Elizabeth Lowry
commented that in this novel HMappears to be saying that modern Britain is Hell.
Lowry, Elizabeth. “The trouble is I’m dead”. London Review of Books, 19 May 2005, pp. 25-6.
26
But she also credited Mantel with a wider vision, as a writer operating simultaneously on a literal...
Literary responses
Germaine Greer
Elizabeth Lowry
, reviewing, noted that Greer writes about her new-found role as an eco-warrior with the same fierce grace that she once brought to the liberation of the female body. Trees of various species...
Reception
Anne Carson
Reviewer Elizabeth Lowry
called this book a compact yet supple series of essays . . . . [e]rudite and entertaining, effortlessly able to play across a range of associations.
Lowry, Elizabeth. “The man who would put to sea on a bathmat”. London Review of Books, Vol.
22
, No. 19, 5 Oct. 2000, pp. 13-14.
13
Lowry, however, finds the Note...
Textual Features
Anne Carson
Then after some appendices (further traces of the world of scholarship) and a poem by Emily Dickinson
, Carson begins her radical modern adaptation and expansion of Geryon's story. He is now a little boy...
Textual Features
Kate Clanchy
In addition to the theme of desire, these poems reflect KC
's experiences as both student and teacher. Timetable, for instance, addresses the lino warming, shoe bag smell, expanse / of polished floor and...
Timeline
No timeline events available.
Texts
Lowry, Elizabeth. “Bang, Crash, Crack”. London Review of Books, pp. 35-6.
Lowry, Elizabeth. “Motivations and lives”. Guardian Weekly, p. 36.
Lowry, Elizabeth. “Seductive Slide into Despair”. London Review of Books, pp. 33-4.
Lowry, Elizabeth. “The Fishman lives the lore”. London Review of Books, Vol.
30
, No. 8, pp. 26-7.
Lowry, Elizabeth. “The jilters and the jilted”. Times Literary Supplement, No. 4857, p. 25.
Lowry, Elizabeth. “The Letters of Sylvia Plath, Volume II: 1956-1963—review”. theguardian.com.
Lowry, Elizabeth. “The man who would put to sea on a bathmat”. London Review of Books, Vol.
22
, No. 19, pp. 13-14.
Lowry, Elizabeth. “The trouble is I’m dead”. London Review of Books, pp. 25-6.