The Book, Cat, & Cat Book Lovers Almanac

of historical trivia regarding books, cats, and other animals. Actually this blog has evolved so that it is described better as a blog about cats in history and culture. And we take as a theme the advice of Aldous Huxley: If you want to be a writer, get some cats. Don't forget to see the archived articles linked at the bottom of the page.

June 4, 2018

June 4, 1923

Elizabeth Jolley (June 4, 1923, to Feb. 13, 2007) was a writer of fiction, This Britannica article does not stress my parallel.

'Elizabeth Jolley ,... British-born Australian novelist and short-story writer whose dryly comic work features eccentric characters and examines relationships between women.

'Jolley was raised in a German-speaking household in England. She moved from England to Australia in 1959, and her work often features contrasts between a stagnant Europe and a brash, vital Australia. She began writing her first novel, Palomino, in the late 1950s, but because publishers were wary of the story, which concerns a lesbian relationship between a 60-year-old doctor and a much younger woman pregnant with her own brother’s child, it was not printed until 1980. The Newspaper of Claremont Street (1981) was praised for its humour and sombre insight into the characters’ psychopathology.

'The publication of her third and fourth novels earned Jolley admiration outside Australia for her effortless comic style and deft storytelling. In Mr. Scobie’s Riddle (1983), set in a nursing home, outcast patients come to terms with their own alienation and imminent death. Miss Peabody’s Inheritance (1983), considered Jolley’s funniest book, explores her two favourite themes: love between women and the contrast between the Old World and the New. Jolley’s later novels include Foxybaby (1985), The Well (1986; filmed 1997), The Sugar Mother (1988), My Father’s Moon (1989), and The Georges’ Wife (1993).

'Jolley wrote several radio plays that were broadcast by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, including a dramatization of her short story “Woman in a Lampshade.” The 1983 collection of the same name, although considered uneven, was praised for its innovative writing.'

Her book, Newspaper of Claremont has a scene where an elderly lady tries to move a cat out of her path, gently, with her foot.  This small detail indicates Jolley's observational powers, but not the fact her
 fictional narratives  may have paled besides stories I have read about her life.  I cannot relay them because I got these possible facts from Wikipedia, which got her dates wrong, besides their general reputation.

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