Caroline Blackwood (1931-1996) was born into an aristocratic Irish family of great wealth and renown. She married three talented and famous men: the painter Lucian Freud, the pianist and composer Israel Citkowitz, and the poet Robert Lowell. She worked as a writer and a journalist. Her novel, Great Granny Webster (NYRB) was shortlisted for the Booker Prize.
Caroline Blackwood combines a childlike neatness and exactitude of
expression with an adult susceptibility to the charm of the
unexpected and devious: an effective mix.
— The Times Literary Supplement
A fine creation—manic, at times demonic
— Penelope Lively, Sunday Telegraphy
Domesticity for Miss Blackwood has never been cozy; she listens for
the ticking of the time bomb in the teapot.
— Carolyn Geiser, The New York Times Book Review
Funny, frightening and immensely enjoyable. The author writes with
an appalled, amused intensity that is completely original but
without a trace of pretentiousness. The result is unexpectedly
powerful, like a box of chocolates with amphetamine centers.
— Francis Wyndham, Sunday Times (London)
One might say Blackwood practices a bullfighter’s feint. The author
waves a red cape at us, knowing we will charge at the wrong target.
The best example of this approach is Corrigan. This 1984 novel
is Blackwood’s loveliest and most craftily assembled work of
fiction and, strange to say, her sunniest, though the sunshine
arrives late in the day and in an extremely perverse yet logical
manner….There is a surprise lurking in its pages that overturns our
understanding of what we’ve read about for a hundred pages or so,
an enriching surprise that has been basking more or less in plain
sight, but perhaps even more striking is the uncharacteristically
wily optimism of Corrigan.
— Gary Indiana, Bookforum
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