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Book cover of Sarah Bastard's Notebook
Canadian Fiction, Women's Fiction, Canadian Peoples & Cultures - Fiction & Literature, Love & Relationships - Fiction

Sarah Bastard's Notebook

by Marian Engel
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Overview


The Insomniac Library is proud to republish for the first time in over twenty years Marian Engel’s breathtaking first novel, Sarah Bastard’s Notebook. First published in 1968, the novel tells the hilarious and frustrating story of thirty-year-old academic Sarah Porlock as she makes her way through the minefields of career and love in the late 1960s.


Sarah Bastard’s Notebook is a species of notebook or journal. It is also one of the first of the truly great feminist novels written in English, inaugurating a tradition that would continue with the work of Margaret Drabble and Margaret Atwood.

Synopsis

A seminal feminist novel.

Publishers Weekly

Engel's mordant, witty first novel (first published in Canada in 1968 as No Clouds of Glory) follows the self-sabotage of a Canadian academic mired in an affair with her sister's husband. Sarah, 30, is the youngest of the four Porlock daughters, an unmarried assistant professor of literature at St. Ardath's College, Toronto. Wrung out after her exhaustive affair with Sandro, the husband of her pretty sister, Leah, Sarah is contemplating taking off for China (or maybe Africa). She feels abandoned by the recent death of her father; her longtime friend and lover, Joe, has returned to his wife; Sandro has written her a Dear Jane letter. The genius of this novel is in Engel's terrific stream-of-consciousness rendering of Sarah's cynicism ("Leah has found her karma: big, blossoming nothing") and self-pity-in an unflinching first-person confession, Sarah seeks resolution, new faith and a way to cast off her dreams and pretensions as she auctions off her possessions. Engel (1933-1985), who went on to write 10 more books, writes of a young woman's desperation with a nimble devil-may-care. (Oct.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

About the Author, Marian Engel

Marian Engel (1933-1985) was born in Toronto. Marian Engel was made an Officer of the Order of Canada in 1982.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

Engel's mordant, witty first novel (first published in Canada in 1968 as No Clouds of Glory) follows the self-sabotage of a Canadian academic mired in an affair with her sister's husband. Sarah, 30, is the youngest of the four Porlock daughters, an unmarried assistant professor of literature at St. Ardath's College, Toronto. Wrung out after her exhaustive affair with Sandro, the husband of her pretty sister, Leah, Sarah is contemplating taking off for China (or maybe Africa). She feels abandoned by the recent death of her father; her longtime friend and lover, Joe, has returned to his wife; Sandro has written her a Dear Jane letter. The genius of this novel is in Engel's terrific stream-of-consciousness rendering of Sarah's cynicism ("Leah has found her karma: big, blossoming nothing") and self-pity-in an unflinching first-person confession, Sarah seeks resolution, new faith and a way to cast off her dreams and pretensions as she auctions off her possessions. Engel (1933-1985), who went on to write 10 more books, writes of a young woman's desperation with a nimble devil-may-care. (Oct.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Book Details

Published
November 1, 2006
Publisher
Insomniac Press
Pages
224
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781897178126

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