The Witch of Exmoor

The Witch of Exmoor
ISBN-10
0544002954
ISBN-13
9780544002951
Category
Fiction
Pages
264
Language
English
Published
2012-03-29
Publisher
HMH
Author
Margaret Drabble

Description

A Los Angeles Times Best Book of the Year: “Part social satire, part thriller, and entirely clever” (Elle). It is a midsummer’s evening in the English countryside, and the three grown Palmer children are coming to the end of an enjoyable meal in the company of their partners and offspring. From this pleasant vantage point they play a dinner-party game: What kind of society would you be willing to accept if you didn’t know your place in it? But the abstract question of justice, like all their family conversations, is eventually brought back to the more pressing problem of their eccentric mother, Frieda, the famous writer, who has abandoned them and her old life, and gone to live alone in Exmoor. Frieda has always been a powerful and puzzling figure, a monster mother with a mysterious past. What is she plotting against them now? Has some inconvenient form of political correctness led her to favor her enchanting half-Guyanese grandson? What will she do with her money? Is she really writing her memoirs? And why has she disappeared? Has the dark spirit of Exmoor finally driven her mad? The Witch of Exmoor brilliantly interweaves high comedy and personal tragedy, unraveling the story of a family whose comfortable, rational lives, both public and private, are about to be violently disrupted by a succession of sinister, messy events. “Leisurely and mischievous,” it is a dazzling, wickedly gothic tale of a British matriarch, her three grasping children, and the perils of self-absorption (The New Yorker). “As meticulous as Jane Austen, as deadly as Evelyn Waugh.” —Los Angeles Times

Other editions

Similar books

  • The Witch of Exmoor
    By Margaret Drabble

    A thrilling psychological game of morality and justice by one of England's greatest novelists. Margaret Drabble is the author of 12 novels, including "The Realms of Gold" and "The Gates of Ivory". Copyright © Libri GmbH.

  • Witch Light
    By Susan Fletcher

    The new novel from Susan Fletcher, author of the bestselling Eve Green' and Oystercatchers'.

  • London Consequences: A Novel
    By Paul Ableman

    London Consequences: A Novel

  • The Red Queen
    By Margaret Drabble

    An appropriate gift indeed for her impending trip to Seoul, but Barbara doesn't know who sent it. On the plane, she avidly reads the memoir, a story of great intrigue as well as tragedy.

  • The Pure Gold Baby
    By Margaret Drabble

    Praise for Margaret Drabble Reading a Margaret Drabble novel has always been like cozying up with a cup of hot tea by a gas fire with a dull English winter rain misting the window, and contemplating the story of one s own life.

  • The Needle's Eye
    By Margaret Drabble

    Meeting Rose, a woman whose notorious reputation caused her to appear in the news regularly, Simon Camish learns about her separation from her Greek husband, wonders at her refusal to leave her slum neighborhood, and admires her courage ...

  • The Coven: For fans of Vox, The Power and A Discovery of Witches
    By Lizzie Fry

    ' Paula Daly 'A real thrill ride.' Debbie Moon 'Dark, dangerous & powerful - I couldn't put it down' Michelle Kenney, author of The Book of Fire series 'Compelling, urgent and highly original as well as being a cracking read. I loved it.

  • The Seven Sisters
    By Margaret Drabble

    Reprint. 35,000 first printing. "Thoroughly witty and entertaining."-The Washington Post Book World Recently divorced from her husband and alienated from her three grown daughters, Candida Wilton is seeking a fresh start late in her life.

  • The Millstone
    By Margaret Drabble

    An independent young woman is faced with a difficult choice when she discovers that she is pregnant after her one and only sexual experience

  • The Peppered Moth
    By Margaret Drabble

    With The Peppered Moth, the acclaimed author of The Seven Sisters conjures a captivating work of semi-fiction, grappling with her memory of her own mother and the indelible mark of family and heredity.