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Several Deceptions: Four Novellas

Several Deceptions: Four Novellas
By Jane Stevenson

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Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1380248 in Books
  • Published on: 2000-09-19
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 272 pages

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
Several Deceptions, Jane Stevenson's first work of fiction, explores the topic of deceit through four quite distinct novellas: "The Island of the Day Before Yesterday"; "Law and Order"; "The Colonel and Judy O'Grady" and "Crossing the Water". The settings are bourgeois, urbane--"Crossing the Water" is country-house farce--often giving the impression of an author "in the know" and playing with that knowledge. "In retrospect, I am strongly inclined to blame the whole thing on Umberto Eco" begins "The Island...", setting the scene for its semiotic indulgence in the well-worn idea of creating a woman's life through archive and story. Nemesis looms, however: the ways in which cleverness can damage, or destroy, itself becoming a central theme of the book. A perennial theme, of course, and that may be why it's easy to get a sense that you've heard, or seen, these stories before: there's a touch of Rope about the brilliance of the University lawyer and his circle in "Law and Order", a cross-dressing twist to "The Colonel and Judy O'Grady", a certain Peter's Friends feel to "Crossing the Water". Recognising the landscape is part of the pleasure of these tales, but it may not be quite enough to sustain a reader's interest through the twists and turns of the plots. --Vicky Lebeau

From the Publisher
Introducing a major new talent - a clever, funny, cruel collection for grown-ups

About the Author
Jane Stevenson is the author of a collection of novellas, Several Deceptions, and several novels, London Bridges, Astraea, The Pretender and The Empress of the Last Days.


Customer Reviews

Enjoyable collection of 4 novellas4
A book of four novellas whose settings are widely dispersed across the globe. Each novella seems solidly set (to this reader) in its milieu, despite the fact that the narrator/central character in each are, respectively, an anglo-italian ex-playboy turned academic, an upper-class student from the Netherlands, an Irish woman in a community of Tibetan monks and a dissolute English art historian. Interestingly for a female writer three of these are men: Stevenson doesn't give them all a completely convincing voice but the prose is pellucid and the narrative drive strong. I enjoyed this book greatly and look forward to future works by the same writer.

Nicely done despite flaws5
Very well written and enjoyable. The author is a gifted writer whose prose flows transparently and swiftly along; you forget you are reading for a while which is the ultimate art which conceals art. I am halfway through her London Bridges which is equally enjoyable. Minor complaint: Some of the characters are cardboard cliches (e.g. the Sandhurst trained soldier in the last novella in Several Deceptions); an academic's concept of what soldiers are like. If Ms Stevenson can learn to dig a bit more under the surface and avoid parodies she will rise to the first rank of fiction writers.