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Two women are reunited twenty years after the love affair that
changed both their worlds. Sylvia Brownrigg's Pages for Her is a
novel about love, memory and what it is to be a woman, a wife, and
a mother. 'A complex portrait of two women's sexuality . . . an
absolute pleasure' - Alice Sebold Flannery, a writer with one
well-known rather racy book to her name, is, by her own admission,
in a situation she never thought she'd be: married to a man who
overshadows her and defined by her primary relationships as wife
and mother. When Flannery is invited to a writers' conference she
sees a chance to return to a world she knew well. And then she
recognizes the name of the chair of the event: Anne Arden. Suddenly
Flannery is thrown back twenty years to her eighteen-year-old self
and the most intense love affair of her entire life. On the other
side of the world Anne is travelling for work. Recently out of a
decades-long partnership, she feels adrift, unsettled. When a
friend asks her to chair an event at a writers' conference she says
yes and a couple of months later, on the same campus where they met
and fell in love, Anne and Flannery are reunited. Though their
lives have taken them in different and unexpected directions, the
pull between them proves irresistible.
Pages for You is story of the beginning, blossoming and falling
apart of a delirious love affair, by Sylvia Brownrigg. 'A love
letter written for a lost lover . . . mesmerizing' - Helen Dunmore,
The Times When Flannery Jansen arrives at university, she is
totally unprepared for an encounter that will rock her existence.
But when she comes across Anne Arden in a local diner, Flannery
falls dramatically and desperately in love. Flannery is quickly
embarrassed in the face of the older woman's poise and
sophistication, and under the gaze of those impossible green eyes,
but slowly their paths intertwine, and soon Flannery becomes Anne's
eager student in life and love.
Morality Tale is a novel about the triangular complications of a
modern marriage and the comedy that flows from them. When the
elusive but exciting Richard (an envelope salesman with a nice
layperson's line in Zen philosophies) meets this novel's narrator,
he offers her a friendly escape from her own daunting domestic
life. Burdened by her husband's ongoing negotiations with his angry
ex-wife, the strains of looking after two stepchildren, and the
lingering ghost of her own past betrayals, she finds that the life
of a "second marryer" leaves much to be desired. As her friendship
develops with Richard, so grows the shadow cast over her marriage
by his presence, and when they make a late, illicit bay crossing
together on a ferryboat, the story gathers momentum under
California's Mount Tamalpais. There, in the fabled Golden State,
Sylvia Brownrigg shows how even a layperson's Zen can lead to some
important revelations about the need to look forward, not back.
Told with unwavering honesty and wit, Morality Tale explores what
it means to be married a second time around--and the crucial
universal truth that change is often the key to staying together.
It is 1998. In the safe haven of her London office--a room her
husband jokingly calls The Delivery Room--Mira Braverman listens to
the stories of her troubled patients. They include an aristocratic
woman going through an intense infertility drama, an American
journalist who is eager to have a baby and is on the lookout for a
potential father, and an irritable divorce who likes to taunt Mira
about her Serbian nationality. As the novel unfolds, Mira discovers
she is not as distant from her patients' pain as she might once
have been: her husband Peter struggles with illness, NATO's threats
against her country grow more serious, and submerged truths from
her own past seem likely to erupt. Compelling, complex, and always
deeply human, The Delivery Room is an engaging examination of the
incomplete understandings that course between therapist and
patient, and a set of variations on the theme of motherhood--as
well as a timely meditation on the meanings of wars fought from a
distance, when ordinary citizens have to measure their personal
griefs against the outrages experienced by those under attack.
A woman travels to seven "invisible" countries, and from the moment
of arrival she is surprised, challenged, and disturbed by what she
discovers. In the brightly colored and somewhat sinister world
conjured by American novelist Sylvia Brownrigg, what is
standard--passing through customs, checking in to a hotel,
pronouncing words in a foreign language--becomes challenging and
fraught. A traveler's search for adventure vies with the anxiety
provoked by the oddity of the unfamiliar. In Invisible Countries,
Brownrigg explores border-crossing, cultural misunderstanding,
touristic voyeurism, and naivete as her visitor attempts to
navigate the environments she encounters. Accompanying the text are
images by renowned British artist Tacita Dean, which extend the
traveler's journeys into spheres that turn almost uncanny in their
combination of abstraction and realistic detail.
One of the 100 Best Books of the Year, San Francisco Chronicle One
the Best Fiction Books of the Year, Kirkus Two ex-lovers, both
women, reunite decades after their passionate affair in this
tender, insightful novel about marriage, motherhood, and sexuality
Pages for Her is the story of two women, Flannery and Anne, each at
a personal turning point, and the circumstances that lead to their
reunion. Twenty years after their brief but passionate affair,
chronicled in Sylvia Brownrigg's earlier novel Pages for You,
Flannery has the chance once again to meet Anne, who opened young
Flannery up to the possibility of love-then left her heartbroken.
Having long ago put their love behind them, they live now on
opposite coasts. Anne has been in a deep, childless partnership
with a fellow scholar, Jasper, who recently left her. Flannery, to
her own surprise, married a charismatic artist named Charles, with
whom she has a young daughter. Submerged by her husband's demands
and personality and her adjustment to motherhood, Flannery has lost
sight of herself and her work. When the two women meet at a
conference, they find that the passion and understanding between
them has endured, though it has been hidden. In rediscovering each
other, they are able to rediscover themselves. Pages for Her is an
exhilarating, passionate work that explores marriage, sexuality,
and the transformative power of love over time. "Sharp observations
about motherhood and womanhood . . . Audacious, confident, smart,
seductive." -The New York Times Book Review
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