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A Domestic Animal

Paperback

Main Details

Title A Domestic Animal
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Francis King
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback
Pages:210
Dimensions(mm): Height 234,Width 156
Category/GenreModern and contemporary fiction (post c 1945)
ISBN/Barcode 9781447257899
ClassificationsDewey:823.914
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher Pan Macmillan
Imprint Macmillan Bello
Publication Date 5 December 2013
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

`Italians are not really domestic animals' is the repeated verdict of Antonio's English landlady. A brilliant philosopher in his thirties, he has come to a redbrick university for a year of research, leaving a wife and two children behind in Florence. Antonio is one of those individuals to whose charm everyone capitulates; but because of difficulties in his early years - poverty and the death of his father forced him to earn money as a professional footballer to see himself through school and university - he has an insatiable greed for reassurance, admiration and affection. All these Dick Thompson, a successful middle-aged novelist in whose house Antonio eventually goes to live, is willing to supply in abundance: inexplicably and ruinously Dick has fallen in love, for the first time for many years, with his handsome lodger. Meanwhile Antonio has also taken up with Pam, a secretary who soon becomes his mistress. The story of this curious triangle - a novelist and mistress begin to feel the pull of a mutual attraction in spite of their distrust and jealousy of each other - is told by Dick, looking back on his infatuation as on an illness that may be temporarily relieved by this or that remedy but can never be wholly cured. Yet for all his own frustration and despair - rarely has the anguish of unreciprocated love been more movingly described - Dick can still feel understanding and compassion both for the girl who, like himself, has fallen prey to the `domestic animal' and for the `domestic animal' himself, always eventually brought back to heel - however far he may stray - by the wife who loves him so much and knows his secret nature so little. Finely-honed, psychologically acute and constructed with rare skill this is a book which has something universal to say about love, jealousy and the essential loneliness of all human beings.

Author Biography

Born in Switzerland, Francis King spent his childhood in India, where his father was a government official. While still an undergraduate at Oxford he published his first three novels. He then joined the British Council, working in Italy, Greece, Egypt, Finland and Japan, before he resigned to devote himself entirely to writing. For some years he was drama critic for the Sunday Telegraph and he reviewed fiction regularly for the Spectator. He won the Somerset Maugham Prize, the Katherine Mansfield Prize and the Yorkshire Post Novel of the Year Award for Act of Darkness (1983). His penultimate book, The Nick of Time, was long-listed for the 2003 Man Booker Prize. Francis King died in 2011. "One of our great writers, of the calibre of Graham Greene and Nabokov." Beryl Bainbridge

Reviews

'Few English novelists have written with more might and assurance ...' Spectator