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The Seven Sisters
  

The Seven Sisters (Audio Cassette)

de Margaret Drabble (Author), Frances Jeater (Author)
3.1étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (16 évaluations de client)

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From Amazon.com

It's hard to get across just how flat-out thrilling, how readable, how absorbing is Margaret Drabble's novel The Seven Sisters. It sounds positively dull when you describe it: Candida Wilton, a faculty wife of late middle age, has been dumped by her allegedly do-gooder husband. Her three daughters aren't too impressed with her, either. The mousy Candida decamps to an inglorious flat in London, where she measures out her time in visits to the health club, trips to the grocery store, and her weekly evening class on Virgil. She tentatively makes a few new friends and rediscovers some old ones. This opening section of the book, told in diary form, is a marvel of tone. With very little action, Drabble makes Candida's forays into the world quietly electrifying. One of her new pleasures is recording in her diary her mounting dislike of her ex-husband. You sense a giddy freedom: "Andrew had come to seem to me to be the vainest, the most self-satisfied, the most self-serving hypocrite in England. That kindly twinkle in his eyes had driven me to the shores of madness."

Ah, but there's more life for Candida yet. A small, unexpected inheritance is left to her, and so she organizes her friends--all female, mostly aged, mostly unmarried--into a tour of Naples as Virgil describes it in The Aeneid. Their holiday is a fictional tour-de-force: by turns a hilarious send-up of group dynamics, a metafictional lark, a feminist rant, and a dark acknowledgement of Candida's mortality. In the end, Drabble's novel is a very serious one, and a very good one. --Claire Dederer --Ce texte provient de la Hardcover édition.

From Publishers Weekly

The narrator of Drabble's teasingly clever new novel, like several of her fictional predecessors (in The Witch of Endor and The Peppered Moth) is a lonely, middle-aged woman disillusioned with her life and wary about her future. Betrayed and divorced by her husband, the smug headmaster of a school in Suffolk, and estranged from her three grown daughters, Candida Wilton moves to a flat in a rundown, slightly dangerous London neighborhood. To fill her days, she takes a class in Virgil, until the adult-ed building is taken over by a health club, which she joins for lack of anything better to do. The first section of the narrative is Candida's computer diary, in which she tries to make sense of the circumstances that have led her to this narrow place in her life, and her tentative efforts to reach out and make new friends. Though she apologizes for "the bleating, whining, resentful, martyred tone I seem to have adopted," Candida's account has the fresh veracity of someone who's a newcomer to London and to the state of being single. While Drabble paints her as sexually cold and maternally reserved, given to French phrases and snobbish assessments, Candida is a character the reader grudgingly admires as she tries to maintain hope that she can turn her life around. Then a small miracle occurs. A financial windfall allows her to take some of her fellow Virgil aficionados and two old friends on a trip to Tunis and Sicily, following the footsteps of Aeneas. Candida learns more about her companions as the trip progresses and gains some insights into her own behavior. The narrative takes several surprising turns, throwing the reader as off-center as Candida has become and proving that Candida herself has not been candid. But Drabble has: Candida's evasive account accurately charts the psychological territory of one who is suddenly cast adrift.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc. --Ce texte provient de la Hardcover édition.

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The Seven Sisters
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L'avis des consommateurs

16 évaluations
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3.1étoiles sur 5 (16 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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4.0étoiles sur 5 Wry look at 21st century middle age, Janv. 9 2008
Par Samantha "Critical Reader" (Ontario, Canada) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: The Seven Sisters (Paperback)
I was in literary heaven for the first half of the book, when she writes in diary form in the first person of the quotidian observations of a middle aged divorced woman in a seedy area of London. Immediately establishing an intimacy with the restrained, dry wit of the main character, I gleefully read the simple, engaging prose. Then the novel got creative and changed to third person. This section was okay, but I desperately wanted to skim. Then back to first person, but a different perspective. In the end, she takes us back to the enjoyable prose of the first half, and explained all the changes in perspective nicely and even criticized the third person section, but I was left feeling a bit tricked and cheated--but only enough to change the rating from a 5 to a 4.
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5.0étoiles sur 5 stunning........, Aoû 16 2003
Par Un client
This review is from: The Seven Sisters (Hardcover)
This book is simply awesome. I savored every paragraph.
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4.0étoiles sur 5 A book of slow change, possible in every age., Juil 7 2003
This review is from: The Seven Sisters (Hardcover)
I am not sure "the Seven Sisters" is a book for everyone. I am tempted to say that the story will most appeal to senior age women. On a second thought... maybe not. It will appeal to anyone who has been thinking of senior age, to anyone who has felt lonely, closed behind four walls, trying to figure out what to do with a day that stretches out endlessly... I myself do not belong to any of the above mentioned groups and still, have found this book to be relaxing and comforting, as in the end the bottom line is as always - reach out to other people.
This is a book of change. A very slow change that can happen in every age. Candida Wilton writes to herself the accounts of her London life. We do not know if Candida means her diary to be read by other people (there are hints she does), but it seems she wants to arrange her thoughts and feelings. Candida moved to London by herself after her divorce from Andrew. She says out front that she is not in a close touch with her three daughters. She does not make an effort to be connected to them or does not show the reader that she is much bothered by this fact. Only towards the end of the book do we start to understand the nature of her relationship with her daughters.

In London Candida tries to find what to do with her time. She walks, she exercises in the gym. She waits.

The main appeal of this book is its sincerity -although sincerity has many layers, as I understood in the end of the book. There are things you hold even from yourself. Candida's (she is candid) mood changes from depression (that even she is not able to fully admit to herself) to feelings of anticipation... a certainty that something good is about to happen to her; and indeed it does. The second part of the story is also told by Candida, however in the third voice and describes the trip she holds with her friends. Candida (or rather Margaret Drabble) seems to experiment with several methods of writing in order to achieve a better understanding of herself, or of others... The changing methods of writing are quite sophisticated and many issues connected with the changing methods are understood only later in the story. I am not certain these changes in tone were necessary. This is a good story which is able to stand by itself and I am not sure it needed all the decorations.

The Seven Sisters has a somewhat contradictory nature: surprising and boring, slow and fast, sincere and yet not totally revealing. I can understand all those who wrote it is slow. Indeed, this is part of the charm I found in this book. It did convince me as a frank description of a person writing to himself about all the small mundane details that make up one's life; accounts of conversations, thoughts, sights, things you eat. Face it; this is what you think about during the day, not always about highly philosophical issues. However, although the account is slow, there are sudden fast changes between the four parts, whereas the fourth part seems to be the most revealing. After you get used to a certain tone in the account, there are fast sudden changes. There is one part in the story which made me feel betrayed and cheated, and here I do agree with previous reviewers but all in all this is a believable story of real life. Candida is a dry person who does not hold a high opinion of herself - and this again is another appeal of the book. Its about regular people trying to give meaning to their lives in every age.

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Commentaires client les plus récents

3.0étoiles sur 5 Makes the mundane interesting
There is nothing special about Candida, but Drabble makes her struggle to create a new life after her divorce facinating. Read more
Publié le Juil 3 2003 par Susan Craine

3.0étoiles sur 5 Just when I finally started enjoying
this book, out of nowhere comes the storyline change that ruined it for me. Had the story stayed on track I would have enjoyed it far more. Read more
Publié le Jui 21 2003 par Readeramy

1.0étoiles sur 5 Drabble Dribble
Seven Sisters is pure drivel. Slow, dull, stereotypical, pseudo-intellectual whining. Ms. Drabble shows again that her writing is at best dribble. Read more
Publié le Mai 16 2003

1.0étoiles sur 5 Boring, boring and slow
This book is slow, slow and then crawls. If you aren't a middle aged woman, it makes you pity them more than a post-Steinem member of society should ever have to. Read more
Publié le Mai 8 2003

1.0étoiles sur 5 SLOW! SLOW! SLOW!!!
If you want a book that "flows" - skip this one! As a product of the fifties - and a voracious reader - I think I can usually find some good in most books. Read more
Publié le Avril 12 2003 par E. Wilson

3.0étoiles sur 5 Weird Sisters
What a great idea - making a late-middle-aged woman the "heroine" of a novel! If only Candida had been a more likeable heroine ... Read more
Publié le Fév 9 2003 par Samantha Madell

4.0étoiles sur 5 A Great Change of Pace
I'm a newcomer to the work of Margaret Drabble and from what I can tell she isn't someone that writes books that I would normally gravitate towards but, I must say I really... Read more
Publié le Fév 6 2003 par Caroline P. Hampton

1.0étoiles sur 5 B-O-R-I-N-G!!
I love good fiction, and I especially love good fiction about older women carving out a good life for themselves. Unfortunately, this book is neither! Read more
Publié le Janv. 8 2003 par AutumnHarvest

5.0étoiles sur 5 One of her best!
I am also a woman in my 50's, but I am not bitter and alone, so I loved this book. I think it's one of Drabble's best. Read more
Publié le Janv. 2 2003

5.0étoiles sur 5 Delightful; a great intro to Margaret Drabble
This was my first Margaret Drabble novel although I have heard of her, and had a feeling I would enjoy her work. The Seven Sisters is such clever fiction. Read more
Publié le Janv. 1 2003 par Book Lover

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