Saltwater
A Best Book of 2020: Open Letters Review
"Andrewss writing is transportingly voluptuous, conjuring tastes and smells and sounds like her literary godmother, Edna OBrien . . . What makes her novel sing is its universal themes: how a young woman tries to make sense of her world, and how she grows up."
Penelope Green, The New York Times Book Review
This luminous (The Observer) feminist coming-of-age novel captures in sensuous, blistering prose the richness and imperfection of the bond between a daughter and her mother
It begins with our bodies . . . Safe together in the violet dark and yet already there are spaces beginning to open between us.
From that first immaculate, fluid connection, through the ups and downs of a working-class childhood in northern England, the one constant in Lucys life has been her mother: comforting and mysterious, ferociously loving, tirelessly devoted, as much a part of Lucy as her own skin. Her mother's lessons in womanhood shape Lucys appreciation for desire, her sense of duty as a caretaker, her hunger for a better, perhaps reckless life.
At university in glamorous London, Lucys background sets her apart. And then she is finished, graduated, adrift. She escapes to a tiny house in Donegal left empty by her grandfather, a place where her mother once found happiness. There she will take a lover, live inside art and the past, and track back through her memories and her mothers stories to make sense of her place in the world.
In a stunning new voice in British literary fiction (The Independent) that lays bare our raw, dark selves, Jessica Andrewss debut honors the richness and imperfection of the bond between a daughter and her mother. Intricately woven in lyrical vignettes, Saltwater is a novel of becoming-- a woman, an artist-- and of finding a way forward by looking back.
Auteur | | Jessica Andrews |
Taal | | Engels |
Type | | Paperback |
Categorie | | Literatuur & Romans |