
The Party
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Narrated by:
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Tessa Hadley
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By:
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Tessa Hadley
About this listen
Brought to you by Penguin.
An irresistible novella about two sisters and a night that changes everything, from the master chronicler of our heart’s hidden desires.
Evelyn had the surprising thought that bodies were sometimes wiser than the people inside them. She’d have liked to impress somebody with this idea, but couldn’t explain it.
On a winter Saturday night in post-war Bristol, sisters Moira and Evelyn, on the cusp of adulthood, go to an art students’ party in a dockside pub; there they meet two men, Paul and Sinden, whose air of worldliness and sophistication both intrigues and repels them. Sinden calls a few days later to invite them over to the grand suburban mansion Paul shares with his brother and sister, and Moira accepts despite Evelyn’s misgivings.
As the night unfolds in this unfamiliar, glamorous new setting, the sisters learn things about themselves and each other that shock them, and release them into a new phase of their lives.
‘Tessa Hadley is my favourite author’ KATE ATKINSON
‘Few writers give me such consistent pleasure’
ZADIE SMITH
‘Hadley’s extraordinary skill [is] making both surface life and deep interiors come fully alive’
COLM TÓIBÍN
‘Tessa Hadley recruits admirers with each book’
HILARY MANTEL
Accessibility
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Very poor
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Not to my taste
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I have much enjoyed several of Tessa Hadley’s previous titles, but I found this one, filmic, vivid and well read as it is, rather disappointing.
Set in Bristol in the late 1940s after WW2, Moira and her younger student sister Evelyn meet some unlikeable men at an unenjoyable party. One of them, the older, once-married Siinden, manages to entice them to another party in the well-off Sneyd Park area of the city where Evelyn is enticed upstairs with him and the obvious happens.
As so often with authors recreating the Forties or Fifties, Hadley overdoes the contemporary details, particularly of food and dress. Not all aspects are convincing for the late Forties, however. The sisters’ home is stifling, but it seems unlikely that in the late Forties an over-protective father would be living with his wife and daughters whilst pursuing an open affair with another woman.
It is after all, a novella, I know, but I found it too slight. Having finished it, I felt as though Hadley had given me a slice of good fruit cake, but the rest of the cake wasn’t on offer.
Rather disappointing
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