Elizabeth Ferrars and a picture of the 1970s

 Last Will and Testament by Elizabeth Ferrars

 published 1978



One of the reasons I enjoyed this book is that it gives a snapshot of some aspects of British life in its era, a time I remember well, small items but telling. One was just for me: a bottle of Alliage perfume features – forever in my mind as the item I bought myself after being interviewed for my first real job (you can still find it, and I recently did, but it is not part of the main Estee Lauder range). Standing in a department store the hot summer of graduating, I had a young person’s uncertain hope that the world ahead of me would be interesting and exciting, and would require a more expensive and less teenaged scent than I had used to date. It was a good choice: light and green and summery.

Other, less glamorous, items in the book include cheque books and bank cards, buying two chops, a cauliflower and a bottle of whisky for dinner, making sandwiches from tinned ham, and the heroine/narrator ‘changing into a long dress’ to go out to dinner at the local pub. ‘Not because there was any need for formality at the Rose and Crown, but because I wanted to feel as different as possible from how I had felt all day.’



There are a good few Elizabeth Ferrars books on the blog – she wrote a lot, over a long period of time – and if you want to see even more, Kate over at Cross-Examining Crime has featured many of them. Kate cross-examines this particular book, and the central relationship, very well in this post.

I tend to prefer Ferrars’ earlier books, but this is a good one: it introduces Virginia and Felix, who become series characters. They are a couple who are still technically married but very much not together. He’s a doubtful character with much charm and few morals. This book lays out what will become a regular trope: he turns up to see Virginia and trouble comes too, as night follows day, and the two of them investigate in an amateurish and lackadaisical way. Sometimes this just gets annoying, but sometimes it works a treat, and I would say this book comes into the good category.

An older lady has died – an old friend of Virginia’s, the mother of a schoolfriend. It is, btw, never suggested that she has been murdered, whatever you might be expecting. Shenanigans about the will follow (the clue is in the title), ending up in several murders. There is the usual useful collection of randoms involved. An older niece and nephew, a younger great-nephew, a companion called Meg, and the couple who were live-in servants, the Bodwells. There is a valuable collection of miniatures at stake. And there is also the solicitor, Patrick, who charms women and wears exuberant shirts, and appears to have little idea about client confidentiality and conflict of interest. He also (this is all not a spoiler, without relevance to his role as possible suspect) doesn’t seem really to be on point with the rules governing wills? My knowledge is of course learned mostly from detective stories, but I think he is wrong on a key point. (May need Bill Selnes from  the Mysteries and More blog to adjudicate: he is my goto legal expert, as well as coming in with clothes advice in my last post).

The book has some enjoyable moments. As the money/bequest/inheritance dramas emerge, Virginia thinks:

It is surprising how easy it is  not to feel worried by the prospect of the financial disappointment of other people.

We have a character wearing a green trousersuit



See this post for my comments on what the phrase means, then and now.

There are some nice discussions, to his face, of Felix’s moral code, or lack of:

‘After all, we all know what you’re like and the sort of life you led her.’ He drank some of his wine. ‘No offence.’

Felix claims to have ‘done a fair amount of voluntary work’ among reformed prisoners. Virginia thinks to herself ‘the only voluntary work that Felix had ever done among the criminal classes had consisted of drinking with them in pubs.’

And there is a splendid scene where innocent naïve Meg, the companion, has been listening to unreliable Felix recount his travellers’ tales, and blames Virginia for the breakup of their marriage: ‘If I’d been you I’d have gone with him… that trip on skis across the Greenland ice-cap.’

There is a storm and a tree falls down, with implications for the positioning of people’s cars – I always enjoy this: it’s a feature of Christianna Brand’s The Rose in Darkness.

Virginia says to Felix that he is ‘My poor old skeleton in search of a cupboard to hide in.’ Ferrars understandably seems to have been pleased with the phrase: She wrote a book four years later with the title Skeleton in Search of a Cupboard.

In the top picture, they all look far too cheery (and young) for the post-death gatherings in the book, but I loved the 1970s-ness of it, and Patrick did wear flowery and brightly-coloured shirts. And you cannot fault Ferrars for her endless descriptions of food (all of it very much of its time), communal eating, shopping, concern if any meal is late...

Group picture Vivat Vintage

Gold dress Vivat Vintage

Comments

  1. This sounds just up my street. As you say, Ferrars is uneven, but she can be very good. Trouser suits! I had a wonderful one in burgundy corduroy, similar to the one in the picture but with a mandarin collar. Chrissie

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    1. I LOVED trouser suits - elegant and stylish. Burgundy cordury sounds perfect.
      Yes, when she's good she's very good.

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  2. This does sound good, Moira. I've liked the Ferrars I've read, and it sounds as though this really paints a picture of life in the 1970s It's funny; your mention of scent makes me think of some that were available when I was younger but not so much used now. I hadn't thought about it before, but that's really interesting!

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    1. And, as we all know, there's nothing like scent for taking you back to when you used to wear it - so nostalgic.

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  3. I'm not convinced about the dinner-party-worthiness of Rosella Minit Meals - book sounds promising though. I've enjoyed a couple of her earlier books and have others on the list - adding this one too.

    Sovay

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    1. Indeed, there was a lot of dicey food in the 70s.
      Ferrars wrote an awful lot, there's aways another one to find.

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    2. Vesta Beef Curry comes to mind – a feature of my childhood camping holidays in the mid-late 70s – dehydrated so light to carry (unlike tins) and no refrigeration needed. The centres of the chunks of dried beef never fully rehydrated so there was a certain unique crunchiness.

      Sovay

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    3. Ah no - it was the Vesta beef risotto for me, absolutely delicious, and yes, the de-and re-hydration process definitely did something to the texture of the beef chunks.

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  4. Apart from wanting to shake Felix sometimes, I've always enjoyed this series. Virginia is much more forebearing than I would be! BTW were you unable to find pics of men's flowery shirts--were they so bad that the web is trying to forget them?

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    1. I'd had enough of 70s pictures and called a halt to the search!

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    2. Thanks for the recommendation. I'm just reading it and have to confess Felix reminds me a lot of Julian Wadham of "The Plymouth Express" by Agatha Christie or of Rupert Carrington. Utterly charming and sophisticated but also totally untrustworthy and unreliable. One might thoroughly enjoy an evening in his company if one doesn't mind counting the silver afterwards.

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    3. And in regard of men in flowery shirts: How about these two gentlemen:

      https://anthonysinclair.com/blogs/style/mr-fish-making-a-splash?srsltid=AfmBOopbTYYfy0Hu-F_7u6-o1ivyxQs5E9_nGqo7mBJcwJLCLBJ8Kyt4

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    4. Yes indeed, good comparison and good description. They must be great characters to write about for an author.
      Thanks for that link - I loved looking at all the pictures on the page, not just the flowered shirts, they were wonderful. What a picture of an era...

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  5. Pray tell me more about the key point if you can. I would be glad to provide my perspective.

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    1. I hoped you'd say that!
      If you make a will, and then decide to make a new will, that will normally cancel out the first one? To the extent that: if you don't like the 2nd will, you can't just burn it and assume that the first will now holds? These wills have been drawn up by a solicitor, and their existence is not in doubt. In lots of books, people burn wills and no-one knows that, so earlier one holds. But I thought that if it was being done legally, she would have to make a new will (however repetitive) and get it signed...
      All advice welcome!

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    2. My partner, Brandi, and I had a conversation. Our answers premised upon the maker of the wills having capacity to make each will and there being proof the second will was destroyed by the maker. Because each will was drawn up by a solicitor there would have been a revocation clause in each will. In these circumstances, the second will's clause revokes the first well. It is not revived by the second will being destroyed as the first will as it was revoked. The intentional destruction of the second will means no copy of the second will can replace it. There are no valid wills. If any of the premises are changed we would have a different answer. Thanks for the interesting question.

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    3. Re-read the reply. Dictating a reply because I am in a sling meant more grammatical and spelling errors for me. I have a broken bone in my upper left arm..

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    4. Thanks so much Bill - hope your arm is recovering and no worries about the dictation!
      And yes, you have confirmed what I thought... appreciate your expertise.

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  6. "buying two chops, a cauliflower and a bottle of whisky for dinner"
    An eccentric choice of dinner even for the 1970s, I'd have thought.Dinner for Felix, I presume.

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    1. I haven’t read the book but based on the comments, Felix seems like a man who would consider the cauliflower superfluous!

      Sovay

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    2. The whisky definitely for Felix!

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  7. Alliage is unfamiilar, but it sounds delightful. A long time ago, a friend who had a Christmas job at Harrods gave me a bottle of Youth Dew, which at the time I found rather heavy. I think it's still popular.
    I recently decided to wear my favourite, Guerlain's L'Heure Bleue, every day rather than once in a blue moon.
    The food looks rather lurid!

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    1. Youth Dew was the epitome of a grown-up scent when I was younger. Alliage is much lighter.
      I'm a big fan of the Guerlain fragrances, and L'Heure Bleue is gorgeous, as well as having that alluring name, and feels very French. (which is obviously a good thing)

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