In her witty, masterful debut novel, Margaret Drabble conjures a gripping story of sibling rivalry. Louise, beautiful and sophisticated, marries wealthy novelist Stephen Fairfax. Sarah, recently graduated from Oxford, is thrown back into family matters. Louise’s life becomes one of parties, gossip columns and glamour. Sarah, now in London, begins to discover a newfound freedom, only glimpsing her sister’s fashionable life. But as rumours of infidelity in Louise’s marriage surface, Sarah finds that her sister, beneath her cool exterior, may not be the woman she thought she was.
‘Margaret Drabble’s early novels were intimate and sprightly chronicles of the small dissatisfactions and small triumphs of young women like herself’ – Hilary Mantel
Review
Her bright, insouciant début novel . . . joined the strengths of old-school realism with the playful detachment and blatant mythmaking of postmodernism -
* New Yorker *Her book . . . has considerable humour, urbanity and intelligence -
* Kirkus Reviews *Praise for Margaret Drabble: One of the most thought-provoking and intellectually challenging writers around -
* Financial Times *I have learned so much from Margaret Drabble's work. Her prose is very beautiful, very funny, and at the same time very serious. Novels like
The Millstone and
Jerusalem the Golden have helped me to understand what great writing can be -- SALLY ROONEY
Margaret Drabble's early novels were intimate and sprightly chronicles of the small dissatisfactions and small triumphs of young women like herself -- HILARY MANTEL -
* New York Review of Books *One of the most versatile and accomplished authors of her generation -
* New Yorker *She was one of the most assiduous chroniclers of female experience in Britain during that time. Drabble's work has always been characterised by astute social observation -
* Guardian *One of our foremost women writers -
* Guardian * --This text refers to an alternate
kindle_edition edition.
About the Author
Margaret Drabble was born in Sheffield in 1939 and educated at Cambridge. She was awarded a CBE in 1980. Her many novels include The Radiant Way, (1987), A Natural Curiosity, (1989), The Gates of Ivory (1991), The Peppered Moth (2000), The Seven Sisters (2002), The Red Queen (2004) and The Sea Lady (2006), all of which are published by Penguin. Margaret Drabble is married to the biographer Michael Holroyd and lives in London. --This text refers to an alternate
kindle_edition edition.