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Reviews for Thomas Hardy

 Thomas Hardy magazine reviews

The average rating for Thomas Hardy based on 2 reviews is 3 stars.has a rating of 3 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2016-06-08 00:00:00
1996was given a rating of 3 stars Hope Rashell Sinclair
Claire Robson was a teacher of mine at secondary school, so this memoir was of interest on a personal level as well as out of general interest. I found it to be a really well written memoir, not particularly "deep", but moving, especially the description of Claire's parents in their small Durham town. The chapters dealing with her time at the school I was at were eye opening, and the teachers (despite having their names changed) were easily identifiable. I pretty much agreed with her assessment of most of them (especially piggy Harlow and Setchell, the pious idiot), but despite having suspected that she and a certain games teacher were in a relationship, it was a bit of a shock to find it was actually the case, especially as the teacher in question was actually incredibly unpleasant and had an ineffective and aggressive teaching style. What on earth did Claire see in her? As lesbian memoirs go, this was not earth-shaking, but was warm, funny and evocative of the 1970s. The descriptions of York university reminded me a little of writings by A.S. Byatt in the way they invoked a certain time and academic lifestyle.
Review # 2 was written on 2016-02-04 00:00:00
1996was given a rating of 3 stars Duane Miller
I met Claire in Key West at a workshop with Edmund White. Then I heard her read from the book in Northampton MA at the Broadside Book Store'a wonderful bit of serendipity to wind up at the same spot at the same time. A most moving memoir. Claire tells of her coming out, but more important, she does it amid the conflict of her hectic family life in England. Beautifully realized "character," if you can say that about person in her own memoir (you can). I've never truly laughed and cried simultaneously before as I did over the scene in which her family motors to her father's funeral, seventeen miles of joke-telling and smoking and crying. "They were impressed by the depth of our sorrow" (215). So witty, so multilayered. Not just about being a lesbian. Much broader and more literary than that. No wonder Michigan State Press published it.


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