Interpretations of Love
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Narrated by:
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Julie Teal
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Kim Durham
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Mark Elstob
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By:
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Jane Campbell
About this listen
'Her work merits comparison with that of Edna O'Brien or Muriel Spark' New York Times
Stretching from war-torn 1940's Liverpool to Oxford at the end of the century, this story explores the emotional landscape of the time and the impact tiny moments of betrayal can have on our relationships in the years that follow.
Malcolm has held on to a secret for more than fifty years: a letter his sister Sophy gave him just before she died. He had promised to give it to the young doctor she met one night during the Liverpool Blitz: a night that altered the course of her life.
But the letter was never delivered. Now, after so many years of uncertainty, Malcolm has decided to share Sophy's secret with her daughter Agnes.
It is the day of Agnes's daughter's wedding party. The ghosts of Agnes's past and all the powerful emotions of the family reunion wrap around her thoughts. Until she is distracted by a hand on her arm as her uncle Malcolm holds out an envelope for her to take . . .
Touching on the many different forms love can take and told from multiple perspectives, Interpretations of Love is the story of a letter and our endless search for the stories that we have lost.©2024 Jane Campbell (P)2024 Quercus Editions Limited
What listeners say about Interpretations of Love
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- H M Roberts
- 22-12-24
A glorious book ... marred by some dreadful narration
This sensitive and delicate book, exquisitely written by Jane Campbell should be a joy, and one of the narrators, Julia Teale, finds the right tone and sensititivity, and she rescues tge audiobook. One of the male narrators is believable though a little heavy handede in his characterisations, the other, I found to be almost unbearable, delivering a performance devoid of sensitivity or apparent understanding or connection to this delicate story. Were it not for the wonderful writing and the exemplary narration of Ms Teale, I would have given up. Such a shame and an example of how poor casting choice and heavy-handed storytelling and a characterisation that borders on caricature without dept, connection or subtlety can destroy the audiobook experience. Such a shame.
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