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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
gentle and unobtrsive, and yet piercing,
By
This review is from: Seducers in Ecuador and The Heir (Virago Modern Classics) (Paperback)
Vita Sackville-West has long been a favorite, and reading these two novellas reminded me why. She is a bit like Austen, with a sharp eye for human behavior and peccadilloes, and in that not much happens in her novels, but one expectantly turns the pages anyway*.Her wry, sometimes dark and yet still gentle humor prevails in Seducers in Ecuador. Mr. Lomax has become caught up in the beauty and lack of reality that comes with wearing blue spectacles. The feelings of ease created by these spectacles accumulate in marriage, murder and the scaffold--as Sackville-West tells the reader in the first pages. The Heir is a completely different type of novella. It is love story of a man for a house. Mr. Chase, a soulless insurance branch-manager, inherits a Manor that is to his mind impractical and in need of being sold. A gradual change over takes him as he falls desperately in love with the house and yet watches the sale proceed. Both novellas are enjoyable, in Sackville-West's particular style-- seemingly gentle and unobtrusive while hiding her piercing social commentary. If you've never read any of her works, Seducers in Ecuador would be an especially good one with which to start. ____________________ |
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Seducers in Ecuador (Virago Modern Classics) by V. Sackville-West (Paperback - 1987)
Used & New from: $0.01
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