Penelope Fitzgerald, who died in 2000, emerged late in life as one of
the most remarkable English writers of the last century. She began her
writing career in 1975 at the age of fifty-nine, and over the next two
decades she published three biographies, nine novels, and a collection
of short stories. Now three of her acclaimed novels are gathered here in
one volume.
The Bookshop is a postwar tragicomedy of manners, set in an isolated
seaside town where an enterprising woman opens a bookstore only to find
it beset by poltergeists, weather, and hostile townsfolk. The Gate of
Angels is an Edwardian romance within a novel of ideas: a young doctor
devoted to science and to his all-male Cambridge college finds his life
and views disrupted by a nurse named Daisy. The Blue Flower, which won
the National Book Critics Circle Award, revitalizes historical drama
through the story of Novalis, an eighteenth-century German romantic poet
and visionary genius, and his unlikely love affair with a simple
child-woman.
These three novels all display Fitzgerald's characteristic wit,
intellectual breadth, and narrative brilliance, applied to an array of
traditional forms into which she breathed new life.