The Constant Nymph is a 1924 novel by Margaret Kennedy. It tells how a teenage girl falls in love with a family friend who eventually marries her cousin and explores the two girls' mutual jealousy. The novel was a best-seller on first publication becoming the first novel of a genre that might be called Bohemian. Much of its success was due to its then-shocking sexual content describing scenes of adolescent sexuality and of noble savagery in the Austrian Tyrol. There is a complimentary allusion to the novel in the 1934 detective story The Nine Tailors by Dorothy L. Sayers. Fifteen-year-old Hilary tells her father she aspires to write novels: Best sellers. The sort that everybody goes potty over. Not just bosh ones but like The Constant Nymph. Sayers includes a positive mention by two characters in her 1930 epistolary novel The Documents in the Case.
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