A strong early novel first published in 1935 under the name of Helen Ferguson. Set in the 1930s, in Bohemian London, Paris, and southern France, the story concerns a rich family and their financial and emotional vicissitudes. The autobiographical element (repression in childhood) is implicit for those familiar with the author's enigmatic life. The author actually identified so strongly with the glacial character of Anna Kavan that she subsequently wrote under that name. Her stories are...rich with a fresh kind of peril."" - New York Times.
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A first US appearance for a novel of acutely detailed alienation and despairing acceptance, first published in 1935 in Britain under the pseudonym Helen Ferguson. Kavan (Mercury, 1995), a writer always attuned to sensibility and mood, offers a story with a strong autobiographical element and period flavor that, in keeping with the despair that lurks beneath the surface, brings little solace. Lives intersect as Martin, the younger son of London department store magnate William Lewison, meets a woman named Anna Kavan while vacationing with his father in the south of France. Lewison Sr. has just prevailed upon Martin to divorce his French (and most unsuitable) wife, Germaine, on the grounds of her adultery with Martin's best friend, and Martin, self-centered but full of good intentions, is awaiting the final decree. Anna Kavan has left her husband Matthew in Burma and fled to London, but the attentions of a wealthy old judge who wants her to be his mistress, and the difficulties of a frustrating business venture with a friend, have driven her to France. Acknowledging her own cool and egocentric nature, she determines to make a life for herself, but she is neither wealthy nor educated, and when she meets Martin and the two fall in love, Anna wants to marry him. But Martin prefers his freedom, so Anna, unable to survive alone, reconciles with her husband. Meanwhile, the Lewison fortunes suffer a reversal, William falls ill, and Gwenda, Martin's sister, betrays her family by siding with their rival Tony Quested. Only William and Martin seem made of tougher stuff: William determines to revive his business, and Martin pays his debt to Anna by painting her portrait: It keeps ``alive a good and lovely thing which otherwise would have perished.'' Lives that are brittle, even shallow, are mercilessly stripped bare to reveal all their flaws and inadequacies by a writer who sees more often than not through a glass darkly. Chilling but intriguing. -- Copyright ©1996, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
First published in 1935, Kavan's nimble riches-to-rags family saga is now something of a period piece, though it brims with sophistication and charm. The central plot revolves around urbane but domineering widower William Lewison, owner of Greater London stores, who loses control of his empire and implacably seeks revenge on the scheming partner who has duped him. More interesting to most readers, however, will be the "Anna Kavan" we meet here (the novel was originally brought out under Kavan's married name of Helen Ferguson). A self-reliant, egocentric rebel of 25, Anna, having run away from her husband in India, now shares an apartment with a woman in London. Soon she ventures to Italy with Martin Lewison, William's son, an easygoing painter whose cheating wife has absconded with Martin's best friend, the slovenly bohemian artist Gerald Gill. Kavan (1901-1968), who was addicted to heroin for most of her adult life, portrays her alter ego as a born outsider, giving contemporary appeal to the protofeminist heroine who is resolved to take control of her destiny. The author's meticulous poetic analysis of her characters' emotions at times recalls Virginia Woolf, as she deflates pretense, hidden motives and inflated self-images with the lightest touch.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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Seller: Bookworks [MWABA, IOBA], Beloit, WI, U.S.A.
Hard Cover. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Good. Reprint. Early semiautobiographical novel by the acclaimed stylist, of a dysfunctional family, first published in 1935 under her married name; she later assumed the name Anna Kavan, who appears as a character in this and others of her books. Hardcover in jacket, as pictured; light wear to book, small scratch to lower front board; jacket with a large chip to lower front panel, minor creasing. Text clean, no names or marks; [10], 302 pages. Size: Octavo. Seller Inventory # y0150
Seller: Burwood Books, Wickham Market, United Kingdom
Hardcover. Condition: Fine. First Edition Thus. Hardback. No Dustjacket. 8vo. pp 302. Original publisher's brown cloth lettered gilt at the spine. FIRST APPEARED IN 1935 UNDER THE NAME HELEN FERGUSON. Brian Aldiss is quoted on the rear of the d/w:'Kavan's prose is like pollen, frail yet enduring. She is De Quincey's heir, Kafka's sister, and a true witer'. ISBN 0720609550 Fine in fine dust jacket.No inscriptions, not price-clipped. Seller Inventory # C94916
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Seller: PsychoBabel & Skoob Books, Didcot, United Kingdom
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good. The first edition under the name Anna Kavan, previously issued in 1935 under her then name of Helen Ferguon. First Peter Owen edition hardcover, text identical, with unclipped dust jacket. Light shelf wear to the jacket, otherwise in an unread condition. LW. Seller Inventory # 539625
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Seller: Mispah books, Redhill, SURRE, United Kingdom
hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Very Good. Dust Jacket may NOT BE INCLUDED.CDs may be missing. SHIPS FROM MULTIPLE LOCATIONS. book. Seller Inventory # ERICA82907206095504
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