Editors Reads
The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie by Muriel Spark — book cover
Editor's Pick beginner

The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie

by Muriel Spark · HarperCollins · 137 pages ·

4.3
Reviewed by Clara Whitmore

Miss Jean Brodie, teacher at the Marcia Blaine School for Girls in Edinburgh in the 1930s, dedicates herself to educating her chosen set of girls for life rather than for exams. She is charismatic, dangerous, and will be betrayed. Spark's masterpiece in 137 pages.

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Editors Reads Verdict

Muriel Spark's masterpiece and one of the finest short novels in English — the portrayal of a charismatic teacher who is both inspiring and fascist is one of literature's most complex portraits of educational influence.

4.3
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What We Loved

  • The structural audacity — we are told who betrays Brodie from the start, which changes how we read everything — is as daring as any formal trick in fiction
  • Miss Brodie is one of literature's great creations: inspiring and appalling simultaneously
  • The Edinburgh setting is rendered with Spark's characteristic dry precision

Minor Drawbacks

  • The brevity means some readers want more development — the novel sketches rather than elaborates
  • Spark's irony can be so dry that some readers miss it entirely

Key Takeaways

  • Charismatic teachers are also exercises of power — Brodie's dedication to her girls is also a project of self-replication
  • Fascism in the 1930s was aesthetically seductive to educated people who should have known better
  • Betrayal is not always wrong — Sandy's betrayal of Brodie is morally ambiguous in ways the novel refuses to resolve
Book details for The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie
Author Muriel Spark
Publisher HarperCollins
Pages 137
Published January 1, 1961
Language English
Genre Literary Fiction, Classic
Difficulty Beginner
Best For Readers who want a classic of British fiction at its most compressed and ironic, and anyone interested in the ethics of charismatic teaching.

The Set

Miss Jean Brodie is at the height of her powers. She teaches at a respectable Edinburgh school for girls in the 1930s and has selected her Brodie Set — six girls she will educate for life, not for exams. They will know about art, love, politics. They will learn from her own passionate example.

Spark tells us almost immediately that one of the six will betray Brodie to the headmistress, causing her to be dismissed. The novel’s pleasure — and it is a pleasure — is working out who will betray her and why. The answer, when it comes, is both surprising and completely inevitable.

The Complexity

What makes The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie endure is the moral complexity of its portrait. Brodie is genuinely inspiring — her girls are more educated, more alive, more capable of thought than their conventionally taught peers. She is also an aestheticised fascist who admires Mussolini and Hitler and whose influence leads, at least indirectly, to one of her girls going to fight for Franco and being killed.

The novel refuses to resolve the question of whether Brodie is primarily admirable or primarily dangerous. The betrayal is both right (Brodie is harmful) and wrong (Sandy, who betrays her, becomes a nun with a haunted face and an obsession with her former teacher that suggests something incomplete in the resolution). Spark leaves it all unresolved in 137 pages.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie" about?

Miss Jean Brodie, teacher at the Marcia Blaine School for Girls in Edinburgh in the 1930s, dedicates herself to educating her chosen set of girls for life rather than for exams. She is charismatic, dangerous, and will be betrayed. Spark's masterpiece in 137 pages.

Who should read "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie"?

Readers who want a classic of British fiction at its most compressed and ironic, and anyone interested in the ethics of charismatic teaching.

What are the key takeaways from "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie"?

Charismatic teachers are also exercises of power — Brodie's dedication to her girls is also a project of self-replication Fascism in the 1930s was aesthetically seductive to educated people who should have known better Betrayal is not always wrong — Sandy's betrayal of Brodie is morally ambiguous in ways the novel refuses to resolve

Is "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie" worth reading?

Muriel Spark's masterpiece and one of the finest short novels in English — the portrayal of a charismatic teacher who is both inspiring and fascist is one of literature's most complex portraits of educational influence.

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#edinburgh#education#1930s#teacher#fascism#girls#betrayal#scottish-fiction

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