The Needle's Eye (novel)

The Needle's Eye is a 1972 novel by British novelist Margaret Drabble.[1] The novel was well received by reviewers, like contemporary novelist Joyce Carol Oates. Though it was her fifth novel, Drabble described it as her first time that she could "actually write a novel" expressing what she wanted to write.[2]

First edition
publ. Weidenfeld & Nicolson

Reception

Novelist Joyce Carol Oates gave a glowing review for the novel in the New York Times describing the novel as well surpassing the quality of her earlier works.[1] Oates writes that The Needle's Eye was an "extraordinary work", transporting the reader into the "human and very extraordinary experience" of the characters.[1]

gollark: Which probably means high premiums, which means people won't buy it and then complain when something bad happens.
gollark: Pandemic insurance which didn't run on the government strategy of "just borrow tons of money and hope it doesn't break things" would need lots of money saved.
gollark: Same here with "national insurance", allegedly, but it just goes into the main government moneypile.
gollark: They give you money if you're unemployed *maybe* subject to some preconditions because government, and you *maybe* pay taxes (here, people below a certain income don't).
gollark: It doesn't actually work like that exactly.

References

  1. Oates, Joyce Carol (June 11, 1972). "The Needle's Eye". The New York Times Books.
  2. Milton, Barbara (1978-01-01). "Margaret Drabble, The Art of Fiction No. 70". Paris Review (74). ISSN 0031-2037. Retrieved 2016-03-15.

Further reading

  • Libby, Marion Vlastos (1975-01-01). "Fate and Feminism in the Novels of Margaret Drabble". Contemporary Literature. 16 (2): 175–192. doi:10.2307/1207546. JSTOR 1207546.
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