From Publishers Weekly
"You live a simple life here away from corruption," an abusive father tells his four motherless daughters in this eerily tragic and mesmerizing first novel. "I cannot risk you becoming corrupted." Virtually imprisoned in their rural house even after their father's death, the four grow into a tormented old age. Milly, the narrator, recalls events from their youth and relates the decayed routines they follow after more than 60 years have elapsed, weaving an ever more nightmarish tale. Querulous older sister Aggie and younger twins Ellen and Esther (invariably called Ellenanesther because of their inseparability) have, like Milly, been scarred forever by the suicide of their warm and once-worldly mother, who, after years of being battered by her husband, drowned herself during the girls' childhood; by the cruelty of their father; and by their almost total isolation. A profusion of gothic elements--illegitimate conceptions; incest; concealed murder; a freak kept hidden in a cellar--is kept in place by Glaister's careful narrative structure and her empathy for Milly.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--Ce texte provient d'une édition qui n'est plus publiée ou qui est non diponible.
From Library Journal
Glaister's first novel is a macabre tale of a family devastated by a father's anger, jealousy, and perversion. It is told by Millie, now an old woman, who lives with her elder sister Agatha, whom she hates, and their two retarded twin sisters. They live in an old, dilapidated house in the midst of filth and squalor. It is a stormy night and Millie, unable to sleep, goes back in memory to the events from their childhood that eventually brought the four sisters to this pass. The result is at times very touching and sad, as innocent youth is juxtaposed with ruined age. Still, though Glaister's prose is attractive and economical, the novel is spoiled by an excess of grisly events that strain the reader's credulity. And the reconciliation of Millie and Agatha at the end, after a lifetime of antagonism, is phony.
- Bryan Aubrey, Fairfield, Ia.Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--Ce texte provient d'une édition qui n'est plus publiée ou qui est non diponible.