Getting a Life: StoriesAlfred A. Knopf, 2001 - 196 страница From the writer whose work has been described as sparingly tragic and unsparingly funny (Ruth Rendell) and shimmering with grace and savagery and wit ("The Times," London), a new collection: nine stories about the blisses and irritations of domestic life. The setting is contemporary London and its suburbs. A seventeen-year-old girl, a student of Coleridge and Keats, walks toward her future resolved not to be anything like her successful career-woman mother. At a small caf? in South Kensington, two women, teachers, become tipsy and exchange confidences about their family difficulties and marital turmoils, revealing more than they intend. A celebratory dinner for a timber merchant and his wife in South London turns into something else entirely. In the midst of a sensuous shopping spree, a woman shares with her friend the secret of a state of mind known as wurstigkeit ('sausageness'). At a Robert Burns gala in a Mayfair hotel, poetry and money collide head-on. These are stories that charm and move us as they catch the special timbre part laughter, part wail of youngish, more or less sophisticated lives in the city at our particular moment in time. |
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Страница 47
... knew it was technically possible to provide enough protein for young children from beans as long as these were eaten in various careful conjunctions with other beans - all to do with amino acids - but she was not wanting to plan and ...
... knew it was technically possible to provide enough protein for young children from beans as long as these were eaten in various careful conjunctions with other beans - all to do with amino acids - but she was not wanting to plan and ...
Страница 91
... knew how the talk went at this kind of mixed do with spouses . The men would address the women beside them with bored chivalry , feeding them brief obvious questions about their children or their house or their little part - time jobs ...
... knew how the talk went at this kind of mixed do with spouses . The men would address the women beside them with bored chivalry , feeding them brief obvious questions about their children or their house or their little part - time jobs ...
Страница 163
... knew I hadn't been mistaken . I knew she had an eye . We were two of a kind when it came to this . She'd caught on . She was caught in . From now on she was a driven woman . Soon we had amassed enough between us to start trying on . In ...
... knew I hadn't been mistaken . I knew she had an eye . We were two of a kind when it came to this . She'd caught on . She was caught in . From now on she was a driven woman . Soon we had amassed enough between us to start trying on . In ...
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anyway asked Au pair baby breath Brian Mahon Burns Burns Night Burns Supper catsuit Charlie child childminder color conga course Daddy Donald Forfar door Dorrie dress Eurydice eyes face feel felt front garden girl glass growled hand head Helen Simpson Herr Mangelkammer Holly Horble husband Iain Buchanan inside Isobel Jade Janine Jean Keith Mannion kiss lain Lassies laughing listen Lois look Mail on Sunday Martin Max's Maxine Maxine's minute nanny never nice night noise Orpheus pulled quaich Robert Burns Robin Roderick MacKenzie round Ruth Rendell says Cassie says Sally screaming shouted sigh sleep smiled sort started stood surtitles Susan talk Tess there's thing thought Nicola tinnitus trying turned walk watched What's whiskey whispered wife woman women Wurstigkeit