reach the premises, expecting a warm reception, food, and hot drinks, plus the good money they had been promised, they find that the woman is extremely sick and they are just rejected by a servant, and they all get sick, only to have a dreadful week in one of the most objectionable holes of England, where Miss Trant loses money, and they all face one of the most serious challenges to their group
An important own goal was the ending (now we must consider if this is the place to start with spoiler alerts, I would ask you what you think…in the future, advanced technology would just require that, in such situations, AI would anticipate reactions of readers, and evidently, if you are going to have any, and then you will know what to do, or better still, not do) which could have killed a lesser work than this

It would have been something like ‘god damn it, you made me read what, seven hundred pages and more, to get me breathless to this, you must be joking, but this is not funny, it makes me mad…’I mean all this fantasy, dreaming, anticipation, solidarity with Inigo, hopes raised that maybe this awful Susie (just kidding) would finally see that he is so gentle, kind, intelligent, gifted, devoted, talented, destined to win
But what if she is made by her creator, JB Priestley, just like a human being (sort of) and she has the famous ‘free will’, more likely, her type, character, goals, person is not the one you would make, and furthermore, a docile, humble, surrendering, ‘feeble’, less vibrant, common Susie would not have been attractive to Inigo and would not have enchanted readers either, so we need to accept the one we have

The Good Companions offers many twists and supporting characters – Elsie’s uncle comes to mind as an example – and we have surprises, including in the very last pages, or when Inigo travels to London, so that he can show his love that he is not ‘feeble’, and furthermore, to have his songs tested and promoted, on a package with Susie, he wins over the impresarios, directors, actors, but he insists he does not give his magic compositions away, unless the man in charge travels to see the show, Susie in particular
He is so loyal and altruistic that he is willing to give his assured success, enrichment away, he does not want to abandon The Good Companions because Susie is still there…the manager accepts to come and see Susie, but the evening is plagued with multiple disasters, a group of hooligans is booing and causing mayhem in the theater, to the point where the special guest is caught in a melee and knocked out

We feel reading this that it could be the end, or perhaps the dawn of another future, Inigo and Susie travelling together through England, maybe the world, less popular, but happy, glamour and headlines might not help them stay together, so why not less wealthy, but in love and in the middle of the troupe…a fabulous, fantastic joy ride, it has been a long time since I enjoyed a book so much, since a few weeks ago, with Kingsley Amis…


Now for a question, and invitation – maybe you have a good idea on how we could make more than a million dollars with this http://realini.blogspot.com/2022/02/u... – as it is, this is a unique technique, which we could promote, sell, open the Oscars show with or something and then make lots of money together, if you have the how, I have the product, I just do not know how to get the befits from it, other than the exercise per se

As for my role in the Revolution that killed Ceausescu, a smaller Mao, there it is http://realini.blogspot.com/2022/03/r...

From To The Heritage:
‘Fiction is infinitely preferable to real life. As long as you avoid the books of Kafka or Beckett, the everlasting plot of fiction has fewer futile experiences than the careless plot of reality. Fiction's people are fuller, deeper, cleverer, more moving than those in real life…Its actions are more intricate, illuminating, noble, profound…There are many more dramas, climaxes, romantic fulfillment, twists, turns, gratified resolutions…Unlike reality, all of this you can experience without leaving the house or even getting out of bed…What's more, books are a form of intelligent human greatness, as stories are a higher order of sense…As random life is to destiny, so stories are to great authors, who provided us with some of the highest pleasures and the most wonderful mystifications we can find…Few stories are greater than Anna Karenina, that wise epic by an often foolish author…’

31 reviews12 followers
November 22, 2014
This is that rare thing - a thoroughly good read with a little bit of bite. It is essentially a 'picaresque' road story - a tale of three mis-placed, disaffected individuals who somehow hook up with a touring concert party and have the time of their lives. The three are totally disparate - a young graduate mouldering away as a teacher in a dull prep school; a vicar's daughter who has had no life but now has a considerable inheritance; and a late middle-aged multi-skilled artisan bored of his life, bored of his stultifying wife and annoyed by his go-getting son who thinks that everything his Dad has strived for is worthless.
This is how we meet Inigo Jollifant, Miss Elizabeth Trant and Mr Jess Oakroyd. Together they transform the fortunes of the distressed concert party 'The Dinky-Doos' that they encounter on their uppers in a dismal Midlands town.
The 'Dinky-Doos' become 'The Good Companions'. Miss Trant supplies the money to keep them going. Mr. Jollifant supplies the tunes and songs that make them a cut above your average 'pierrot'/end of the pier show. Mr Oakroyd provides enthusiasm and good old-fashioned cheerful, working-class moral back-bone to the ensemble.
There are ups and there are some very serious downs as 'The Good Companions' tour around England. Miss Trant often wonders why she has put her money into this seemingly hopeless project.
Spoiler Alert!
The bite in this wonderful, funny, entertaining picaresque comes in the very 'open-ended' ending. There is no resolution. The stars of the show get a chance at the big-time in London. Will they make it? The 'journey-men' troupers in the party get a summer season in a seaside town - but what will become of them come winter? Miss Trant gets her investment back and will probablŷ marry her old sweetheart of many years ago (the Scots doctor). Mr Oakroyd goes to Canada to be reunited with his beloved daughter. He goes into business with his son-in-law as a jobbing carpenter - but he misses Yorkshire and he can't get the football results until 2 weeks after they've happened!
Bitter-sweet. Just as JBP intended.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Joe.
420 reviews12 followers
May 14, 2020
First things first, prospective readers should know that this is a really long book – surprisingly long, given that it mostly details the amiable, not-all-that-threatened lives of a group of touring actors in the English provinces. It’s light and breezy and I could just see an editor today saying “your manuscript is 640 small-print pages and nothing happens?? Call me when you’ve cut it in half!”

But the rewards for sitting with these characters and their everyday lives for 640 small-print pages are deep and varied and you wind up shedding a tear over their absence as soon as you cross the final sentence (on p. 640). The level of character detail and description of events makes it feel like you’re not just hearing about these actors as they make their way from town to town from an omniscient narrator, you’re there WITH them. You walk with them, you visit and gossip with them, you explore towns and meet new people and pray for a good audience, night after night.

The credit for this deceptively simple book exploding like fireworks is due to Priestley, who, as a novelist as well as playwright, is so damn good at telling a story. His characters are hilarious, heartfelt, and layered, and his bang-up dialogue brilliantly evokes the time and place.

Finally, my biggest endorsement for reading this book is because, in reading it, you’ll get the distinct pleasure of meeting Jess Oakroyd. Mr. Oakroyd is quite easily one of my all-time favorite characters I’ve had the pleasure of knowing. The first chapter, all about the stifling home life he suddenly decides to escape, and a stretch of writing that could function as a perfect isolated short story, is a heavenly depiction of a guy you just love from the word go. The novel ends with him, too, in a resolution both simple and profound. All in all well worth reading if this kind of escapism appeals to you.
Profile Image for Steven J..
67 reviews1 follower
December 3, 2016
The Good Companions was a pleasant surprise that I came upon during a classic book challenge i undertook.
I never heard of it before, and it was quite a lengthy book at 640 pages or so. The book was a great read and has many colorful and funny characters in it and the story and plot is pretty good.
The story is really about three people who are parting their ways in their current lives to go on an adventure which pairs them all together when they meet up at a town called Rawsley in England.
The three people are Jessiah Oakroyd who is a handy man who does odd jobs and carpentry, his wife and kid are a bunch of jerks so Jessy decides to leave home. Elizabeth Trant, a woman who has taken care of her sick father, Colonel Trant, until his death, and finally Inigo Jolliphant whom teaches history and literature at a boarding school in which he gets canned and decides to go on playing piano.
They all meet up in Rawsley by chance and Elizabeth decides to manage and payout for a failing concert troupe called the Dinky Doo's in which later she changes that ridiculous name to the Good Companions. Inigo is their new piano player and Oakroyd helps build scenes and does odd jobs around the theater. There are other many great characters they meet along their journey to Rawsley and also during their time with the concert troupe, too many characters to mention, but the three are the main ones the story is about.
There wasn't one time during this whole book that I ever got bored the story just builds and builds and finally comes out to a great ending.
Profile Image for Amy Durreson.
Author 34 books377 followers
Read
March 23, 2013
I hadn't read this for a long time, but a chance mention reminded me that I had enjoyed my first read, so I sought it out with some qualms. Not all fondly-remembered books bear rereading, after all.

I was relieved to fall in love with this story again. It's a simple enough story - three misfits, a vicar's daughter facing genteel spinsterhood, a flamboyant schoolmaster, and a mill worker unfairly laid off and sick of his ungrateful family, all turn their backs on their lives and take off in search of adventure. The adventure they all find is a travelling show on its last legs, and all three throw in with the players as they tour across England.

It's a warm and lovely story, but there was an edge of sadness to rereading it. When I first read it in my teens, the world it described was still just within living memory. This time, it felt like a historical novel. Modern entertainment is so at odds with the pierhead and fairground entertainments of the book that it felt like it was describing a very faraway world.
Profile Image for Peter Macinnis.
Author 69 books62 followers
May 6, 2013
I enjoyed this so much as a teenager (that's half a century ago, near enough for government work) that I have just bought it for Kindle so I can read it again on my travels.

A mixed group of English "characters" go on the halls, having adventures of a gentle kind in the English countryside. They formed what was called, I think, a concert party. It's a gentle, joyful book.

I need to read it again, because I can't recall if they ever got the Shuddersford (as Susie called it). Music halls interest me because they were very much an 1859 phenomenon, but by the time I read 'Good Companions' for the first time, just after I started listening to it as a radio serial. My parents told me I had to read it as well, and I did, getting ahead of the once-a-week dose, but some of the joy came from the audio version, where Sydney Torch had done the music, so I can still hum 'Slipping Round the Corner'. Sometimes you just have to mix the media!
Profile Image for Val.
2,425 reviews84 followers
April 12, 2017
This is a delightful book, nicely written with humour and a pleasant, quirky cast and story. It was first published in 1929, written a few years earlier and became the bestseller of the depression.
It is the story of a travelling theatre group, but it starts with an ordinary working man being laid off from his work at a Yorkshire woolen mill, a gentlewoman selling up and moving out, and a schoolmaster getting the sack. In this book their misfortunes are the impetus for a new life. It brings together diverse characters from very different backgrounds, bohemian and traditional, middle and working classes and different temperaments, all working together, having adventures and some success. It is also partly a travelogue round Britain of the time.
There is an embedded social message, but it is worth reading because it is such great fun, whether we are in a depression or not.
Profile Image for Craig.
1,381 reviews9 followers
October 19, 2023
Re-read. Another book that displays Priestley's amazing ability to develop interesting, well-rounded characters who feel very real, even minor ones that appear only briefly. A different time, a long-gone profession, and great characters.

Note: This re-read was of the 1929 1st edition which, perhaps half-a-dozen times, used terms for people of African and Asian descent that would be considered pejoratives today. I expect this was mainly a reflection of when and where the book was written (the references weren't that negative, pretty much just straight identifiers), but each use did drop me right out of the story for a while. I believe my decades-ago initial reading was of a much later edition which must have been edited, as I don't remember seeing any of this then.

Listened, 10/23. Decent, but not great, narrator.
Profile Image for John Eliot.
Author 122 books18 followers
May 19, 2016
The edition I have of this book was republished over 50 times between 1929 and 1974. The popularity quite incredible. It's weakness is probably is that it was first published in 1929. It hasn't always dated as well as other novels that were published long ago. At times it is twee. On the positive side it is very well written, at times stunningly well written. The story of a concert party in 1929 is quite fascinating in this day when they don't exist and all forms of entertainment are on the television. There are parts of the novel which are very Sillitoe as he writes about terraced house working class Yorkshire. I think if you were new to Priestley I'd read something by him that was more up to date.
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