Mona of the Manor: A Novel

· Harper · Narrated by Mara Wilson
2.0
1 review
Audiobook
5 hr 45 min
Unabridged
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About this audiobook

Narrated by Mara Wilson

Set in the early 1990s, the long-awaited tenth novel in Armistead Maupin’s beloved and enduring Tales of the City series follows the adventures of Mona Ramsey, now the widowed Lady of a glorious old manor in Britain’s golden Cotswolds, and her fabulous adopted son Wilfred, as they come to the aid of an American visitor with a troubling secret.

When Mona Ramsey married Lord Teddy Roughton to secure his visa—allowing him to remain in San Francisco to fulfill his wildest dreams—she never imagined she would, by age 48, be the sole owner of Easley House, Teddy’s grand, romantic country manor in the UK. She also didn't imagine that she’d need to open the manor’s doors to paying guests to afford the electric bill and repair the leaking roof. Yet somehow she and her young friend Wilfred--whom guests assume is serving as Easley’s charming-but-clumsy butler--and the loopy old gardener Mr. Hargis, are making it work.

This delicate equilibrium is upended when Americans Rhonda and Ernie Blaylock arrive for a weekend vacation at Easley, and Wilfred stumbles onto their terrible secret. Now, instead of being able to focus on the imminent arrival of her old friend Michael Tolliver and beloved parent Anna Madrigal, Mona will need to focus all of her considerable charm, willpower, and wiles—and the help of Wilfred and Mona’s girlfriend Poppy, the town’s postmistress and local calligraphy whiz—to set things right before the Midsummer ceremony when the whole town will descend on Easley’s historic grounds.

Ratings and reviews

2.0
1 review
Shay Tyler
July 15, 2025
I feel very affectionate about the characters, but there isn't 39 chapters worth of story here. I hadn't listened to an Armistead Maupin story on audiobook before, so maybe it's a stylistic things my eyes have just darted over before, but it started to feel tedious that the prose would give some information, then a character would say it, and then a character would tell somebody else about it. You can feel that it's written in 2024 not the 90s in which it's set; the politics that were happening, gay nightlife, the AIDS epidemic, are happening in hindsight, and there's some moral critiques I wholeheartedly agree with that feel awkwardly worked in. I'm sounding critical, but I did enjoy it. I was just tired by the time it got to the climax and wished I could have skimmed some pages
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About the author

Armistead Maupin is the author of the Tales of the City series, which includes Tales of the City, More Tales of the City, Further Tales of the City, Babycakes, Significant Others, Sure of You, Michael Tolliver Lives, Mary Ann in Autumn, The Days of Anna Madrigal, and Mona of the Manor. His other books include the memoir Logical Family and the novels Maybe the Moon and The Night Listener. Maupin was the 2012 recipient of the Lambda Literary Foundation’s Pioneer Award. He lives in London with his husband, Christopher Turner.

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Narrated by Mara Wilson