| Magnetic
North - Critical
acclaim from Susan Hill, Margaret Forster and others.
'I like it when women novelists are bold and make demands
on themselves as well as their readers, and Sue Prideaux could
be judged to be over-ambitious in Magnetic North. This is her third
novel but it reads as though her others were only practising for
this one. She gives it a huge backcloth, almost Russian in scope,
and indeed her heroine, Katya, is originally from Moscow. She marries
a Norwegian and goes to live in Oslo. Landscape descriptions dominate
the story, from the forests where Katya's family have been
massacred by the Bolsheviks (the novel opens in 1917) to the snows
of Norway and the warmth and colour of the south of France. There
is plenty of period detail but what is more unusual is the development
of Katya's character. She abandons her child to free herself
from a marriage she has outgrown and the novel takes on all kinds
of moral debates. It is perhaps over-packed with meaning but it
has a sweeping strength to it which justifies her ambition.'
Susan
Hill in Books and Company.
'A gothic novel in the best sense…and even a romantic
one in the way Tolstoy is romantic.'
Margaret Forster
'Only women novelists seem able to invent truly nasty, yet
utterly believable, fictional women, and Sue Prideaux has created
a trio
of perfectly credible horrors. Katya, whose family has been wiped
out by the Bolsheviks, her sinister Troll-like companion simply
known as the Tëtka, reduced to sub-humanity by her love for
her charge and Katya's daughter who speaks (a brilliant touch)
in the language of Damon Runyon but has been irretrievably wounded
by her mother's defection...The book is highly satisfying.
The minor characters are as colourful as the main players, the
multi-lingual writing is enriched by the author's Anglo-Norwegian
blood and when evoking the Norwegian countryside it verges on the
stupendous.'
Leslie Geddes-Brown in Country Life.
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