This is the story of Humphrey Clark and Ailsa Kelman, who spent a summer together as children in Ornemouth, a town by the gray North Sea. As they journey back to Ornemouth to receive honorary degrees from a new university thereHumphrey on the train, Ailsa flyingthey take stock of their lives over the past thirty years, their careers, and their shared personal entanglements. Humphrey is a successful marine biologist, happiest under water, but now retired; Ailsa, scholar and feminist, is celebrated for her pioneering studies of gender and for her gift for lucid and dramatic exposition. The memories of their lives unfold as Margaret Drabble exquisitely details the social life in England in the second half of the last century.
BOOK REVIEWS
Media Reviews
"An ode on childhood's joys and injustices, and a primer for marine biology" - PW.
"Starred Review. [F]or all its dark knowledge, oceanic psychology, and spiny social critique, Drabble's novel is as scintillating as a sunny day on board a fast-moving sailboat on the life-sustaining sea." - Booklist.
"Fortunately, the author's practiced narrative skills prevent the frequent watery images and literary allusions from overwhelming the story; nevertheless, this is not Drabble's best work." - Library Journal.
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