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Loading... Friendly Young Ladiesby Mary Renault
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. I hadn't expected to find this book about a young girl's awakening and the allure of the daring lesbian lifestyle (!) in a bygone bohemian age so charming - it's very funny, in a wistful, bittersweet way. It made me smile, rather than laugh, but I smiled all the way through. I remember reading Mary Renault years ago, rather stodgy historical fiction stuff about ancient Greece - I wouldn't have expected a book as sensitive and delightful as this from her on that basis. Pleasant surprise! ( )I think I enjoyed this book more this time than I have previously. As with other Renault books, every re-read seems to reveal something that you had missed earlier. I feel sorry for Elsie, I dislike Peter more intensely every time, and like Leo and Helen more and more. I can't remember what I thought about the ending earlier, this time I found it still quite confusing - I'm not entirely sure about what Leo intends to do. This edition incorporates Renault's 1983 afterword and a new afterword by Lillian Faderman - I enjoy Renault's but didn't think Faderman succeeded in adding anything to the text itself. Extremely disappointing. I really like The Charioteer, and this book definitely didn’t match up. I didn’t connect with any of the characters, and there was only one scene that even vaguely had the brilliant touch that makes many of the scenes in The Charioteer so amazing. Young girl comes to london to find her sister- and finds her living with a beautiful nurse. no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0375714219, Paperback)Set in 1937, The Friendly Young Ladies is a romantic comedy of off-Bloomsbury bohemia. Sheltered, naïve, and just eighteen, Elsie leaves the stifling environment of her parents’ home in Cornwall to seek out her sister, Leo, who had run away nine years earlier. She finds Leo sharing a houseboat, and a bed, with the beautiful, fair-haired Helen. While Elsie’s arrival seems innocent enough, it is the first of a series of events that will turn Helen and Leo’s contented life inside out. Soon a randy young doctor is chasing after all three women at once, a neighborly friendship begins to show an erotic tinge, and long-quiet ghosts from Leo’s past begin to surface. Before long, no one is sure just who feels what for whom.Mary Renault wrote this delightfully provocative novel in the early 1940s, creating characters that are lighthearted, charming, and free-spirited partly in answer to the despair characteristic of Radclyffe Hall’s The Well of Loneliness or Lillian Hellman’s The Children’s Hour. The result is a witty and stylish story that offers exceptional insight into the world of upcoming writers and artists of in 1930s London, chronicling their rejection of society’s established sexual mores and their heroic pursuits of art and life. (retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:09 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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