Originally published alongside Ulysses in the pages of the legendary
Little Review, Mary Olivier: A Life is an intimate, lacerating account
of the ties between daughter and mother, a book of transfixing images
and troubling moral intelligence that confronts the exigencies and
ambiguities of freedom and responsibility with empathy and power. May
Sinclair's finest novel stands comparison with the work of Willa Cather,
Katherine Mansfield, and the young Virginia Woolf.
As a child, Mary Olivier's dreamy disposition and fierce intelligence
set her apart from her Victorian family, especially her mother, "Little
Mamma," whose dazzling looks cannot hide her meager love for her only
daughter. Mary grows up in a world of her own, a solitude that leaves
her free to explore her deepest passions, for literature and philosophy,
for the austere beauties of England's north country, even as she
continues to attend to her family. But in time the independence Mary
values--at almost any cost--threatens to become a form of captivity
itself.