From Publishers Weekly
New Zealander Frame's 1972 novel Daughter Buffalo , her only work set in America, relates in an original fashion a doctor's reaction to a patient's death; The Adaptable Man , first published in 1965, contrasts an alienated young murderer with his antiquated father and uncle.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Review
As in previous novels...the author examines conventional attitudes toward death with both satire and wistful poetry. --
Time MagazineShe writes with a beauty that confers a morbid grandeur, that makes poetry of the particular, the private, the enclosed. And she has written a novel as gleaming as pure, black, shattered glass. --
The New York Times