The Middle Age of Mrs Eliot

The Middle Age of Mrs Eliot

by Angus Wilson
The Middle Age of Mrs Eliot

The Middle Age of Mrs Eliot

by Angus Wilson

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Overview

Meg Eliot is the wife of a successful barrister and with that comes a lovely home in Westminster, cocktail parties and a round of charity committees. She is the model wife and her life is one of ease, contentment and privilege.
All that changes though when she is suddenly left widowed after a senseless tragedy. Totally alone she is thrust into a struggle to reconstruct her life as she realises that she doesn't really know who she is anymore or who she is supposed to be. The Middle Age of Mrs Eliot follows Meg as she tries to make sense of the realities of life, of living and contemplates the future and its possibilites. What she finds is the ability to survive and, also, the joys of new friendships, new opportunities and perhaps even the idea of a new love.
Described by the Daily Telegraph as 'one of fiction's great female creatures', Meg Eliot is a powerful heroine who inspired readers when she first appeared in 1958.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780571286843
Publisher: Faber and Faber
Publication date: 08/02/2012
Sold by: Bookwire
Format: eBook
Pages: 529
File size: 488 KB

About the Author

Angus Wilson
One of Britain's most distinguished novelists Sir Angus Wilson was born in 1913. Educated at Westminster and Merton College, Oxford he joined the British Museum as a cataloguer before being called for service in 1941. His literary career began with a collection of short-stories published in 1949. These were followed by other short-story collections, novels and plays. Co-founder with Malcolm Bradbury of the MA programme in creative writing at the University of East Anglia, Wilson was appointed professor in 1967. Chair of many literary panels, including the Booker prize, and campaigner for homosexual equality he was knighted in 1980. He died in 1991.

What People are Saying About This

Margaret Drabble

"This novel offers Wilson's most perfect and elegant plot....This is a book which, like Austen's (Emma), one can read it with increasing pleasure, and one discovers more intricacies, dramatic ironies and echoes of the narratives....There is an exhilerating vision."

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