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Expiation (Paperback)
Elizabeth Von Arnim; Preface by Valerie Grove
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R529
Discovery Miles 5 290
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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"Daddy's Gone A-Hunting" is about the expectations of women, about
a house-bound mother reluctantly (desperately) at home all day, in
contrast to her daughter who has escaped, to university and then,
we can assume, to a job. 'The book came out at a time,' writes
Valerie Grove (author of the recently published "A Voyage Round
John Mortimer") in the Preface, 'when the impact of the new wave of
feminism, which would change everything under the banner of women's
liberation, had not yet arrived'.In Ruth Whiting's commuter-belt
village 'the wives conform to a certain standard of dress, they run
their houses along the same lines, bring their children up in the
same way; all prefer coffee to tea, all drive cars, play bridge,
own at least one valuable piece of jewellery and are moderately
good-looking.' Yet Ruth is on the verge of going mad. A 'nervous
breakdown' would be a politer phrase, but really she is being
driven mad by her life and her madness is exacerbated by everyone's
indifference to her plight.Although "Daddy's Gone A-Hunting" is at
times excuciatingly funny in its caustic dissection of the people
among whom the Whitings live, it is also a profound study of female
isolation. As the critic Judy Cooke has pointed out, Penelope
Mortimer's novels were 'intense, imaginative explorations of an
inner world. It is an enclosed world, dominated by fear, in which
physical experiences such as sterilisation and abortion isolate her
characters from their fellow beings and are metaphors for a deeper
spiritual isolation.'
'This book has one of the most charismatic narrators I've ever met'
J K Rowling 'I write this sitting in the kitchen sink' is the first
line of this timeless, witty and enchanting novel about growing up.
Cassandra Mortmain lives with her bohemian and impoverished family
in a crumbling castle in the middle of nowhere. Her journal records
her life with her beautiful, bored sister, Rose, her fading
glamorous stepmother, Topaz, her little brother Thomas and her
eccentric novelist father who suffers from a financially crippling
writer's block. However, all their lives are turned upside down
when the American heirs to the castle arrive and Cassandra finds
herself falling in love for the first time. 'I know of few novels
that inspire as much fierce lifelong affection in their readers'
Joanna Trollope **One of the BBC's 100 Novels That Shaped Our
World**
Frank and funny, unorthodox, liberated and quintessentially
English, Dodie Smith, playwright and novelist, was the author of
those immortal classics, The Hundred and One Dalmations and I
Capture the Castle. One of the most successful dramatists of her
generation, she spent the war years in America, befriended
Christopher Isherwood and, through Walt Disney's film, became a
household name.
Frank and funny, unorthodox, liberated and quintessentially
English, Dodie Smith, playwright and novelist, was the author of
those immortal classics, The Hundred and One Dalmations and I
Capture the Castle. One of the most successful dramatists of her
generation, she spent the war years in America, befriended
Christopher Isherwood and, through Walt Disney's film, became a
household name.
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Discovery Miles 3 100
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