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  1. More than Satire: Cold Comfort Farm and the Humanizing of the Rural. Josh Skinner. Contrary to what it might seem like, Stella Gibbons does not create a world. While Cold Comfort Farm is definitely a place like no other, it is actually a place like many others.

    • Josh Skinner
  2. Cold Comfort Farm. Starkadder family farm to which Flora Poste moves. Taking its name from a line in William Shakespeare’s play King John (1596-1597), the farm is located outside the village...

  3. While other female satirists of the 1930s might serve to develop this argument – Dorothy Parker or Dawn Powell in the United States, or Ivy Compton-Burnett in England – my case study here will be Cold Comfort Farm.

    • Jonathan Greenberg
    • 2011
  4. Jun 13, 2016 · This podcast scripts catch-up from the Really Like This Book miniseries on the mighty tradition of British humour in fiction is on Stella Gibbons’ fine satire of rural life and literary pretentiousness, Cold Comfort Farm (1932).

  5. Jan 1, 2001 · Stella Gibbons' Cold Comfort Farm pits an Austen sensibility against a rural Radcliffean scenario and proceeds to parody both as literary ancestors of a contemporary narrative of femininity.

    • Faye Hammill
  6. Complete summary of Stella Gibbons' Cold Comfort Farm. eNotes plot summaries cover all the significant action of Cold Comfort Farm.

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  8. Briefly summarized, Cold Comfort Farm concerns a London woman, Flora Poste, who loses her parents at the age of nineteen, and decides to live with some of her relatives until she marries. She chooses a family of Sussex farming cousins, the Starkadders, and resolves to tidy up their lives for them.

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