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The Seven Sisters
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The Seven Sisters
Author: Margaret Drabble

Book Information
Publisher: Harvest Books
Book Type: Paperback
Rating:

ISBN-13: 9780156028752 - ISBN-10: 0156028751
Publication Date: 10/13/2003
Pages: 320


Other Versions of this Book: Hardcover, Audio Cassette

Book Description:
When circumstances compel her to start over late in her life, Candida Wilton moves from a beautiful Georgian house in lovely Suffolk to a two-room, walk-up flat in a run-down building in central London--and begins to pour her soul into a diary. Candida is not exactly destitute. So, is the move perversity, she wonders, a survival test, or is she punishing herself? How will she adjust to this shabby, menacing, but curiously appealing city? What can happen, at her age, to change her life?
In a voice that is pitch-perfect, Candida describes her health club, her social circle, and her attempts at risk-taking in her new life. She begins friendships of sorts with other women-widowed, divorced, never married, women straddled between generations. And then there is a surprise pension-fund windfall . . .
A beautifully rendered story, this is Margaret Drabble at her novelistic best.


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Top Member Book Reviews

Jeri G. (snugpug) wrote on 3/29/2007...

4 member(s) found this review helpful.

This was a really interesting book. It was the sort of book that I realized I liked when I was about three quarters finished with it; but until that point it was rather difficult to get through. A background in classical literature would be helpful; since I lack a familiarity with Virgil, I missed some of the references and symbolism. It would also be a great book to use with a book club, as there are so many issues, particularly women's issues, that would be fascinating to discuss with others.

Ruth R. (yomamaruth) wrote on 4/1/2006...

3 member(s) found this review helpful.

After a divorce from a husband who betrayed her and estrangement from daughters and friends, a woman on the far side of middle age tries to make a new life-moving from a university town in the country to the heart of London. That's a bare bones description of an extremely well written book that explores many of life's issues-and kept me reading for two days straight!

Carol R. (hansmrs) - Murphys wrote on 5/1/2007...

2 member(s) found this review helpful.

I could not get into this book. What I did read I would rate it a 2.

Camden S. (xserafinx) wrote on 11/8/2006...

2 member(s) found this review helpful.

It's hard to get across just how flat-out thrilling, how readable, how absorbing is Margaret Drabble's novel The Seven Sisters. It sounds positively dull when you describe it: Candida Wilton, a faculty wife of late middle age, has been dumped by her allegedly do-gooder husband. Her three daughters aren't too impressed with her, either. The mousy Candida decamps to an inglorious flat in London, where she measures out her time in visits to the health club, trips to the grocery store, and her weekly evening class on Virgil. She tentatively makes a few new friends and rediscovers some old ones. This opening section of the book, told in diary form, is a marvel of tone. With very little action, Drabble makes Candida's forays into the world quietly electrifying. One of her new pleasures is recording in her diary her mounting dislike of her ex-husband. You sense a giddy freedom: "Andrew had come to seem to me to be the vainest, the most self-satisfied, the most self-serving hypocrite in England. That kindly twinkle in his eyes had driven me to the shores of madness."

Ah, but there's more life for Candida yet. A small, unexpected inheritance is left to her, and so she organizes her friends--all female, mostly aged, mostly unmarried--into a tour of Naples as Virgil describes it in The Aeneid. Their holiday is a fictional tour-de-force: by turns a hilarious send-up of group dynamics, a metafictional lark, a feminist rant, and a dark acknowledgement of Candida's mortality. In the end, Drabble's novel is a very serious one, and a very good one.

Carolee L. (carolee) wrote on 2/11/2006...

2 member(s) found this review helpful.

It was okay....not a satisfying ending.


Please Rate these Book Reviews

Laura M. wrote on 11/21/2009...


I really liked the diary format. The twist about 3/4 of the way thru jolted my interest again. Good character developement. Think it would be good for a book club discussion

Michelle M. (hdmmomma) wrote on 3/13/2008...


An interesting book-- really makes you think about friendships and also self-awareness. The narrator of the book is going through major changes in her life (divorce, moving to a new area, making new friends) which cause her to examine herself and her personality.

Tracey W. wrote on 1/3/2008...


Great story of a woman starting again in London after her marriage ends and the new friends she makes, and some old one and family members seen in a different light.


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