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Country Life: A Novel by Rachel Cusk — book cover

Country Life: A Novel

by Rachel Cusk
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Overview

A New York Times Notable Book of the Year

Stella Benson answers a classified ad for an au pair, arriving in a tiny Sussex village that's home to a family that is slightly larger than life. Her hopes for the Maddens may be high, but her station among them is low and remote. It soon becomes clear that Stella falls short of even the meager specifications her new role requires, most visibly in the area of "aptitude for the country life." But what drove her to leave her home, job, and life in London in the first place? Why has she severed all ties with her parents? Why is she so reluctant to discuss her past? And who, exactly, is Edward?

The Country Life is a rich and subtle novel about embarrassment, awkwardness, and being alone; about families, or the lack of them; and about love in some peculiar guises. Rachel Cusk's widely praised novel is a captivating tale of one young woman's adventures in self-discovery.

Synopsis

A New York Times Notable Book of the Year

Stella Benson answers a classified ad for an au pair, arriving in a tiny Sussex village that's home to a family that is slightly larger than life. Her hopes for the Maddens may be high, but her station among them is low and remote. It soon becomes clear that Stella falls short of even the meager specifications her new role requires, most visibly in the area of "aptitude for the country life." But what drove her to leave her home, job, and life in London in the first place? Why has she severed all ties with her parents? Why is she so reluctant to discuss her past? And who, exactly, is Edward?

The Country Life is a rich and subtle novel about embarrassment, awkwardness, and being alone; about families, or the lack of them; and about love in some peculiar guises. Rachel Cusk's widely praised novel is a captivating tale of one young woman's adventures in self-discovery.

Megan Harlan

...[A] smartcharmingand often outright hilarious novel. —Entertainment Weekly

About the Author, Rachel Cusk

Rachel Cusk's debut, Saving Agnes, won the Whitbread Prize for Best First Novel in 1993. She lives in Oxford.

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Editorials

From the Publisher

"A sophisticated confection . . . For this delightful novel about the governess from hell, maybe only the word 'wicked' will do."—The New York Times Book Review

"A brilliant oxymorona serious farce so subtle that its command of the reader must called insidius . . . Bright, candid, and modestly humorous, Stella Benson lures us into complicity . . . Cusk's ability to keep us interested in innumerable human collisions is uncanny. We may finally learn Stella's secrets, but she remains as fascinatingly indeciperable as anyone we know."—The New Yorker

"Enchanting . . . A funny, modern Jane Eyre combined with an Anne Tyler-esque tale about escaping from the pressures of an unhappy urban life."—Newsday

"An oddly ingratiating social comedy . . . Smart, literate, offbeat, confiding . . . A pleasure."

—The Boston Globe

"Hilarious . . . Stella is strange because strangeness is part of the human condition; she's just a little more aware of it than most people."—Village Voice Literary Supplement

"Smart, charming, and often outright hilarious."—Entertainment Weekly

Megan Harlan

...[A] smartcharmingand often outright hilarious novel. —Entertainment Weekly

London Literary Review

That rare thing: a novel that makes you laugh out loud and that you put down with regret.

Tatler

Gracefully captures both the heart and mind.

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

Whitbread winner Cusk's first novel to appear in America is a touching, hilarious narrative by a modern-day Jane Eyre who renounces her life in London in the hope of finding an uncomplicated existence in the Sussex countryside. After a frenzied throwing out of "every vestige of love I had ever earned," unhappy, solitary Stella arrives in a tiny village to answer an advertisement for the job of caretaker to Martin Madden, the handicapped son of a rich farming family. Stella is prone to an "inner derangement": by the end of her second day among the nutty Maddens, she has broken out in hives, walked through a thorny hedge to avoid the front door, acquired a terrible sunburn and vomited. "It seemed incredible that so much could have gone wrong in so short a time," she laments. Cusk's hyperbolic descriptions of these and the many other calamities in Stella's everyday life demonstrate that her desire to "exist in a state of no complexity whatever" will prove to be impossible, especially since her surly charge, Martin, is, in her early estimation, an "evil dwarf." Cusk has a marvelous knack for revealing character in a few deft lines of dialogue; Stella herself is utterly lovable and her pain genuine. Later, when Stella and Martin have grown close, he tells her,"Everyone has to face things. It's the only way." Stella's particularly poignant attempt at facing her own inner oppression--and the surprising secrets in her past--will win Cusk many new readers, who will be eager to find her previous work, Saving Alice and The Temporary.

Penelope Lively

Here is Rachel Cusk flying a kite for au pair/governess literature and nicely abiding by the requirements... An adroitly paced narrative. -- The Independent

Lawrence Norfolk

An extraordinary blend of comedy and menace.... A tour-de-force against the odds and contains--just for the record--the most unexpected single line I have ever read in a work of fiction." -- The Guardian

Lisa Zeidner

The Country Life boasts pich-perfect tonal control and humor...a delightful novel about the governess from hell. -- The New York Times Book Review

Helen Dunmore

Like the novels of Evelyn Waugh or Stella Gibbons, The Country Life has a moral core, meticulously disguised by comedy. Cusk is a highly interesting, original writer, and, more unusually, she is a joy to read." -- The London Times

Sunday Telegraph

By turns funny and poignant... A pleasure to read...Cusk will reward you with gentle wit and a touching portrait of emotional vulnerability.

The Tatler

Gracefully captures both the heart and mind.

Book Details

Published
January 1, 2000
Publisher
Picador
Pages
352
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780312252809

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