Description
Description
Critical Reviews
Critical Reviews
"[A] silvery, suggestive novella of love and friendship. The year is 1944, the place is London, and all the young men are at war. We find ourselves at Horsham Science College with a group of women who spend their time dissecting mammals and navigating material privations (bombs go off, pipes freeze) and emotional detonations (ruptured affairs, thwarted tête-à-têtes). It's a bleakly cinematic book, full of unkempt gardens and smoky cafes . . . Read if you like: Sally Rooney, E.M. Forster, the Todd Haynes film Carol."--Molly Young "New York Times"
"Suyin--best known for her heavily autobiographical 1952 novel, A Many Splendored Thing--is an artist of emotion, and her renderings of early romantic obsession, frustration with oppressive social mores, and the dullness of love lost are endlessly quotable . . . Dashes of early Margaret Drabble crossed with the youthful diaries of Patricia Highsmith; my pencil went dull with all the sentences I underlined."--Keziah Weir "Vanity Fair"
"The progression of their intimate connection, interwoven with Red's coming-of-age, is entertaining . . . Red's story offers peeks into several versions of not-so-covert lesbian life in the 1940s . . . For the contemporary reader, this novel, originally published in 1962, feels like an astute observation on how compulsory heterosexuality has impacted and stifled society for generations. A rumination on a life that could have been, this novel encapsulates queer history often left untold."-- "Kirkus Reviews"
"This intense, atmospheric novel set in wartime London--all silvery sheen and cigarette smoke--rivals Alfred Hayes for the clipped gloom it brings to the subject of mankind's greatest trial: love . . . All sad stories should be this much fun to read."--John Self "The Critic"
"Lesbian drama set in wartime London. Enough said."-- "Lambda Literary, Staff Picks"
"Steeped in a pool of volatile emotions--from jealousy to doubt to tangled-up frustrations--and set against the gray, grim austerity of fascism and war, the novel walks to the edge of enduring rubble, and compels us to stay and look."--Snigdha Koirala "Literary Hub"
"Originally published in 1962 and reissued in 2022, it's a rare depiction of a queer relationship . . . vividly brought to life with the taut, stylish writing.--Laura Chouette "Electric Literature"
"The private world of bliss, frustrations, lies and substitutes involved in a love outside the canon of western mores is bitterly and movingly told."-- "Times Literary Supplement"
"A remarkable performance . . . A novelette only in its length."--Anthony Quinton "Sunday Telegraph"
Publishing Information
Publishing Information
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