Fay Weldon
Novels

Big Women
Flamingo (HarperCollins)
First British Edition, 1997
Published in the U.S as Big Girls Don't Cry
Atlantic Monthly, 1998
Cover art by Max Schindler
From the book jacket:

Fay Weldon's new novel blasts into the Brave New World which women - and their men- fought for, agonised over, and thought they would inherit.

This is the story of women when they were wimmin: of that unforgettable blossoming in seventies England of hope, freedom, equality, and sisterhood; and of what happened next … The novel is everything we expect from Fay Weldon, and more: not just a work of literature but an energising leap into the pool of social complacency, a feisty, no-holds-barred portrait of four women's attempts and failures to create a new life.

There's the feminist publishing house, founded one balmy evening at sedate No. 103 Chalcot Crescent in a flurry of argument, peace-making and naked dancing.

There's Layla: noisy, darlingish, high-profile: 'I am the only right-thinking feminist there is. It's all the others who are out of stop.'

And Alice, the academic, the philosopher, the - eventually - Glastonbury witch.

And Nancy, boring, sensible Nancy who is the only one with any business nous.

And Stephanie - the one who leaves her husband and children to embrace politics, men, other women...

Their stories are intertwined with twenty years of all of our lives - blissful, rage-filled, treacherous, redemptive.

It is a novel, too, about money, power, pain, and, definitely, Men.

  • Excerpt

    Bio from the book jacket:

    Fay Weldon was born in England and raised in New Zealand. Her work is translated into most world languages. She lives in London.

  • Note:

    Flamingo (HarperCollins)
    British softcover reprint
    Published July, 1998

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