Paying Guests is E. F. Benson's brisk, observant portrait of a genteel boarding house in interwar England, where fragile hierarchies are tested at the dinner gong. With supple free indirect narration and set pieces that slip from decorum into farce, Benson choreographs rivalries over precedence, musical evenings, and charitable committees into a comedy of exposure. The paying guest-neither servant nor kin-becomes a lens on status, thrift, and the uneasy commerce of intimacy, aligning the novel with the comedy of manners while giving it a distinctly interwar bite. Benson (1867-1940), son of an Archbishop of Canterbury and later a resident of Rye, had honed his eye on provincial theatricals in the Mapp and Lucia novels. Interwar anxieties-class mobility, shrinking incomes, and the need to take lodgers-supplied both subject and stage. A prolific satirist, he writes with the amused precision of a man intimate with committees, clubs, and seaside seasons. Recommended to readers who relish ruthless civility and ensemble comedy, Paying Guests offers polished laughter and a sharp primer on the economics of gentility. Ideal for admirers of social satire and students of interwar Britain. Quickie Classics summarizes timeless works with precision, preserving the author's voice and keeping the prose clear, fast, and readable-distilled, never diluted. Enriched Edition extras: Introduction · Synopsis · Historical Context · Brief Analysis · 4 Reflection Q&As · Editorial Footnotes.