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Overview

Winner of both the Hawthornden Prize and the James Tate Black Prize for Fiction, David Garnett's Lady Into Fox is the story of a man whose wife is turned into a fox. Need we say more?

"At last, at last, the Hawthornden has chosen the right book." – Virginia Woolf

"The whole psychology of man and beast is, I should say, flawless, in essence and exposition." – Joseph Conrad

"It is as astonishing as a new sort of animal...suddenly running about in the world...as whimsically inevitable as a very healthy kitten. It shows up most other stories as the clockwork beasts they are." – H.G. Wells, The Adelphi

"It is one of the strangest little fictions in the English language. ... Garnett's novella has attracted numerous readings: a political allegory about marriage, a fable about female sexuality, a coded love letter to Garnett's former lover, the painter Duncan Grant." – Judith Mackrell, The Guardian

"The story of Lady Into Fox is gripping and terrible.... What I love best about this story is its straight-faced, ever so slightly sly prose... The author uses humor, fantasy, allegory and realism to explore to explore pain, passion, conjugal fidelity, love, death and the whole damn thing." – Andrew Barrow, Independent

"Garnett's story intimates that the sexual relation rests on the delusion that kin can be converted into kind. If the fable also applies to same-sex love (and I think it does), then perhaps Garnett's point is darker still: every kind attempt we make to "claim kin" with one another is a sort of violence. Wild we begin toward one another—at day's end, wild we remain." – Maud Ellmann, Public Books

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Watersgreen House is an independent international book publisher with editorial staff in the UK and USA. One of our aims at Watersgreen House is to showcase same-sex affection in works by important gay and bisexual authors in ways which were not possible at the time the books were originally published. We also publish nonfiction, including textbooks, as well as contemporary fiction that is literary, unusual, and provocative. watersgreen.wixsite.com/watersgreenhouse

Product Details

BN ID: 2940161458495
Publisher: Watersgreen House
Publication date: 05/16/2019
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Born 9 March 1892 in Brighton, David Garnett was a prolific writer best known for his satirical fantasies Lady Into Fox (1922), the tale of a man whose wife is suddenly transformed into a fox, and A Man in the Zoo (1924), concerned with a man who is accepted by the London Zoo to be exhibited as an example of Homo sapiens. Later novels, not fantastic, were not so successful. In The Golden Echo (1953), The Flowers of the Forest (1955), and The Familiar Faces (1962), Garnett described his memories of the English literary coterie—including the Bloomsbury group—of which he was a member dring the period of World War I and the 1920s. Much of what he described was shocking to the general public, as was the fully nude photograph included in one edition. Great Friends: Portraits of Seventeen Writers (1980) continued in the same vein. Garnett’s novel Aspects of Love (1955) was not very popular upon publication but has since been made famous due to its adaptation by Andrew Lloyd Webber into a musical in 1989. Garnett’s other novels are Two by Two (1963) and A Clean Slate (1971). He edited several collections of correspondence, including The Letters of T. E. Lawrence (1938) and Carrington: Letters and Extracts from Her Diaries (1978). Garnett died on 17 February 1981 at Le Verger Charry, Montcuq, France.
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