* 'The divine Spark is shining at her brightest . . . Pure delight' Claire Tomalin, Independent
With a cover design by Lucienne Day
When Mrs Hawkins tells Hector Bartlett he is a pisseur de copie , that he urinates frightful prose , little does she realise the repercussions. Holding that no life can be carried on satisfactorily unless people are honest Mrs Hawkins refuses to retract her judgement, and as a consequence, loses not one, but two much-sought-after jobs in publishing.Now, years older, successful, and happily a far cry from Kensington, she looks back over the dark days that followed, in which she was embroiled in a mystery involving anonymous letters, quack remedies, blackmail and suicide.“'Wonderfully entertaining - full of absurd, comical, engaging characters and written with typical wit, elegance and aplomb”
'The divine Spark is shining at her brightest . . . Pure delight' Claire Tomalin, INDEPENDENT 'An outstanding novel . . . A FAR CRY FROM KENSINGTON has an effortless, transluscent grasp of the spirit of the period' OBSERVER '' SUNDAY TELEGRAPH One of Muriel Spark s most liberating, liberated and meditative novels. Spark is a writer who can take the meditative and make it mercurially funny, playful and mischievous Ali Smith My admiration for Spark s contribution to world literature knows no bounds. She was peerless, sparkling, inventive and intelligent ? the creme de la creme Ian Rankin
The divine Spark is shining at her brightest . . . Pure delight - Claire Tomalin, INDEPENDENTAn outstanding novel . . . A FAR CRY FROM KENSINGTON has an effortless, transluscent grasp of the spirit of the period - OBSERVER - SUNDAY TELEGRAPHOne of Muriel Spark's most liberating, liberated and meditative novels. Spark is a writer who can take the meditative and make it mercurially funny, playful and mischievous - Ali SmithThe divine Spark is shining at her brightest . . . Pure delight - Claire Tomalin, INDEPENDENTAn outstanding novel . . . A FAR CRY FROM KENSINGTON has an effortless, transluscent grasp of the spirit of the period - OBSERVER - SUNDAY TELEGRAPHBorn in Edinburgh, Muriel Spark was internationally famous and received the Italia Prize, the James Tait Black Memorial Prize, the FNAC Prix Etranger and the Saltire Prize, among many others. She was elected an honorary member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 1978 and to L'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres in France in 1988. She died in April 2006.
With a cover design by Lucienne DayWhen Mrs Hawkins tells Hector Bartlett he is a pisseur de copie , that he urinates frightful prose , little does she realise the repercussions. Holding that no life can be carried on satisfactorily unless people are honest Mrs Hawkins refuses to retract her judgement, and as a consequence, loses not one, but two much-sought-after jobs in publishing.Now, years older, successful, and happily a far cry from Kensington, she looks back over the dark days that followed, in which she was embroiled in a mystery involving anonymous letters, quack remedies, blackmail and suicide.
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