Someone at a Distance
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4.0 • 4 Ratings
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
‘A very good novel indeed about the fragility and also the tenacity of love’ commented the Spectator recently about Someone at a Distance, the 1953 novel by Dorothy Whipple, which was ignored fifty years ago because ‘editors are going mad for action and passion’ (as she was told by her publisher). But this last novel by a writer whose books had previously been bestsellers is outstandingly good by any standards. Apparently ‘a fairly ordinary tale about the destruction of a happy marriage’ (Nina Bawden in the Preface) yet ‘it makes compulsive reading’ in its description of an ordinary family (‘Ellen was that unfashionable creature, a happy housewife’) struck by disaster when the husband, in a moment of weak, mid-life vanity, runs off with a French girl. Dorothy Whipple is a superb stylist, with a calm intelligence in the tradition of Mrs Gaskell (both wrote in the Midlands and had similar preoccupations). ‘The prose is simple, the psychology spot on’ said the Telegraph, and John Sandoe Books commented: ‘We have all delighted in this unjustly forgotten novel; it is well written and compelling.’
Customer Reviews
Painful
And yet wonderful. .
Someone at Distance… should be approached
First rate. Tougher than it at first seems. Sentimental, but earns it. English smugness about being English kept in check. Very funny. Kind and hard-headed at the same time.
Real and Surreal
This book is lovely. It is like a film playing out in your mind and you are most definitely identifying yourself as one of the characters in the story. Dorothy Whipple’s writing is surreal with how she pulls you into the story and creates a silent need to keep reading.