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Aileen La Tourette

Author of Nuns and Mothers

8+ Works 75 Members 4 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: Aileen La Tourette

Works by Aileen La Tourette

Nuns and Mothers (1984) 31 copies
Cry Wolf (1986) 31 copies
Weddings and Funerals (1984) 7 copies
Touching Base (2006) 2 copies
Downward Mobility (2004) 1 copy
Late Connections (2008) 1 copy

Associated Works

The Mammoth Book of Lesbian Short Stories (1999) — Contributor — 93 copies
Passion Fruit (1986) — Contributor — 55 copies
Heterosexuality (1987) — Contributor — 28 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1946
Gender
female
Nationality
USA (birth)
Birthplace
New Jersey, USA
Places of residence
London, England, UK
Occupations
novelist
short-story writer

Members

Reviews

About 50 pages in, I started dreading returning to this book. The style reminded me of, maybe Joanna Russ? I'm not sure, it's been so long. She was trying to depict a post-apocalyptic society through the broken mind of the one person who had any knowledge of the past, but it just went in circles and I gave up.
 
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cindywho | 2 other reviews | May 27, 2019 |
Cry Wolf opens with Curie, a M-other and guru to a group of human-like creatures, seemingly innocent and in need of protection from the horrors of the world as it was before. During a class one of Curie's pupils suddenly displays a previously hidden intelligence and begins to ask questions about Curie's life. Curie resists giving this knowledge but finally relents and tells her story.

She begins with the four women she lived with. Together they decide, taking inspiration from Scheherazade, to stop the coming day of impending world destruction by working their way into nuclear bunkers and distracting the men there by telling them tales that will stop them pressing the red button. The next section of the book is each of their tales, each of which ends as lights start to flash and sirens start to sound.

Curie then goes back further in time to tell the story of her two mothers, Bee who is shot on the fences of Greenham Common and Lily Ghost who becomes her surrogate mother.

Finally we return to Curie and her friends who are seized by the military and shipped off to a desolate location and left to perish. There they meet the creatures who become Curie's disciples.

Hopefully with that synopsis I've saved you from having to read the book yourself. While there are interesting themes of story-telling, truth and deception I struggled with most of this book. The sudden relevation of her pupil's intelligence and Curie's decision to tell her story just seemed too contrived.

Also, as urania1 has noted in another Club Read thread, Curie's attitude to her charges in the first part of the book is really patronising, not what you'd expect from a feminist work. And I found the writing style too laboured. The blurb on the back describes La Tourette as having remarkable story-telling gifts, but for me it felt like she was trying too hard to create a sense of mystery and otherworldliness, particularly in the first part when a ritual festival/shag-fest takes place that I just couldn't engage with at all.

I've considered whether this like my usual reaction to anything mystical or magical realist, but I don't think so. I enjoyed couple of the women's stories (particularly the one where a girl has a large red tail), I just like any other parts!

I think my lasting impression is of a writer who was trying to write a book that would be remembered as a feminist classics of the 1980s. I'm sure I'm doing La Tourette a dis-service with that statement, but there you are.
… (more)
 
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charbutton | 2 other reviews | Aug 25, 2010 |
Set in a post-apocalyptic world in a small utopian civilization which is deliberately not given a history, this tale is less of a straightforward story of what happened and why than a story about truth, lies and storytelling. I felt my expectations were set up for a straightforward tale of destruction and survival and the creation of a new, better civilization and I was a little disappointed that didn't turn out quite that way (although you do get the basics); however, it did provide me a few thoughtful moments around the ideas of religion, history, truth, lies, the power of story and more so all is not lost. It brings to mind Atwood's Oryx and Crake. Curie and her four companions are much in the same position as Snowman was with the Crakers - What do you tell them and how much? A worthy read, though I wasn't wowed by it.… (more)
 
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avaland | 2 other reviews | Sep 13, 2008 |
At the 'Contrasting Voices' Poetry festival:
Aileen La Tourette, an American who has lived in Britain for many years, read from Touching Base, a collection about coming back to her roots and the memories these return evoke, especially on recent stay in Provincetown.
She was born in New Jersey, but now lives in the UK. She was one of Poetry Reviews 'New Poets' in 1992, has published two novels with Virago, many short stories in anthologies, and has had seven original plays broadcast on Radio 4.
Many of the poems in this second collection were written during a three-month stay in Provincetown, Massachusetts. The poems have many flavours: of an American childhood in the fifties, as well as a vision, often troubled, of the USA today.
Her novel, Late Connections, was highly commended by the Ilura Press awards.
A book of short stories, Oral History, will be published by Headland in 2007.
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Flagged
zeitgeist | Jun 15, 2007 |

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Statistics

Works
8
Also by
3
Members
75
Popularity
#235,804
Rating
½ 3.3
Reviews
4
ISBNs
10

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