Opposed Positions

Opposed Positions

by Gwendoline Riley (Author)

Synopsis

At thirty, Aislinn Kelly is an occasional novelist with a near-morbid attunement to the motives of those around her. Isolated, restless and stuck, she decamps to America - a default recourse - this time to an attic room in Indianapolis, to attempt once again the definitive act of self-salvage. There are sharp memories to contend with as the summer heats up, and not least regarding her family history, now revealed as so botched and pitiful it seems it might yet cancel her out. She's spent years evading the attentions of her unstable, bullying father, only to find her mother now cowering in a second rancid marriage. There are also friendships lost or ailing: with bibulous playwright Karl, sly poet Erwin, depressed bookshop-wallah Bronagh, and Aislinn's best friend Cathy, who has recently found God...Finally her thoughts turn to her last encounter with Jim Schmidt, a man she's loved for ten years, hasn't seen for five, yet still has to consider her opposite number in life. Opposed Positions is a startlingly frank novel about the human predicament, about love and its substitutes, disgraceful or otherwise. Some of these people want to be free - of themselves, of each other - and some have darker imperatives. Wry, shocking, perfectly observed and utterly heart-breaking, the novel moves towards its troubling conclusion: a painful appreciation of what it is we've come from, and what we might be heading for.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 240
Publisher: Vintage
Published: 02 Jan 2014

ISBN 10: 0099565196
ISBN 13: 9780099565192
Book Overview: A spare and stunning new novel from one of England's brightest literary talents
Prizes: Long-listed for Gordon Burn Prize 2013.

Media Reviews
Riley writes with a kind of defeated ecstasy -- Leo Robson * Sunday Times *
Scrupulous performance -- Kate Webb * Times Literary Supplement *
Although she works on a small canvas, Riley's work is both intricate and expansive. Her prose is a continual joy to read, and the detail immensely satisfying: she can squeeze more resonance out of a misplaced apostrophe than others can from baroque, technicolour trauma -- Stuart Kelly * Scotland on Sunday *
Never less than enthralling * Bookmunch *
Riley's appetite for risk-taking and vinegary apercus remains undiminished -- Emma Hagestadt * Independent *
Author Bio
Gwendoline Riley was born in 1979 and has published four novels: Cold Water, which won a Betty Trask Award, Sick Notes, Joshua Spassky, which was shortlisted for the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize and won the Somerset Maugham Award, and Opposed Positions.