A new novel from the author of "Sexual Intercourse", this book focuses on the relationship between a mother and daughter. It is about the growth of sexual desire, about incest, about jealousy and about the pain of adolescence.
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An occasionally interesting but out-of-focus story about a girl-child named Rose (make what you will of the fact that the protagonist and author share a moniker), written by Sigmund Freud's great-granddaughter. Boyt's first novel was called Sexual Intercourse (1990); this one could be subtitled Sexual Abuse, since it chronicles the way Rose's stepfather molested her--and not even very secretly--throughout her childhood. Actually, though, it's the trappings of Rose's youth that are most compelling. Her earliest memories are of sailing from England to Denmark aboard her new daddy's boat; going eel fishing; making weekly visits to a bathhouse with her sister and brother to wash off the salt spray; enduring a storm at sea; and later settling down in Trinidad, where she watches her mother wrestle with a woman who's come on to stepfather Klaus. Rose is also witness and prisoner to her mother's fecundity (``I only have to look at a naked man to get pregnant''). Thus, every year Rose's mother produces another baby, with Rose soon giving her childhood over to infant care. But she is not fated to linger long at the sidelines of sex, since Klaus begins visiting her in bed. Craving approval and affection, the girl comes to appreciate his attention. Eventually, though, Klaus disappears, and the family spends many grim years in a tatty section of London, where Rose does downers and becomes a teenage tart. Interspersed throughout here are fleeting glimpses of Rose as an adult, experiencing murkily rendered problems with romance. But how the girl's youth informs her life remains a giant question mark. Unsatisfying as a sexual history, and in the end one wishes Boyt could imagine a novel that has to do with something besides sex--like character and plot for starters. -- Copyright ©1991, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
Surely we can read into the fact that the great-granddaughter of Sigmund Freud chooses to bestow on the eponymous narrator of her second novel (after Sexual Intercourse ) her own given name. Rose, 28, tells her life story--in a "book"that takes her two years to write--not as a chronological account but as journal-like reminiscences and impressions of events, interspersed with occasional comments on the current state of her affairs. She describes her unconventional early childhood on a freighter sailing between England, Denmark, Finland, Spain and Trinidad with her mother, her three siblings and Klaus, her mother's lover and the ship's captain. Rose initially mistakes Klaus's sexual advances toward her as a sign of his quasi-paternal affection, but not for long. The family, without Klaus, returns to England, where they live in poverty. As a young teenager in the early 1970s, Rose busies herself with barbituates and boys; her mother lacks the strength to tame her children. When Klaus reappears and again sexually abuses Rose, her mother accuses her of asking for it. The women in Rose's life are abused and abandoned by men--she describes her sense that they share "a female mystery, some kind of damage." Boyt's language is poetic; her descriptions through Rose's strong voice of sights, scents, people and moods are vivid, often painful but always lively .
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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Seller: Peakirk Books, Heather Lawrence PBFA, Sheringham, United Kingdom
H/b; illus boards; vg; 8vo; White spine black writing. Seller Inventory # 49428
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Seller: Peakirk Books, Heather Lawrence PBFA, Sheringham, United Kingdom
H/b; illus boards; vg; 8vo; 134pp; ex lib with rubber stamps, White spine black writing. Seller Inventory # 41477
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Seller: WorldofBooks, Goring-By-Sea, WS, United Kingdom
Paperback. Condition: Very Good. Rose's mother Lucy had once been a famous actress and now has ambitions for her daughter. Rose, however, is not sure about her future, preferring her own fantasy world where she can change her profession from week to week. Suddenly Rose is offered a lead part in a new film and it seems there is no escape. Elizabeth Beresford is perhaps best known as the author of "The Wombles", although she has written over 20 novels for children including "The Four of Us", "Adventures of Poon" and "Charlie". The book has been read, but is in excellent condition. Pages are intact and not marred by notes or highlighting. The spine remains undamaged. Seller Inventory # GOR013819999
Quantity: 1 available