FREE SHIPING FOR ORDERS OVER $50

Image Alt
products

Buy Books, Subscriptions and Tickets

by

by Vialleron, Margaux

Breaststrokes : ‘A study of womanhood, vulnerability, and the secrecy of the inner-life’ – Rowan Hisayo Buchanan

£9.99

Author: Vialleron, Margaux

Modern & contemporary fiction (post c 1945)

Published on 1 January 1800 by Simon & Schuster Ltd in the United Kingdom.

Paperback | 320 pages
197 x 130 x 23 | 234g

Sharply observed and painfully relatable, Breaststrokes is a novel that seems to emerge from the haze of our current time. This story of unexpected encounters and intimacies is perfect for fans of Cleopatra and Frankenstein and Beautiful World, Where Are You.

Cloe and Gertrude and the Jenkins-Bell sisters, Mathilde and Sarah, have never met. They are strangers who share a city.

  It is Sunday morning. Cloe has woken-up in someone else’s home; Gertrude starts her shift in the pub kitchen, while Mathilde and Sarah are on their way to lunch.

Soon, these four women’s lives will overlap.

Saturday felt like a normal day, but on Sunday the past will catch-up with them as they realise that there never is only one side to a story.

‘A study of womanhood, vulnerability, and the secrecy of the inner-life. Vialleron’s writing is laced with a love for these women who can barely love themselves. A novel for anyone interested in the way the body keeps score or in the complex intimacies between women’ Rowan Hisayo Buchanan ‘A tender, lyrical novel about the ripples caused when consent is taken away from women and the loneliness this causes, even when you’re surrounded by people. It will tug at your heart strings’ Araminta Hall ‘Reading Breaststrokes felt a little like watching ribbons unfurl – or intertwine. Margaux Vialleron writes tenderly and evocatively about female friendship, fear and desire’ Chloë Ashby

SKU: '9781398525795 Category:

Additional information

Weight 0.234 kg
Dimensions 19.7 × 13 × 2.3 cm

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “Breaststrokes : ‘A study of womanhood, vulnerability, and the secrecy of the inner-life’ – Rowan Hisayo Buchanan”