Top

We have updated our Privacy Policy Please take a moment to review it. By continuing to use this site, you agree to the terms of our updated Privacy Policy.

The Echoing Grove

On sale

1st August 2013

Price: £10.99

Select a format

Selected: ebook / ISBN-13: 9780349004280

Disclosure: If you buy products using the retailer buttons above, we may earn a commission from the retailers you visit.

ONE OF THE MOST REMARKABLE BRITISH WRITERS OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY

‘Lehmann legitimised a type of writing that took on deep personal themes’ ENGLISH PEN

‘Full of her sensibility, her funniness, her own peculiar acumen’ ELIZABETH JANE HOWARD

‘Lehmann has always written brilliantly of women in love’ MARGARET DRABBLE

Two sisters: Madeleine and Dinah. One husband: Rickie Masters. For many years now, Dinah, exotic and sensual, has conducted a clandestine affair with Rickie. Madeleine, calm and resolute, has accepted that her marriage has been of limited success. Rickie’s sudden death makes widows of both sisters in this highly imaginative novel that explores with extraordinary insight the sublimity, the rivalry and the pain of personal relationships.

‘She makes a mood, an atmosphere, which is never forgotten . . . The inner voice of women talking to themselves about their love affairs, knowing that it is hopeless, having to go ahead anyway, expecting the end as soon as it begins. That, of course, is what Rosamond Lehmann does best’ SUNDAY TIMES

What's Inside

Read More Read Less

Reviews

English PEN
Lehmann legitimised a type of writing that took on deep personal themes
Anita Brookner
A novelist in the grand tradition . . . The first writer to filter her stories through a woman's feelings and perceptions
Margaret Drabble
Lehmann has always written brilliantly of women in love
Elizabeth Jane Howard
Full of her sensibility, her funniness, her own peculiar acumen
Sunday Times
She makes a mood, an atmosphere, which is never forgotten . . . The inner voice of women talking to themselves about their love affairs, knowing that it is hopeless, having to go ahead anyway, expecting the end as soon as it begins. That, of course, is what Rosamond Lehmann does best