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'One of the wisest and most versatile of our novelists' CHRISTOPHER WORDSWORTH, GUARDIAN
'So intelligent and clear-eyed that every page seems to peel another layer of pretence' ISABEL QUIGLEY, FINANCIAL TIMES 'Nina Bawden's novels are self-perpetuating pleasures' KIRKUS REVIEWS
'Today, Tuesday, the day that Penelope has chosen to leave her husband, is the first really warm day of spring . . . '
Penelope has always done her best to be a good wife, a good mistress, a good mother - and a good magistrate. Today she is more conscious that usual of the thinness of the thread that distinguishes good from bad, the law-abiding from the criminal. Sitting in court, hearing a short, sad case of indecent exposure and a long, confused theft, she finds herself examining her own sex life - what would that sound like in court? - and her own actions and intentions. How would the court judge what she's about to do this afternoon . . . ?
One of the wisest and most versatile of our novelists . . . an intriguing achievement
Isabel Quigley
Financial Times
So intelligent and clear-eyed that every page seems to peel another layer of pretence, social custom or humbug from the surface of the life it describes
Kirkus Reviews
Whether a little more so or a little less, Nina Bawden's novels are self-perpetuating pleasures and among the few which deal gently with people, real people, and the fallibility of personal relationships
Julian Barnes
A neat, quietly serious novel, sharp about ironies both large and small
CHRISTOPHER WORDSWORTH, THE GUARDIAN
One of the wisest and most versatile of our novelists ... an intriguing achievement
ISABEL QUIGLEY, FINANCIAL TIMES
So intelligent and clear-eyed that every page seems to peel another layer of pretence, social custom or humbug from the surface of the life it describes
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