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From the beginning this novel's tension weaves warp and woof between hilarity and hell. Two women friends travel through France, encountering backroad-European misogynist crudities and the awkward experiences of being female, over thirty, with your teeth almost literally at your closest friend's throat, and "fancying men, but not liking them very much." Throughout Rona's random acts of innocent irritation and Cassie's caustic reactions, the funny and fumbled art of their compassion supersedes self-slaughter, stretches itself thin, but refuses to puncture, throughout years of pals together both on holiday and in troubled spirit.
Author: Janice Galloway
ISBN-10: 1564780821
ISBN-13: 9781564780829
Publisher: Dalkey Archive Press
Language: English
Published: 09/01/1995
Pages: 262
Format: Paperback
Weight: 0.75lbs
Size: 8.40h x 5.40w x 0.80d
Review Citation(s):
Publishers Weekly 07/24/1995 pg. 57
Kirkus Reviews 07/15/1995 pg. 969
Booklist 09/01/1995 pg. 41
Library Journal 10/15/1995 pg. 88
New York Times 10/01/1995 pg. 32
Janice Galloway was born in Ayrshire in 1955 where she worked as a teacher for ten years. Her first novel, ?"The Trick is to Keep Breathing," now widely considered to be a contemporary Scottish classic, was published in 1990. It was shortlisted for the Whitbread First Novel, Scottish First Book and Aer Lingus Awards, and won the MIND/Allan Lane Book of the Year. The stage adaptation has been performed at the Tron Theatre in Glasgow, the Du Maurier Theatre, Toronto and the Royal Court in London. Her second book, ?"Blood," shortlisted for the Guardian Fiction Prize, People's Prize and Satire Award, was a New York Times Notable Book of the Year. Her second novel, ?"Foreign Parts," won the McVitie's Prize in 1994. That same year, and for all three books, she was recipient of the E M Forster Award, presented by the American Academy of Arts and Letters. Her story-collection, ?"Where You Find It," was published in 1996, followed by a series of collaborative installation texts for sculptor Anne Bevan, published by the Fruitmarket Gallery as?Pipelines?in 2000. Her only play, "?Fall," was performed in Edinburgh and Paris in spring, 1998. She was the recipient of a Creative Scotland Award in 2001.
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