Jean Rhys’s first novel is a heartbreaking and disturbingly intimate portrayal of an isolated woman in Paris.
Set in a superficially romantic, between-wars Paris, Quartet by Jean Rhys is a poignant tale of a lonely woman. Against a background of winter-wet streets, Pernod in smoky cafes and cheap hotel rooms with mauve- flowered wallpaper, Marya tries to make something substantial of her life in order to withstand the unreality of her surroundings. Alone, her Polish husband in prison, she is taken up by an English couple who slowly overwhelm her with their passions.
‘[Quartet] belongs to the new tradition in prose, which shuns elaboration for sharpness and intensity of effect’ The New York Times
Not-so-gay Paree
I first read Jean Rhys in my mid-teens; a copy of Quartet from my parents’ bookshelf, which drew me with its undemanding slimness and its cover featuring the beautiful face of Isabelle Adjani in...
Read moreVoyage in the Dark
Good Morning, Midnight is in fact the fourth in a series of novels that draw largely on Jean Rhys’s own life. Sasha Jansen is a lonely, ageing alcoholic who, at the instigation of a worried friend,...
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