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The Pumpkin Eater

The Pumpkin Eater

by Penelope Mortimer, introduction by Daphne Merkin

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The Pumpkin Eater is a surreal black comedy about the wages of adulthood and the pitfalls of parenthood. A nameless woman speaks, at first from the precarious perch of a therapist’s couch, and her smart, wry, confiding, immensely sympathetic voice immediately captures and holds our attention. She is the mother of a vast, swelling brood of children, also nameless, and the wife of a successful screenwriter, Jake Armitage. The Armitages live in the city, but they are building a great glass tower in the country in which to settle down and live happily ever after. But could that dream be nothing more than a sentimental delusion? At the edges of vision the spectral children come and go, while our heroine, alert to the countless gradations of depression and the innumerable forms of betrayal, tries to make sense of it all: doctors, husbands, movie stars, bodies, grocery lists, nursery rhymes, messes, aging parents, memories, dreams, and breakdowns. How to pull it all together? Perhaps you start by falling apart.

Download the Reading Group Guide for The Pumpkin Eater. by Penelope Mortimer, introduction by Daphne Merkin

Additional Book Information

Series: NYRB Classics
ISBN: 9781590173824
Pages: 248
Publication Date:

Praise

A subtle, fascinating, unhackneyed novel.... in touch with human realities and frailties, unsentimental and amused.... So moving, so funny, so desperate, so alive.... [A] fine book, and one to be greatly enjoyed.
—Elizabeth Janeway, The New York Times

A strange, fresh, gripping book. One of the the many achievements of The Pumpkin Eater is that it somehow manages to find universal truths in what was hardly an archetypal situation: Mortimer peels several layers of skin off the subjects of motherhood, marriage, and monogamy, so that what we're asked to look at is frequently red-raw and painful without being remotely self-dramatizing. In fact, there's a dreaminess to some of the prose that is particularly impressive, considering the tumult that the book describes.
—Nick Hornby, The Believer

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