Product Details
I Sent a Letter to My Love (Library of Wales Anthology) (Library of Wales)

I Sent a Letter to My Love (Library of Wales Anthology) (Library of Wales)
By Bernice Rubens

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Product Description

All her life, Amy Evans has struggled against that unkind gift of fate ugliness. A squat nose stubbed like a plasticine afterthought on her face, a chin too long and eyes straining to meet each other, form a sad picture that dooms Amy to a life of solitude and lovelessness. Now in her fifties, Amy lives with her crippled brother, both prisoners of the hopes and aspirations of their youth. Then Amy makes a final bid for happiness, a last ditch attempt to meet someone she can love...who might love her. Suddenly her life takes on dizzying new dimensions as she explores untrodden paths of sexual awareness in an all-or-nothing gamble for dangerous and delicious success.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #118854 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-02-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 228 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
Perfect mastered skill... gentle and pungent style...compassion and humour to modulate her often steely-eyed observation. --Sunday Times

Intensely dramatic...extraordinarily funny...an exceptionally original and disturbing achievement. --Daily Telegraph

A remarkable novel. --Auberon Waugh

About the Author
Bernice Rubens was born in Cardiff in 1928, the second daughter of Eli Rubens, a Lithuanian Jew fleeing anti-semitism who established himself in the clothes business and Dorothy Cohen whose family had emigrated from Poland. She grew up in the large musical family in the vibrant Cardiff Jewish community. Music remained a passion throughout her life and sometimes she liked to describe herself as a failed musician. She was one of the most successful British novelists of the second half of the twentieth century and won the Booker prize in 1970 for The Elected Member. She read English at the University of Wales in Cardiff, before marrying Rudi Nassbauer, a wine merchant who also wrote poetry and fiction. Bernice Rubens had two daughters, taught English at a Birmingham grammar school from 1950 to 1955, before entering the film industry. Her documentaries were well received, one entitled Stress winning the American Blue Ribbon award in 1968. She began writing fiction based securely on the intricacies of her own Jewish family in her late twenties. She achieved early critical and commercial success with her first novel Set On Edge (1960) which allowed her to maintain a long career which would encompass 24 published novels. Her autobiography published in 2003 was her first work of non-fiction but she had often used incidents in her own life such the break up of her marriage in her work. Her second novel, Madame Sousatzka (1962), became a film starring Shirley MacLaine and directed by John Schlesinger; her seventh, I Sent A Letter To My Love (1975), was also filmed, with Simone Signoret. Rubens enjoyed the respected place she had achieved in the literary world. She was an honorary vice-president of International PEN and served as a Booker judge in 1986. She maintained close friendships with a chosen group of colleagues, including Beryl Bainbridge, Paul Bailey and Francis King. She was a compelling storyteller, weaving her novels from many strands: her own vivid experiences, her friends and family's lives, centuries of Jewish tradition and history; above all, her remarkable and disturbing imagination. In everyday places - a suburban villa, an English public school, a home for the elderly - Rubens showed the horrors that can lie behind net curtains and cosiness, polite conversation or an unexplained wink. Though her novels possess many themes, she admitted that she really only wrote about one thing. Human relationships were the core material of her books, especially within a family. In later years her work moved to a larger historical canvas as she connected strongly with her Jewish heritage. She considered her strongest book to be Brothers, a sweeping historical novel that follows several generations of a Jewish family through a fight for survival that takes them from 19th-century Tsarist Russia to western Europe and Nazism, then back to modern Russia and its continued persecution of the Jews. It was the best she insisted: 'because... what it is about matters.' She died in London in 2004.


Customer Reviews

Sad and somewhat dispiriting3
A sad book which leaves a somewhat unpleasant taste. The author doesn't seem to like her characters and perhaps even despises them. Yes, you feel very sorry for Amy and her brother but ultimately you wonder what the author wants you to feel. Is it sadness/sympathy or contempt?

I Sent a Letter to My Love5
I've read all Bernice Rubens' novels and they all contain very clever twists and are very readable. Disfunctional families brought to life on the page with their anger and tenderness laid bare but not judged. I Sent a Letter to My Love is no exception.

Wonderful5
Wonderfully sad, you want Amy (the main character) to succeed in life but know when reading that despite everything she's going to end up exactly as she does; fat and lonely, looking after her brother whom her mother loved more than her. Somehow avoids being depressing and remains a beautiful story. Worth a read!