Where is my Mask of an Honest Man? is a powerful collection of short stories set in and around Notting Hill or W11. Though the stories share a common setting, they deal with a wide variety of issues and range from stark realism to the surreal. 'Dark Angel', part 1 set in 1951 and part 2 in 1982, could be seen as the author's commentary on her debut novel The Furnished Room, filmed by Michael Winner. It covers similar ground but now seen through the prism of the author's wickedly evolved style. Several of the other stories feature Kuhlman. In 'Rape of the Soul' we find out whether Kuhlman really murdered Fr Quinlan with a ballpoint pen - or do we? In 'Notes on Time' Kuhlman appears to have become a doctor and is observed through the eyes of one of his patients, or indeed it may well be the other way around. I was confounded. I am misanthropic because I cannot love humanity when the weight of its numbers oppresses and depresses me. Humans are all over the streets, the parks. They lack rarity value. 'The Woman with Crocodile Teeth' is surreal, akin to a story by Franz Kafka. Yet while the woman in the title is clearly a monster, Dr Kuhlman - yes, him again - plays a dubious role too. The story is also a scathing comment on the plight of the elderly. 'J Krissman in the Park', included in the Best British Short Stories 2013, published by Salt Publishing, deals with the travails of an ageing writer, contemplating his rejections while surrounded by happy families in a park. 'The Professor A Katz Memorial Evening' is a hilarious account of Elizabeth Woolacott, a large-boned, energetic woman, giving a talk to mathematicians. You need a writer like Laura to carry this off: Numbers and women had been his dominatrixes. The title story, the longest, is perhaps the most autobiographical. In it 78-year-old Joan Byker develops a severe crush on her 38-year-old landlord, Harry Brightling. Set in the present day, the story is again beautifully observed, and you feel you're there with Joan and Harry in the key scene on the roof of Vernon Crescent. Their conversations keep taking you by surprise.
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Laura Del-Rivo was born in 1934 into a well-to-do family in Cheam, Surrey. She became part of a loose group of writers that included Colin Wilson, Alexander Trocci and Bill Hopkins. Laura certainly benefited from this stimulating company and burst onto the literary scene in 1961 with her debut novel The Furnished Room. It was hailed by Colin Wilson as 'one of the significant novels of the 1960s'. In 1963 The Furnished Room was turned into a film, West 11, by the late Michael Winner, starring Alfred Lynch, Eric Portman, Kathleen Breck and Diana Dors. The Furnished Room, originally published by Hutchinson & Co, was republished by Five Leaves Press in 2011. The review in the Guardian called it 'an evocative taste of black-coffee blues'. Laura's other novels include Daffodil on the Pavement and more recently Speedy and Queen Kong, which was published by Paupers' Press in 2004.
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Seller: Broadleigh Books, Gillingham, DOR, United Kingdom
Soft cover. Condition: Very Good. The pages are unmarked, in very good condition and tightly bound. No creasing on the spine. Short crease at the lower corner of the front cover otherwise the covers have only light reading/shelf wear. Mailed the same or next working day in a cardboard book box. Seller Inventory # 468.24