In an essay for
Open Letters Monthly, Ingrid Norton praised the novel's subtlety, The happiness depicted in
A Month in the Country is wise and wary, aware of its temporality. When he arrives in Oxgodby, Birkin knows very well life is not all ease and intimacy, long summer days with "winter always loitering around the corner". He has experienced emotional cruelty in his failed marriage. As a soldier, he witnessed death: destruction and unending mud; the edges
are brighter for it. Birkin's idyll in the country is brought into relief by what Birkin has gone through in the past and the disappointments that, it is implied, await him. Carr's great art is to make it clear that joy is inseparable from the pain and oblivion which unmake it. == Background ==