Pages For You by Sylvia Brownrigg

Pages For You

Sylvia Brownrigg

In a steam-filled diner in a college town, Flannery Jansen catches sight of something more beautiful than she’s ever seen: a graduate student, reading. The seventeen-year-old, new to everything around her–college, the East Coast, bodies of literature, and the sexual flurries of student life–is shocked by her desire to follow this wherever it will take her.When Flannery finds herself enrolled in a class with the remote, brilliant older woman, she is intimidated at first, but gradually becomes Anne Arden’s student outside of class as well. Whatever the subject–Baudelaire, lipstick colors, or how to travel with a lover–Flannery proves an eager pupil, until one day learns more about Anne than she ever wanted to know.

Sylvia Brownrigg’s Pages for You is the story of a sentimental, sensual education, a love affair between a student and a teacher–all blushes, kisses, books and poetry. Flannery is just 17 and a first-year student at an American university; Anne, a lecturer, is 28: ‘wise, well-travelled, sophisticated’. Flannery sees this red-haired, red-lipped goddess drinking coffee in a diner, wearing ‘pointed, pretty, argumentative boots’, and is immediately smitten. Her dreams begin to taunt her with a ‘bawdy vividness’, and much to her surprise the dreams become a reality, when Anne returns her affections. The story is beautifully paced, in small, concise chapters, each capturing a moment in an intense emotional experience. The prose is lyrical and a little gauche, mirroring Flannery’s youth and her enthusiasm for literature–she is a poet in the making, and her heartfelt narration of her own story reflects that. If Desdemona loved Othello partly for his stories, than Flannery loves Anne partly for the content of her bookshelves. The novel is lush with sensation and impression; a recognition of the physical passion that the two women share: If doubt had smouldered in Anne at first, the sex extinguished it … Her questions were silenced by their pleasure calls, and the smoothness and the fluidity of their limbs together calmed her. The novel is intimate and romantic, vivid as the ‘passionate hot fall of the autumn leaves with their brilliant reds, yellows and golds’. –Eithne Farry


Details

Genre: Fiction; Romance
Subject: Fiction
Publication Date: 2002-04-06
Publisher: Macmillan Trade
Language:

Rating:
Notes:
Book_ID: 258059B

Author: Northshore Noir Admin