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Banks, Lynne Reid 1929–: Critical Essay by John Mellors

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About 1 pages (319 words)
Lynne Reid Banks Summary

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Some books have a success partly because of their worth but also because they seem to hit the right note for the zeitgeist at their moment of publication. One thinks of Lucky Jim, The Virgin Soldiers and The L-Shaped Room. Kingsley Amis has been wise to resist the temptation to write a Son of Lucky Jim, but Leslie Thomas and Lynne Reid Banks have both succumbed. There is even a Y-shaped house in Two is lonely, being built by solidly masculine, 44-year-old Andy whom Jane Graham is considering as a 'daddy' for her 8-year-old, illegitimate son, David. Before making up her mind to marry Andy, Jane goes off to visit an earlier love, Toby, now living in the uncomfortably warm climate of Israel, where the sharav is blowing and the Six-Day War is about to flare up. Then … But this is the kind of book that depends more on plot than on quality of writing, so I think one should not reveal more of the story.

Lynne Reid Banks has certainly lost none of her gift for making you want to find out what happens next, and she can poke fun both shrewdly and sympathetically at minor characters like Chris, the hydrophil hippy. But she cannot quite rise to the big occasions such as the first night with the new lover and the last night with the old.

This is a free excerpt of 228 words. There are 319 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page) in the full critical essay.

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Banks, Lynne Reid 1929–: Critical Essay by John Mellors from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.

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