My Next Bride
by Kay Boyle
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This book made me miserable. The extreme poverty, the filthy, neglected children who have been so isolated that they don’t know how to play like proper children, the greed and self-interest of the self-declared colony (cult) leader, the constant hunger of the Russian ladies who have nothing to cling to except their tattered clothes from the previous century, the bulging white eyes of the ancient landlady who is blind but sees all, the waves of sickness that wash over the young American as she tries desperately to induce an abortion, the child conceived on a drunken, forgotten night, the very detailed descriptions of the latrine behind the shop, the greenness, the stench, the fevers, endless glasses of cloudy Pernod …this is not the show more picturesque side of France. Kay Boyle’s writing is like nothing else I’ve ever read. This book is like one long, disturbing poem. show less
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Virago Modern Classics (226)
Common Knowledge
- Original publication date
- 1934
- Epigraph
- "Knife will be my next bride."
-Laurence Vail - Dedication
- FOR
CARESSE - First words
- Victoria was in Neuilly by afternoon, watching for trees in the bare gardens.
Kay Boyle's life, for much of her early fiction, was the catafalque on which she was to hang her fiction. (Afterword) - Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"Don't cry. Antony said you never cried," said Fontana, a small, clear voice picking it up and putting it together and going on with it for ever.
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)Or so we believe as the novel ends. (Afterword)
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- (3.94)
- Languages
- English
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- 2
- ASINs
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