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The Catherine Wheel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Twenty-five-year-old Clemency James has moved from Sydney to a chilly bedsit on the other side of the world. During the day she studies for the bar by correspondence; in the evenings she gives French lessons to earn a meagre wage. When she meets Christian, a charismatic would-be actor, she can see he's trouble - not least because he's involved with an older woman who has children. She is drawn to him nonetheless: drawn into his world of unpayable debts and wild promises.

First published in 1960, The Catherine Wheel is Elizabeth Harrower's third novel and the only one of her books not set in Australia. In it she turns her unflinching gaze on the grim realities of 1950s London, and the madness that can infect couples.

Elizabeth Harrower was born in Sydney in 1928 and moved to London in 1951. She travelled extensively and began to write fiction. Her first novel Down in the City was published in 1957, and was followed by The Long Prospect a year later. In 1959 she returned to Sydney where she began working for the ABC and as a book reviewer for the Sydney Morning Herald. In 1960 she published The Catherine Wheel, the story of an Australian law student in London, her only novel not set in Sydney.

The Watch Tower appeared in 1966. No further novels were published until May 2014 when Harrower's 'lost' novel, In Certain Circles, was released. Her work is austere, intelligent, ruthless in its perceptions about men and women. She was admired by many of her contemporaries, including Patrick White and Christina Stead, and is without doubt among the most important writers of the postwar period in Australia.

Elizabeth Harrower died in Sydney on 7 July 2020 at the age of ninety-two.

'The Catherine Wheel is a great starting point for those new to Harrower's work, those readers who are unafraid to face the darker aspects of desire we're sometimes too ashamed to acknowledge.' 3am Magazine, Top Reads for 2015

'I love The Watch Tower, but I love The Catherine Wheel more. Like all the Harrower books, with their psychological mysteries, their droll humour, their brilliant language and ear for voices, The Catherine Wheel takes your hand from the first page and beckons you in.' Ramona Koval

'Rich and rewarding.' Starred review, Kirkus

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 27, 2015
      First published in Australia in 1960, Harrower’s (In Certain Circles) novel now comes to the U.S. for the first time. Clemency, a young Australian law student living in a London bedsit, moves through her life with great control. She feels a measured passion for Christian, a failed actor whom Clemency tutors in French—which spurs the jealousy of Olive, the older woman Christian has taken up with. Thus begins the central tension of the novel, a cat and mouse game of relenting and withholding. Clemency, a self-described “student of human nature,” feels a “sweet ferocious calm,” which is also an apt description of Harrower’s writing—it’s consistently restrained, even when describing love, deception, and failure. Though the narrative offers some suspenseful questions—whether or not Christian is really in love with her plays out within a hundred dreary French lessons, as Clemency drinks tea and quietly wavers in her moral resolve—Harrower is most concerned in the psychological peculiarities of her small cast of characters. Indeed, the action rarely moves to Clemency’s bedroom, and the reader is led to believe that the bleakness of the room is a protracted metaphor for the bleakness of 1950s London. At times, Clemency’s emotional distance can be witty, as when she dryly observes of Christian, “This must be what they called personality.” Other times, however, the adjective-drunk quality of Harrower’s writing makes it difficult to maintain a real interest in her self-destructive characters.

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from May 15, 2015
      The latest reissue from the author of In Certain Circles (2014) and The Watch Tower (1966). First published in 1960, Harrower's third novel evokes both Victorian melodrama and contemporary realism. Clemency James has moved from Sydney to London to study for the bar. She's independent and committed to creating her own future, but she's also an extravagant narrator, much given to philosophical pronouncements and exclamation points. Harrower's prose would be entirely too much if Clem weren't aware of her own tendency toward "flashy moods and temperament." This heroine meets something like her match in Christian Roland, the failed actor employed by her landlady as a window washer and night watchman. As an outsider, Clem is a keen observer of how class operates in midcentury England. In Australia, her fine winter coat suggested nothing more than the fact that she could afford it. In London, it speaks of a pedigree that she cannot claim. She lives in a shabby but not disreputable London bedsit and gives French lessons in order to augment a small inheritance from her father. It's this awareness of her own ambiguous outsider status that initially makes Clem susceptible to Christian's charms. She recognizes his flattery-and self-flattery-as a kind of performance; nevertheless, she doesn't want to be perceived as a snob. She recognizes that she's playing a part in her interactions with Chris, but she can't seem to resist the play. And then there's Olive....The woman presented as Chris' wife is decades his senior and herself a figure of pantomime. Clem understands that her role in this story is unlikely to be a happy one. She embraces it not as an innocent but as a modern woman willing to experience-and survive-old tropes. Rich and rewarding.

      COPYRIGHT(2015) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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