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Four Bare Legs In a Bed

Helen Simpson

$24.99

Paperback

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English
Vintage
01 August 1991
'Stories told in such succulent prose that you wince at their brevity... a most exceptional debut' - Evening Standard

Winner of the Somerset Maugham Award.

Brilliant, funny and tragic, Four Bare Legs in a Bed is an outstanding and invigorating collection of short stories. In Simpson's singular and opulent voice, we hear of the mixed blessings of independence and marriage, of sex and babies. From a bed that transforms the lives of a struggling couple to a chorus of midwives telling the dramatic story of a birth, this is a playful, unique set of stories to treasure.
By:  
Imprint:   Vintage
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Edition:   New edition
Dimensions:   Height: 199mm,  Width: 131mm,  Spine: 12mm
Weight:   141g
ISBN:   9780749391621
ISBN 10:   0749391626
Pages:   192
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Helen Simpson's sixth short-story collection, Cockfosters, follows Four Bare Legs in a Bed (1990), Dear George (1995), Hey Yeah Right Get a Life (2000), Constitutional (2005) and In-Flight Entertainment (2010). A Bunch of Fives- Selected Stories (2012) includes five stories from each of her first five collections. She has received the Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year Award, the Somerset Maugham Award, the Hawthornden Prize and the E.M.Forster Award. She lives in London.

Reviews for Four Bare Legs In a Bed

Beautiful young Englishwomen and the men who disappoint them populate this tart and bitter debut collection by a former model and Vogue staff writer living in London - winner of the Somerset Maugham Award. I lay on the bed looking over my shoulder through a tangle of hair, aortas my dipping breast down to thighs like swan's wings. I felt electric and wanted him to look at me. But he slept within seconds. Much is expected of the men in Simpson's stories and next to nothing is received as a succession of young women living in both ancient and modern England fume over their martyrdom at the hands of love. In Zoe and the Pedagogues, a self-effacing student sullenly tolerates her professor lover's habit of treating her as a kind of pet; in The Bed, a depressed secretary risks enraging her drab young cohabiter by buying a magnificent new bed; in Good Friday, 1663, a 17th-century teenager dissects the hateful qualities of her new, much older husband while waiting to give birth to another man's child. In Simpson's world, sex is seen as a despicable business transaction ( Are you sure your friend Jim values you at your true worth? a wealthy wife asks her younger neighbor in A Shining Example shortly before she makes a pass at her) or as a self-imposed form of solitary confinement ( I don't know what he thinks about, the narrator says of her husband in the title story. 'If only he could talk,' as old people say of their pets ), and men can be counted on to lie, steal, disappear after a single night or, worse, remain to prove themselves unutterably dull. Pessimistic images (the vacationing heroine of The Seafarer unpacks her clothes into a wardrobe no bigger than a coffin ) and dreary settings accumulate until the fate of the final, quasi-Kafkaesque story's heroine - death by hanging - comes as absolutely no surprise. Don't be morbid, snaps the condemned woman's mother shortly before the book's abrupt conclusion. Sound advice, too late. Simpson's talent should improve with age. (Kirkus Reviews)


  • Winner of Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year Award 1991
  • Winner of Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year Award 1991.

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