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March 2000

Between head & heart: Penelope Fitzgerald's novels

by Tess Lewis

All accidents of our lives are materials out of which we can make whatever we like. One who has much intelligence will make much of his life. Every acquaintance, every incident might, for a thoroughly gifted person, become the first link of an infinite series, the beginning of an unending novel.
—Novalis,
Pollen

Penelope Fitzgerald is anything but an autobiographical novelist. Yet four of her nine novels have grown directly from personal experiences. Her various positions as a clerk in a bookstore, as a sound assistant at the BBC during the Second World War, and as a teacher of child actors gave rise respectively to The Bookshop (1978), Human Voices (1980), and At Freddie’s (1982). Fitzgerald’s third novel, Offshore, which won the Booker Prize in 1979, is set on the Battersea Reach of the Thames where Fitzgerald herself lived on an old wooden barge until it sank. These early novels ow ...

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Tess Lewis is a translator and essayist who writes frequently about European literature
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This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 18 March 2000, on page 29
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