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The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie: A Novel
The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie: A Novel
The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie: A Novel
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The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie: A Novel

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“A perfect book”—and basis for the Maggie Smith film—about a teacher who makes a lasting impression on her female students in the years before World War II (Chicago Tribune).
  “Give me a girl at an impressionable age, and she is mine for life!” So asserts Jean Brodie, a magnetic, dubious, and sometimes comic teacher at the conservative Marcia Blaine School for Girls in Edinburgh. Brodie selects six favorite pupils to mold—and she doesn’t stop with just their intellectual lives. She has a plan for them all, including how they will live, whom they will love, and what sacrifices they will make to uphold her ideals. When the girls reach adulthood and begin to find their own destinies, Jean Brodie’s indelible imprint is a gift to some, and a curse to others.   The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie is Spark’s masterpiece, a novel that offers one of twentieth-century English literature’s most iconic and complex characters—a woman at once admirable and sinister, benevolent and conniving.   This ebook features an illustrated biography of Muriel Spark including rare photos and never-before-seen documents from the author’s archive at the National Library of Scotland.    
LanguageEnglish
Release dateMar 20, 2012
ISBN9781453245033
The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie: A Novel
Author

Muriel Spark

Muriel Spark (1918–2006) was a prolific Scottish novelist, short story writer, and poet whose darkly comedic voice made her one of the most distinctive writers of the twentieth century. Spark grew up in Edinburgh and worked as a department store secretary, writer for trade magazines, and literary editor before publishing her first novel in 1957. The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (1961), considered her masterpiece, was made into a stage play, a TV series, and a film. Spark became a Dame of the British Empire in 1993. 

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I need to mull this book over a bit, so my rating may change. Miss Brodie is a bit strange, especially towards the end. Sandie's internal imaginings were amusing, amusing but I didn't really understand her feelings about Miss Brodie at the end...
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    The third book for the twenty-four hour readathon! I have a World Book Night copy, given to me by my mother. Otherwise, I doubt I'd have read this without someone giving me a push toward it.

    I don't know what I think of it, though. The character of Miss Jean Brodie is sort of fascinating, the things she says and believes, and the psychology of it all is actually quite interesting, but... It didn't really catch fire for me. The introduction by Candia McWilliam suggests that for some people it does, when they're fairly young even in many cases, but not so for me.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I kind of liked the odd rhythm of the narration in this. I wonder is this the original "inspiring/dangerous teacher" book, or are there earlier ones?
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Actually this is a DNF for me. I was intrigued by Miss Brodie and her students but was totally put off with the writing that jumped around so much.

    For example, we are introduced to the "girls" as being famous for a variety of reasons, the mathematics girl, the one famous for sex, one for gymnastics, etc. The next description of them is as the one "who will be" famous for mathematics, sex, gymnastics. Then not a few pages later they are described as the one in 20, 30 40 years who *was famous* but is something else. To me I never managed to keep a name with a reason for being famous nor with what they become in the future.

    Call me a linear thinker (others have) but all this bouncing about and jumping from time frame to time frame just confuses me. So, I gave up.

    On to the next book.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    “Give me a girl at an impressionable age and she is mine for life.” Firstly let me say that this is not your ordinary schoolday tale, there is something a little sinister about it. The story is set in a posh Edinburgh day school and set around a group of schoolgirls the 'Brodie Set' who are selected then taken under the wing of their tutor Miss Jean Brodie. Jean Brodie is something of an outcast within the school she does not stick strictly to the curriculum preferring instead to tell tales of her travels abroad and tries to instill a love of the Arts into 'her' girls by taking them to museums, art galleries etc preferring individualism over teamwork, all of which puts her at odds with headmistress who is looking for a way to get rid of her. Yet in many ways she is merely tring to give them a more rounded education rather than just getting them to pass exams. Unfortunately Miss Brodie is also a fan of Fascism, which seems strange given her belief in individualism, and it is her politics which leads to her downfall. The tale moves through the girls education from 11 to 17 with all that teenage angst but is also interwoven with sections of them as adults. Miss Brodie seems a little sinister as she tries to mould and influence her 'Set' into her own image and can be seen as controlling but I also see her as cutting a rather sad figure. She seems incapable of having a real relationship with another adult, she is at odds with her colleagues and even goes as far as trying to use one of the girls to have an affair with Mr Lloyd as a way of having one herself with him by proxy. In the end her scheming fails as the girls eventually go their own ways and she is eventually betrayed by one of them rather than be allowed to repeat the process with another group.This is an interesting tale and perhaps the moral of it is that you should not put a person on a pedestal as they are likely to eventually disappoint. The tale is beautifully written with with touches of comedy as well as darkness througthout but sadly not really my cup of tea.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    For a book that I really just picked up on a whim, because I'd thought to read it idly at a few points over the past few years, this really paid off. The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie is a modern classic (to the degree that I read the Modern Classics edition), which is usually enough to put me off something, but perhaps I should reconsider that if this delightful, slim little novel is what I'm missing out on. For something that was a scant 123 pages, there's a surprising amount of depth here.Our Miss Jean Brodie here is a teacher at a fairly good private school in Edinburgh in the mid-1930s, who has different ideas about teaching than her colleagues. Thus, her headmistress at the school would like to find some reason to kick her out, but it's hard to find purchase among her students to find grounds to do so, since just being unorthodox isn't grounds as long as the students are learning. And her students, and particularly her own Brodie Set of six girls that she has decided to devote her prime to, hold her in high esteem, taking in all the lessons she cares to give, and of course much more from her own life, her lost love in WWI, and then her new romantic connections to two different teachers now in her prime. But in the end, one of them comes to betray her, and she is cast out. How and why this comes to pass, and the growth of the girls, that forms the bulk of the story.Saying that one of her set betrays her isn't really a spoiler, mind - we hear of this quite early, and find out the identity of the betrayer fairly early on as well, even if the betrayal itself only comes at the end. Spark writes her way through with a wide, knowing eye over the sweep of the years, so that we see the roots of the students' connections with her, starting off in junior school, and then on through the rest of their lives, just with making casual references to the future, and back again. This style actually does a great job of building along to the resolution while letting us see the different characters and how their personalities and lives were shaped, by themselves and by Miss Brodie. It allows for a lot of characterization, given the shortness of the book.As much as I had interest in the story, though, the writing and the characters really did sell it. The book really is quite funny, for Miss Brodie's teachings, all the Primes and the meanings of education and the nature of her classes, how she cuts through life. What the girls take away from it, what they actually do with the teaching and what they think about, is often presented humorously, as well. But there is a great feeling of psychological reality to it all, both for Miss Brodie and her love interests, and also for the different girls. The thematic structure, of connection and trying to find and protect your role, is really well done, and the characters we see a lot of definitely have complex minds. They're real people, and I imagine this is a book that would stand up quite well to re-reading. There're lots of good metaphor and psychology stuff to dig into.Anyway, for its size - really, you can probably knock this off in an easy few hours - there's a lot of humor and amusement to get out of this, and a lot of meat, as well. The story's got a real spark, and I really enjoyed it. Definitely this is one that's worth a quick try, to enjoy and to admire.

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I first encountered The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie in 1969 when I viewed the British drama film, based on the novel of the same name by Muriel Spark. Like many others I was mesmerized by Maggie Smith's Academy-Award winning performance as the imperious Miss Jean Brodie who lectured and directed her girls. The original novel by Muriel Spark had been turned into a play by Jay Presson Allen, which opened in London in 1966 with Vanessa Redgrave and on Broadway in 1968, with Zoe Caldwell in the title role, a performance for which she won a Tony Award. Allen adapted the play into the film, which was directed by Ronald Neame. In addition to Maggie Smith there was also a notable performance from Pamela Franklin as Sandy, for which she won the National Board of Review award for Best Supporting Actress. It is also remembered for the beautiful song by Rod McKuen, "Jean".It was more than a decade before I actually got around to reading the original novel, and as is the case even with very good films the novel was considerably better. Muriel Spark explores the complex morally ambiguous lives of her charcters through a medley of straight narrative and flash-forwards that propel the reader through the lives of Miss Brodie's girls. "Give me a girl at an impressionable age and she will be mine for life," says the elegant Miss Brodie, the 1930s Edinburgh schoolmistress who is devoting her "prime" to six hand-picked, 10-year-old students. She demonstrates an unorthodox devotion that values art above history and dwells upon her personal love life and travels. The author breaks into the novel to tell the reader, in brief paragraph-long omniscient interruptions just what will become of the girls in the future. Miss Brodie's attempt to inspire seems to lead to unintended consequences, but it is not clear exactly what her original intent was beyond, perhaps, merely dazzling these young girls. As a result a sort of melancholy emerges, but it is the vigor and beauty of Spark's prose make this a great novel. It not surprising that it was included on the best 100 lists of both Time Magazine and the Modern Library.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Beware of miss Jane Brodie! Not the novel of course but of the character. An awful woman. Narcissistic, manipulative and terrible. It all seems so nice with a modern, feminist teacher gathering a few selected pupils around her in 1930s Edinburgh. Soon though, you realize miss Brodie needs the girls as an audience or a scene for her own purposes. She´s not at all interested in them, only in herself. It´s a wonderful portrait of a manipulative woman, of the 1930s and of young vulnerable girls.flag
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Miss Jean Brodie plies her unorthodox teaching methods at the sedate Marcia Blaine School for Girls in Edinburgh, Scotland, where she is in her prime, ”the moment one is born to.” In the 1930s, between-the-wars, she was not that different from other spinsters, teaching elsewhere in Scotland. But she just didn’t fit in with the traditional concepts that prevailed at Marcia Blaine, and the head mistress is bound and determined to find a way to rid the school, and her chosen girls, otherwise known as the Brodie set, of Miss Brodie.But her set, her personally chosen crème de la crème consists of six girls who are completely devoted to their teacher. And yet one will betray her. Who? And how? Although the betrayal is revealed fairly early on in the narrative, Spark takes the reader back and forth in time, exposing events that lead up to the forced retirement of the instructor and the later resultant lives of the Brodie set. And why does the teacher reveal so much of her personal life to her young charges? It doesn’t take long for one of her students to figure out that Miss Brodie has taken one teacher as a lover, while actually being in love with another teacher. She is at once both a sympathetic romantic but also has a dark, calculating, self-centered side.Spark’s prose is divine throughout:”Mary MacGregor, although she lived her twenty-fourth year, never quite realized that Jean Brodie’s confidences were not shared with the rest of the staff and that her love story was given out only to her pupils. She had not thought much about Jean Brodie, certainly never disliked her, when, a year after the outbreak of the Second World War, she joined the Wrens, and was clumsy and incompetent, and was much blamed. On one occasion of real misery---when her first and last boyfriend, a corporal whom she had known for two weeks, deserted her by failing to show up at an appointed place and failing to come near her again---she thought back to see if she had ever really been happy in her life; it occurred to her then that the first years with Miss Brodie, sitting listening to all those stories and opinions which had nothing to do with the ordinary world, had been the happiest time of her life.” (Page 24)The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie is full of dark satire, complex characters that are not necessarily likable, and intricate plotting. Highly recommended.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This best known work by Murial Spark, is a story of a woman teacher, Miss Jean Brodie who teaches at an girls day school in Edinburgh, Scotland during the thirties. Miss Brodie is unconventional to say the least. The story is told through the girls of the Brodie set, mostly by Sandy. Miss Brodie states; “Give me a girl at an impressionable age and she is mine for life”. The book starts out by introducing us to the girls along with a prophetic statement about each of the girls. Miss Brodie teaches strongly in the areas of art and history and her own personal travel stories and neglects the subjects of math and science. Early on the reader learns that someone betrays Miss Brodie. There are some flash forwards in the story as well as some details in Miss Brodie’s life that are slowly reviewed. The main focus starts out with Miss Brodie’s love life. The girls are eleven in the beginning. There is a love triangle with Miss Brodie, the art teacher and the music teacher. Inserted into the story are some references to Mussolini, Hitler and to Franco. Major themes relate to individualism and education. Individualism has been taken away from the Brodie set. A teacher has used them to live her own life vicariously through them. The other major theme is the differences between curriculum and cultural learning. The question is, was Miss Brodie betrayed or did she finally trip herself up with her influence over young the young girls? This is a great book for discussion and I experienced it rather than just read it, which makes it a 5 star book for me.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    First line:~ The boys, as they talked to the girls from Marcia Blaine School, stood on the far side of their bicycles holding the handlebars, which established a protective fence of bicycles between the sexes, and the impression that at any moment the boys were likely to be away ~This is a portrait of six young women coming of age and falling under the influence of a idolized teacher. And a portrait of the teacher, Miss Jean Brodie, who unduly and perhaps dangerously influences 'her girls' and tells them:'Little girls, I am in the business of putting old heads on young shoulders, and all my pupils are la crème de la crème. Give me a girl at an impressionable age and she is mine for life.' She abandons the standard curriculum and tells her students of her personal love life, her travels and her opinions on politics, art, religion. Always with their math textbooks open on their desk and a math problem on the blackboard so if the head mistress came by she would ‘see’ that they were studying what was expected. She focuses on a select few and lives her life vicariously through them and invites them to art museums, theatre, concerts etc. Her teaching methods meet with resistance and eventually she is forced to resign as she is seen as having influenced the politics of her students by encouraging and praising Fascism.This is a short, well written, well crafted book. Spark uses words as a painter uses the paint and canvas. She paints broad strokes first, so that we know right from the very beginning of the book that Miss Brodie is fired from her teaching position, that Mary McGregor died, that Sandy became a nun and wrote a significant psychology tome.Then Spark paints the details and we learn how all of this came to be.I could not help but see Maggie Smith in my mind’s eye as I was reading this. She played Miss Brodie in the 1969 movie. I will always remember the way that she said (this is from the movie not the book) as she was being told to resign:I am a teacher! I am a teacher, first, last, always! Do you imagine that for one instant I will let that be taken from me without a fight? I have dedicated, sacrificed my life to this profession. And I will not stand by like an inky little slacker and watch you rob me of it and for what? For what reason? For jealousy! Because I have the gift of claiming girls for my own. It is true I am a strong influence on my girls. I am proud of it! I influence them to be aware of all the possibilities of life... of beauty, honor, courage. I do not, Miss Mackay, influence them to look for slime where it does not exist! I am going. When my class convenes, my pupils will find me composed and prepared to reveal to them the succession of the Stuarts. And on Sunday, I will go to Cramond to visit Mr. Lowther. We are accustomed, bachelor and spinster, to spend our Sundays together in sailing and walking the beaches and in the pursuit of music. Mr. Lowther is teaching me to play the mandolin. Good day, Miss MackayI would highly recommend this book. I thoroughly enjoyed it even though it has rather sinister implications.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Miss Jean Brodie is a schoolteacher at a private girl's school in Edinburgh, Scotland. She has unusual teaching methods, and believes that science, mathematics and other items on the curriculum should take a back seat to teaching about beauty and culture. During class, she is perfectly capable of telling her students to open their math books in case the headmistress drops by and proceed to tell them all about her recent trip to Italy—this is the 1930s and she is a fan of Mussolini's "Black Shirts”—and about her love life. The story is centred on "The Brodie Set", a group of six girls who've attended her classes in primary school and have kept in touch with Miss Brodie as they grew up, visiting her at home for tea our accompanying her to cultural outings. Each of the girls has a particular characteristic she is known for. For instance, when we are introduced to them, we find out that Jenny is famous for her beauty, Sandy is famous for her "small, almost nonexistent, eyes", Monica is famous for mathematics and her anger, and Rose is famous for Sex, and these descriptions are repeated throughout the novel to form a comic motif. The novel travels backward and forward in time, and we know early on that one of the girls eventually betrayed Miss Brodie—the school has been trying to get rid of her for a long time, and the headmistress has questioned each of Miss Brodie's former students repeatedly to try to find something to pin on her, though of course we only find out who delivered the damning information toward the end, by which time we've learned how most of the characters have fared into their adult lives and the extent of the influence Miss Brodie exerted on them.I read this novel a couple of years ago and it was my first foray into Muriel Spark's writing. I can't say I liked it much back then. I could see there was humour here, but it failed to amuse me, and it probably didn't help that I didn't like Miss Brodie much—no doubt her fascist leanings didn't help much. I was disappointed, as was expecting to love this book based on much of what I'd read about it. I decided to revisit it this year, on audio format this time, and while the narrator Miriam Margolyes did a fine job and I got a kick out of hearing the Scottish pronunciations (I'd forgotten that Edinburgh is pronounced "Edinborough"), I didn't get much more out of it than I did the first time. I wouldn't want to discourage others from reading this book, because it's got lots going for it, but if I were to recommend good places to start with Spark's writing based on my personal preferences so far, I'd sooner recommend Memento Mori or Loitering with Intent, which I both found excellent and very funny.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Wonderful! A note-perfect, densely-woven little novel about an extraordinary, and extraordinarily strange, Scottish schoolmistress and the long-lasting effect she has on her favorite pupils. Candida McWilliams, who composed the introduction to my copy, writes, "So distinguished a technician is Muriel Spark that one may take practically any section of the book and it will provide metaphor for the entire book itself." She's absolutely right. For a book that lasts just one-hundred-and-thirty pages, "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie" lends itself to a remarkable number of alternate readings. It's a portrait of its marvelously eccentric title character and a commentary on the shortcomings of a "woman's education" and a critique of twentieth century totalitarianism and a meditation on art and its uses and a love-letter to shabby-genteel Edinburgh and a smutty, funny sex comedy all at once. However, I particularly enjoyed sensitive Spark's depiction of adolescence, a time when everyone can, and maybe should, be "known for something" and the world more or less revolves around gossip and social gamesmanship. As lighthearted as "Miss Brodie" seems, though, I admire Spark for presenting her readers with a character like Miss Jean Brodie. From a certain perspective, this constitutes an absolutely enormous risk. Miss Brodie, who rejects conventional morality, considers herself cultured and extraordinarily perceptive, and years for artistically-induced ecstasy, seems, at times, to be a cruel caricature of a certain kind of female reader. Like John Kennedy O'Toole, whose Ignatius J. Riley lampooned self-styled intellectuals, Spark might be seeking to challenge her readers with a cartoonishly distorted personification of their own worst intellectual habits. That she manages to pull this high-wire act off without once deviating from her perfectly pitched high-camp tone is nothing short of amazing. "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie" is highly recommended.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Relatively short, but incredibly powerful. This is the story of Miss Jean Brodie, a Scottish schoolmistress who has a class of girls she proclaims to be 'la crème de la crème', and decides to mould them to suit her rather unconventional political ideals. She has an on-off romance with the Art master, Teddy Lloyd, and to make him jealous she decides to have him fall in love with one of the girls - but her scheme backfires when another starts a real affair with him instead.I read this book when I was very young and found it highly accessible - I would probably love it even more if I read it now. What I found then, however, was that it perfectly captured the unhealthy curiosity that children, who think they're grown up but they're not, have for the adult world. The juxtaposition of Miss Brodie's underestimation of the girls, and the girls' overestimation of themselves, seemed psychologically spot on. As well as a study of how easily relationships between teachers and students can go wrong when the students know too much, it is a novel about friendship, loyalty, school, adolescence, middle age, politics, religion and conventionality.The title refers to Miss Jean Brodie, but I found I really identified with Sandy Stranger, one of the girls who rebels against Miss Brodie. The portrayal of an adolescent, still sensitive and impressionable but who thinks she is clever and attempts to deal with adult situations, really resonated with me. One of the images of my childhood is of Sandy Stranger walking out of the school in tears in the 1969 film adaptation, with Miss Brodie's voice narrating what she said at the beginning of her classes: 'Little girls, I am in the business of putting old heads on young shoulders, and all my pupils are la crème de la crème. Give me a girl at an impressionable age and she is mine for life.' This couldn't be more true; for me, this sums up the impression the book made on me.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Told in a mix of timelines and a whirlwind of delicious characters this is a funny, intelligent and exuberant story of the "Brodie Set". Miss Brodie is an unorthodox teacher at a girls school in the 1930s and she (as she likes to remind people) is in her Prime. Her favourite pupils are groomed to be the crème de la crème: the Brodie set. 'This is Stanley Baldwin who got in as Prime Minister and got out again ere long,' said Miss Brodie. 'Miss Mackay retains him on the wall because she believes in the slogan "Safety First". But Safety does not come first. Goodness, Trust and Beauty come first. Follow me.' It's a damn hard book to review, short and chaotic it's full of pitch perfect, intelligent and humorous writing. I cannot really find anything to pick out. From the intriguing and enticing way Spark introduces the Brodie set by narrowing them to a simple skill (Rose is famous for her sex appeal, Monica for her maths and her anger) to extra tension of the ominous betrayal and the bitter-sweet edge of future reality. It is a book of many layers and complexity but it is never confusing or tiresome and oddly, although very much of it's time it doesn't feel dated. "We shall discuss tomorrow night the persons who oppose me' said Miss Brodie. 'But rest assured they shall not succeed.''No,' said everyone. 'No, Of course they won't.''Not while I am in my prime. It is important to recognize the years of one's prime, always remember that,..' Highly recommended. It's my second attempt at Muriel Spark, I didn’t quite gel with the character in [Drivers Seat] but I loved this.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Miss Jean Brodie teaches at a small Scottish day school for girls. She uses unusual teaching methods such as telling her impressionable prepubescent girls romantic stories and taking them on excursions to art galleries and plays. Her favorite pupils are referred to as the "Brodie set" a group of girls especially selected because of their parents love of Miss Brodie's methods or just indifference. She constantly reminds the girls how lucky they are to know her while she is "in her prime" and manipulates them to her own ends.When Miss Brodie continually reminds her girls that she is "in her prime" the author is alluding to her being a woman past marrying age that is trying to hold on to her influence and sex appeal. She is an egotistical spinster who uses her "Brodie set" as confidants and co- conspirators. They keep her secrets and help her to keep her job. She influences her students for the better or worse. She instills poise and confidence in some of her girls and they look back to there time with her with fondness. She also lets some of the girls down like the harassed Mary Macgregor and the misguided Joyce Emily.Miss Brodie is an idealistic admirer of the fascists. She feels persecuted by the head mistress of the school and she in turn persecutes one of her students, Mary Macgregor, by constantly blaming her for anything that goes wrong. Poor Mary is so dim that she takes the abuse. The other pupils copy the behavior and tease Mary to please their teacher.This is a very sexual novel. When we first meet the young pupils they are 10 or 11 years old and are both curious and naive about sex. The girls have conversations and write stories elaborating on the tales Miss Brodie tells of her past lover who died in World War I. Later Miss Brodie manipulates the girls into covering for her new affair and even encourages one pupil to start an affair with one of the teachers. This short novel is packed with meaning. I am impressed by Muriel Spark's economy of words, yet so much is said. By using repetition we learn so much about the characters personality and motives. This is a very well written novel and I look forward to reading more of her works in the future.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I like the way that the story gradually unfolds, you're aware of some of the events right from the beginning but it all comes together slowly to create one big picture.I think this would be my next choice for a Book Tree Book; I love the writing style, and there are some fantastic lines in it.I like the way it shows the girls growing up and the ways in which they change - by the end of the book you can really see Miss Brodie's influence on them. I wonder how things would have been different if they hadn't been part of her 'set'.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    An entertaining story, and a simple escape for an evening's read. Spark's humor here is delicate, and her character studies here both remarkable and engrossing. Worth the wandering.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I’ve heard others discussing how much they loved this book, so I was pleased to hear that it was one of the latest releases in the Popular Penguins series. A short novella, I thought this would be a perfect short read before I went on holidays. Well, I’ve returned from my holidays and I still can’t really work this one out.Miss Jean Brodie is a teacher at an Edinburgh school. She picks some of the girls from her class to be part of her set- some intelligent, some pretty and some neither. She is not a traditional teacher, telling them long stories about her ‘prime’- loves and losses. She is somewhat controversial- having an affair with a fellow teacher and suggesting that a schoolgirl should become the lover of one of her former lovers. Her ‘girls’ idolise her, even going so far to make up romantic fiction stories about her. The book follows her ‘girls’ to adulthood, until she is betrayed by one of them and forced to retire from teaching. I’m not really sure what the fuss is about. Certainly teachers shouldn’t act like that in any time period and Miss Brodie is ahead of her time- rather a feminist, having affairs and travelling alone in the 1930s, not to mention idolising Mussolini! It is well written and the characters are well drawn. I’m not one to deeply analyse what I read for pleasure (I leave that to students) but while it’s enjoyable, it’s not life changing literature.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This is an odd little book, a sort of coming of age story set in a school during the early 1930's in Scotland. Miss Jean Brody, a teacher at the school, has selected six girls to befriend and influence, and eventually one of them betrays her. In the Afterward, James Wood calls this book funny, but I found nothing particularly funny about it. I suspect this is just one of those books I don't get. In fact, instead of finding the story funny, I thought that Miss Brodie's influence, control, and manipulation of the girls a little disturbing, not to mention her admiration for Hitler and Mussolini. She seemed a somewhat desperate and stereotypical spinster to the point of being a little neurotic. An interesting enough read, but not a favorite.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Muriel Spark is one of those authors that many readers/bloggers love.  This book in particular, The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, seems to be a favorite.  I can understand why.  It is smart, funny, and sad, with a helping of  pathos for good measure.Miss Jean Brodie is a teacher at a girl's school in 1930's Edinburgh, Scotland, "in her prime".  She has what we would call "teacher's pets" in her class - girls that she hand picks because she sees something special in them, something that she can use to turn them  into the "creme de la creme" as she loves to call it.   She is an unconventional teacher, not teaching from the books but from her own life experiences.  She has no use for history, math or science - only the arts, music, dance, literature, and love.   She has constant run-ins with the head mistress and the other administrators who look for opportunities to have her dismissed but always seem to come up short.  The "Brodie set" (as they are referred to by everyone else at the school) consists of six girls with different strengths, abilities and interests:  one is known for her mathematical ability; one for her athletic ability, one for self awareness and confidence (and at a later age, sex).  Then there are the two best friends, Sandy and Jenny - Sandy is known for her small, beady eyes and perfect diction, and Jenny for her acting ability.  The 6th girl is Mary MacGregor who has no ability at all except to be the picked on by the rest of the group.Miss Brodie instructs the girls to focus on individualism.  She tells them they should not cultivate "team spirit" in such things as sporting activities for the school.  Instead, she takes them to cultural events and out for tea, hoping that in return she will win their loyalty.  Ironically, as the girls gain  the individuality Miss Brodie wanted them to have, their loyalty begins to erode.   When Miss Brodie is eventually betrayed, she cannot imagine it being caused by one of her girls.Sparks does a great job of  taking the reader into the minds of impressionable young girls as they try to assimilate life as presented to them by a vibrant but repressed woman.  I enjoyed this book and look forward to reading more by her.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Jean Brodie, the brusque, determined and assured Scottish school-mistress breezes her way through this classic tale, leading her creme-de-la-creme girls in her own indomitable and idiosyncratic style. Muriel Spark luminescent prose takes us beyond her brash exterior and into her internal life through the romantic passions and questionable political leanings which lead her into a tragic error. Spark is a superb stylist, her books are short because they carry no flab, no extraneous filler - each nuance and implication is carried economically in underplayed remarks and gestures. She is an expert at packing and there's a lot to be missed if you don't read around the novel. Which of her girls is the one who betrays her?
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A book that was on many people’s recommended reads lists. Jean Brodie is a teacher at a girls’ school with a following. She’s sharp and well-read and clever, which goes against the grain of the educational institution, but she is also flawed and leads her students onto paths that do not always serve them or the world well. Why is it when we find someone we admire we seem to ignore the parts that don’t work for us? A cautionary tale, in a sense, for me.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Intricately put together, but alienatingly mannered and lacking in narrative drive. One of the many books that make me wonder whether people who describe it as "humorous" are doing so in order to appear clever, rather than because while reading it they actually, well, laughed.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I just finished this 1001 book, and I felt quite disappointed. I thought the writing was at times repetitive, and the characterisation poorly executed, overall. For me, Jean Brodie's character was simply foolish and pathetic, but I think my memory of the film where Maggie Smith plays that part has influenced my judgment, as she was quite compelling in the role. The narrative was written in an interesting manner, as TQD says, signalling the outcome for the various characters. This device can be at times extremely irritating, but in this instance it works, as a linear narrative would have made the tale quite dull.Having dissed the book, I must say that I was drawn in to it, despite my expectations not being met.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A character study and power play of fascinating construction. In Miss Brodie, Dame Muriel Spark gave a prime example of a perfect and artistic presentation of a character’s state and fate. The novel’s layers of inquiry are peeled one by one, spoiling secrets like they don't matter at all, whose meanings are only incidental to the story and serves the greater purpose of feeding Miss Brodie’s ego. The novel concerns itself with the conflict between Insight and Instinct, virtues that Miss Brodie claims reside at the heart of her philosophy of education. Her self-proclaimed genius and superiority hinges, ultimately, on the unity or twinning within herself of Insight/Instinct. In her devotion to assimilate her influence over her brood of adolescent students who are at the mercy of her care, and in her insistence to spread her influence to them with utmost gusto, Miss Brodie is one of the most naïve and deluded characters invented in fiction.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I listened to this as an audiobook last year and it was just the perfect thing. First, I love audiobooks with British narrators (check) and I love novels about boarding schools (check) and finally I love kind of understated British humor (check). And the writing is good! I should go back and read the book, but the audio experience was so lovely. I highly recommend it for your next solo road trip.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I liked this even better than the movie—everything was a bit clearer and richer: my distaste for Jean Brodie, the growing divergence of the girls' private feelings from their subservient demeanor, the perspectives into the minds of Miss Brodie's adult acquaintances. Whereas my admiration for Maggie Smith's abilities made her the most interesting part of the film for me, I found myself more interested in the growth of the girls as individuals and their life choices in the book.The book is not long and Ms. Spark has achieved such a good flow between the school-days perspective and that of Sandy's memories, and between the stories of the six girls, that it almost seemed like a short story.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I discovered this one from the Girlybooks community here at LT. It's set in the 1930s at a girl's school around a group of young girls described as "Brodie's set." Miss Jean Brodie is a teacher at the school who believes, obviously, that she is in her prime. She teaches the girls what she thinks is really important: how to take care of their faces, their hands, and about Miss Brodie's love life.This is a quick book, it can easily be read on a rainy Saturday (as today was) and is laugh out loud funny in places. I would definitely recommend.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, by Muriel Spark, is a wonderful little book about Miss Brodie, a teacher at a girl's school in 1930's Edinburgh, and her "set" - the group of five girls who Miss Brodie personally chose as her crème de la crème. Miss Brodie's teaching style is eccentric, with a focus on literature, art, music and stories about her personal life. As the girls mature, they speculate about Miss Brodie's personal life and eventually become embroiled in it. And in the end, one of Miss Brodie's set betrays her.The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie is about the influence that a teacher can have on impressionable minds. All of the girls are shaped by Miss Brodie and bear that influence throughout their lives. Spark's tale is not so much plot-driven as character-driven. Throughout the book we learn about the tales the girls - especially Sandy - weave about their teacher and how those stories morph and change through the years. Personally, I love Spark's writing style - she is humorous and notes the tiniest details which help to define a person. She repeats certain phrases throughout the book, illuminating the way that individual details help make up our knowledge of a person.

Book preview

The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie - Muriel Spark

The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie

Muriel Spark

Contents

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2

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5

6

A Biography of Muriel Spark

1

THE BOYS, AS THEY talked to the girls from Marcia Blaine School, stood on the far side of their bicycles holding the handlebars, which established a protective fence of bicycle between the sexes, and the impression that at any moment the boys were likely to be away.

The girls could not take off their panama hats because this was not far from the school gates and hatlessness was an offence. Certain departures from the proper set of the hat on the head were overlooked in the case of fourth-form girls and upwards so long as nobody wore their hat at an angle. But there were other subtle variants from the ordinary rule of wearing the brim turned up at the back and down at the front. The five girls, standing very close to each other because of the boys, wore their hats each with a definite difference.

These girls formed the Brodie set. That was what they had been called even before the headmistress had given them the name, in scorn, when they had moved from the Junior to the Senior school at the age of twelve. At that time they had been immediately recognisable as Miss Brodie’s pupils, being vastly informed on a lot of subjects irrelevant to the authorised curriculum, as the headmistress said, and useless to the school as a school. These girls were discovered to have heard of the Buchmanites and Mussolini, the Italian Renaissance painters, the advantages to the skin of cleansing cream and witch-hazel over honest soap and water, and the word menarche; the interior decoration of the London house of the author of Winnie the Pooh had been described to them, as had the love lives of Charlotte Bronte and of Miss Brodie herself. They were aware of the existence of Einstein and the arguments of those who considered the Bible to be untrue. They knew the rudiments of astrology but not the date of the Battle of Flodden or the capital of Finland. All of the Brodie set, save one, counted on its fingers, as had Miss Brodie, with accurate results more or less.

By the time they were sixteen, and had reached the fourth form, and loitered beyond the gates after school, and had adapted themselves to the orthodox regime, they remained unmistakably Brodie, and were all famous in the school, which is to say they were held in suspicion and not much liking. They had no team spirit and very little in common with each other outside their continuing friendship with Jean Brodie. She still taught in the Junior department. She was held in great suspicion.

Marcia Blaine School for Girls was a day school which had been partially endowed in the middle of the nineteenth century by the wealthy widow of an Edinburgh book-binder. She had been an admirer of Garibaldi before she died. Her manly portrait hung in the great hall, and was honoured every Founder’s Day by a bunch of hard-wearing flowers such as chrysanthemums or dahlias. These were placed in a vase beneath the portrait, upon a lectern which also held an open Bible with the text underlined in red ink, O where shall I find a virtuous woman, for her price is above rubies.

The girls who loitered beneath the tree, shoulder to shoulder, very close to each other because of the boys, were all famous for something. Now, at sixteen, Monica Douglas was a prefect, famous mostly for mathematics which she could do in her brain, and for her anger which, when it was lively enough, drove her to slap out to right and left. She had a very red nose, winter and summer, long dark plaits, and fat, peglike legs. Since she had turned sixteen, Monica wore her panama hat rather higher on her head than normal, perched as if it were too small and as if she knew she looked grotesque in any case.

Rose Stanley was famous for sex. Her hat was placed quite unobtrusively on her blonde short hair, but she dented in the crown on either side.

Eunice Gardiner, small, neat and famous for her spritely gymnastics and glamorous swimming, had the brim of her hat turned up at the front and down at the back.

Sandy Stranger wore it turned up all round and as far back on her head as it could possibly go; to assist this, she had attached to her hat a strip of elastic which went under the chin. Sometimes Sandy chewed this elastic and when it was chewed down she sewed on a new piece. She was merely notorious for her small, almost nonexistent, eyes, but she was famous for her vowel sounds which, long ago in the long past, in the Junior school, had enraptured Miss Brodie. Well, come and recite for us please, because it has been a tiring day.

She left the web, she left the loom,

She made three paces thro’ the room, She saw the water-lily bloom,

She saw the helmet and the plume,

She look’d down to Camelot."

It lifts one up, Miss Brodie usually said, passing her hand outward from her breast towards the class of ten-year-old girls who were listening for the bell which would release them. Where there is no vision, Miss Brodie had assured them, the people perish. Eunice, come and do a somersault in order that we may have comic relief."

But now, the boys with their bicycles were cheerfully insulting Jenny Gray about her way of speech which she had got from her elocution classes. She was going to be an actress. She was Sandy’s best friend. She wore her hat with the front brim bent sharply downward; she was the prettiest and most graceful girl of the set, and this was her fame. Don’t be a lout, Andrew, she said with her uppish tone. There were three Andrews among the five boys; and these three Andrews now started mimicking Jenny: Don’t be a lout, Andrew, while the girls laughed beneath their bobbing panamas.

Along came Mary Macgregor, the last member of the set, whose fame rested on her being a silent lump, a nobody whom everybody could blame. With her was an outsider, Joyce Emily Hammond, the very rich girl, their delinquent, who had been recently sent to Blaine as a last hope, because no other school, no governess, could manage her. She still wore the green uniform of her old school. The others wore deep violet. The most she had done, so far, was to throw paper pellets sometimes at the singing master. She insisted on the use of her two names, Joyce Emily. This Joyce Emily was trying very hard to get into the famous set, and thought the two names might establish her as a something, but there was no chance of it and she could not see why.

Joyce Emily said, There’s a teacher coming out, and nodded towards the gates.

Two of the Andrews wheeled their bicycles out on to the road and departed. The other three boys remained defiantly, but looking the other way as if they might have stopped to admire the clouds on the Pentland Hills. The girls crowded round each other as if in discussion. Good afternoon, said Miss Brodie when she approached the group. I haven’t seen you for some days. I think we won’t detain these young men and their bicycles. Good afternoon, boys. The famous set moved off with her, and Joyce, the new delinquent, followed. I think I haven’t met this new girl, said Miss Brodie, looking closely at Joyce. And when they were introduced she said: Well, we must be on our way, my dear.

Sandy looked back as Joyce Emily walked, and then skipped, leggy and uncontrolled for her age, in the opposite direction, and the Brodie set was left to their secret life as it had been six years ago in their childhood.

I am putting old heads on your young shoulders, Miss Brodie had told them at that time, and all my pupils are the crème de la crème.

Sandy looked with her little screwed-up eyes at Monica’s very red nose and remembered this saying as she followed the set in the wake of Miss Brodie.

I should like you girls to come to supper tomorrow night, Miss Brodie said. Make sure you are free.

The Dramatic Society … murmured Jenny.

Send an excuse, said Miss Brodie. I have to consult you about a new plot which is afoot to force me to resign. Needless to say, I shall not resign. She spoke calmly as she always did in spite of her forceful words.

Miss Brodie never discussed her affairs with the other members of the staff, but only with those former pupils whom she had trained up in her confidence. There had been previous plots to remove her from Blaine, which had been foiled.

It has been suggested again that I should apply for a post at one of the progressive schools, where my methods would be more suited to the system than they are at Blaine. But I shall not apply for a post at a crank school. I shall remain at this education factory. There needs must be a leaven in the lump. Give me a girl at an impressionable age, and she is mine for life.

The Brodie set smiled in understanding of various kinds.

Miss Brodie forced her brown eyes to flash as a meaningful accompaniment to her quiet voice. She looked a mighty woman with her dark Roman profile in the sun. The Brodie set did not for a moment doubt that she would prevail. As soon expect Julius Caesar to apply for a job at a crank school as Miss Brodie. She would never resign. If the authorities wanted to get rid of her she would have to be assassinated.

Who are the gang, this time? said Rose, who was famous for sex-appeal.

We shall discuss tomorrow night the persons who oppose me, said Miss Brodie. But rest assured they shall not succeed.

No, said everyone. No, of course they won’t.

Not while I am in my prime, she said. These years are still the years of my prime. It is important to recognise the years of one’s prime, always remember that. Here is my tram car. I daresay I’ll not get a seat. This is nineteen-thirty-six. The age of chivalry is past.

Six years previously, Miss Brodie had led her new class into the garden for a history lesson underneath the big elm. On the way through the school corridors they passed the headmistress’s study. The door was wide open, the room was empty.

Little girls, said Miss Brodie, come and observe this.

They clustered round the open door while she pointed to a large poster pinned with drawing-pins on the opposite wall within the room. It depicted a man’s big face. Underneath were the words Safety First.

This is Stanley Baldwin who got in as Prime Minister and got out again ere long, said Miss Brodie. Miss Mackay retains him on the wall because she believes in the slogan ‘Safety First.’ But Safety does not come first. Goodness, Truth and Beauty come first. Follow me.

This was the first intimation, to the girls, of an odds between Miss Brodie and the rest of the teaching staff. Indeed, to some of them, it was the first time they had realised it was possible for people glued together in grown-up authority to differ at all. Taking inward note of this, and with the exhilarating feeling of being in on the faint smell of row, without being endangered by it, they followed dangerous Miss Brodie into the secure shade of the elm.

Often, that sunny autumn, when the weather permitted, the small girls took their lessons seated on three benches arranged

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