After publishing her first novel in 1977 at the age of sixty-one,
Penelope Fitzgerald (1916-2000) went on to become one of the most
remarkable and highly acclaimed English writers of the last century.
Each of the three novels gathered here vividly and unforgettably
conjures up an entire world.
The Booker Prize-winning novel Offshore limns the marginal existence
of an eccentric assortment of barge dwellers on the Thames in the early
1960s, a group of misfits who are drawn to life on the muddy river in
exile from the world of the landlocked. Human Voices takes us behind
the scenes at the BBC during World War II, as world-weary directors and
nubile young assistants attempt to save Britain's heritage and keep
Britons calm in the face of a feared German invasion. In The Beginning
of Spring, a struggling English printer living in Moscow in 1913 is
abandoned by his wife and left alone to care for his three young
children in the face of the impending revolution.
Fitzgerald is a genius of the relevant detail and the deftly sketched
context, and these narrative gems are marvels of compassion, wit, and
piercing insight.