‘Dazzlingly effective . . . not easy to forget’ FINANCIAL TIMES
‘Continually surprising, witty and often disquieting, Walking Naked is one of Nina Bawden’s most impressive novels’ COSMOPOLITAN
‘Among the most perceptive and accomplished novelists writing today’ P. D. JAMES
Laura is happily married, a mother and a successful novelist. Although she is prey to night terrors, she is adept at smoothing the disorder of reality into controlled prose. Walking Naked telescopes the whole of Laura’s life – childhood, marriages, triumphs and disappointments – into a day in which the past and present converge. It begins with a game of tennis played for duty rather than amusement and progresses, via an afternoon party of old friends and jaded emotions, to a bewildering visit to Laura’s son, imprisoned on a drugs’ charge. At its close, the possibility of death within the family hauls unresolved conflicts centre stage and Laura strips herself of the posturing and self-deceit with which she has cloaked her vulnerability.
‘Continually surprising, witty and often disquieting, Walking Naked is one of Nina Bawden’s most impressive novels’ COSMOPOLITAN
‘Among the most perceptive and accomplished novelists writing today’ P. D. JAMES
Laura is happily married, a mother and a successful novelist. Although she is prey to night terrors, she is adept at smoothing the disorder of reality into controlled prose. Walking Naked telescopes the whole of Laura’s life – childhood, marriages, triumphs and disappointments – into a day in which the past and present converge. It begins with a game of tennis played for duty rather than amusement and progresses, via an afternoon party of old friends and jaded emotions, to a bewildering visit to Laura’s son, imprisoned on a drugs’ charge. At its close, the possibility of death within the family hauls unresolved conflicts centre stage and Laura strips herself of the posturing and self-deceit with which she has cloaked her vulnerability.
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Reviews
Like Margaret Drabble's The Middle Ground, this dazzlingly fine-crafted portrait of one Englishwoman--her past and present compressed into a single day--offers a haunting shadow play of rueful recognitions about the rattling complexities of middle age
Continually surprising, witty and often disquieting, Walking Naked is one of Nina Bawden's most impressive novels. Her heroine stands before us . . . a looking glass through which to see ourselves
Dazzlingly effective . . . not easy to forget