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Bad Blood

A Memoir

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Whitbread Award Winner: A memoirist "conjures up her claustrophobic childhood in the small Welsh village of Hanmer with wit and unsentimental clarity" (The New York Times). 
The bad blood had missed a generation. You're just like your grandfather, my mother said.
Blood trickles down through every generation, seeps into every marriage. An international bestseller and winner of the Whitbread Biography Award, Bad Blood is a tragicomic memoir of one woman's escape from a claustrophobic childhood in post–World War II Britain and the story of three generations of a family—its triumphs and its darkest secrets. With wit and a dose of self-deprecating humor, Lorna Sage's prose brings to life a period—the 1940s and 1950s—that continues to influence and shape society in the twenty-first century. As a portrait of a family and a young girl's place in it, Bad Blood is unsurpassed.
"Her father was off fighting in World War II, her mother off in her own dreamy rerun of adolescence, so young Lorna hung onto the 'skirts' of her vicar grandpa, a histrionic, bitterly intelligent philanderer . . . Sage finds such delicious ironies in all the awful detail that readers can't help but be entertained., wickedly . . . perfect book club reading." —Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"She lifts your spirits even as she hurts your heart." —Daily Telegraph
"Deeply affecting and beautifully written." —People
"Evocative, enthralling, often hilarious." —Los Angeles Times
"A superb memoir of a daughter of the '50s who got knocked up, but not knocked down." —Maureen Corrigan, NPR's Fresh Air
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from January 21, 2002
      The late British literary critic Sage spent her youth in the home of her grandparents, in the vicarage of Hanmer, a village in Flintshire, England. Her father was off fighting in World War II, her mother off in her own dreamy rerun of adolescence, so young Lorna hung onto the "skirts" of her vicar grandpa, a histrionic, bitterly intelligent philanderer with the "habit of living irritably in his imagination." His idiosyncrasies were almost endearing: he spent days stalking the graveyard muttering Shakespearean soliloquies and blacking out the spines of the books in his library to deter casual theft. Grandma, "a fat doll tottering on tiny swollen feet," considered Hanmer a "dead-alive dump" and never forgave her husband for talking her into marriage and leaving the gynocentric Eden of her family's shop in South Wales. What made her grandparents' marriage "more than a run-of-the-mill case of domestic estrangement" was Grandma's "refusal to accept her lot"—she remained "furious" with her husband and, by extension, with all men, including her daughter's and granddaughter's husbands. In such a dysfunctional household, where "nobody wants to play the part of parent," Sage didn't have the option of passing for normal—not that the "functional illiteracy" of her village peers was anything to envy. Ultimately, it was books and sheer orneriness—her grandpa's "bad blood"—that saved her from the oblivion her mother and grandmother had chosen. Sage finds such delicious ironies in all the awful detail that readers can't help but be entertained., wickedly. (Mar.)Forecast:Sage won the prestigious Whitbread Biography Award (2000) and has received kudos from the likes of Jonathan Raban and Doris Lessing. Her book is perfect book club reading, combining social history and great writing. Expect strong sales.

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  • English

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