Home | Books By Year | Books from 1953


The Lying Days

Buy The Lying Days now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the book. And once you've experienced the book, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




'The Lying Days' is the debut novel of Nobel winning South African novelist, Nadine Gordimer. It was published in 1953 in London by Victor Gollancz and New York by Simon & Schuster. It is Gordimer's third published book, following two collections of short stories, 'Face to Face' (1949), and 'The Soft Voice of the Serpent' (1952). The novel is semi-autobiographical, with the main character coming from a small mining town in Africa similar to Gordimer's own childhood. The novel is also a bildungsroman "about waking up from the naivete of a small colonial town."

Reception



Reviews of 'The Lying Days' in 1953 were generally positive. 'New York Times' critic James Stern compared the novel favourably to the works of Alan Paton, especially 'Cry, the Beloved Country', describing 'The Lying Days' as the better of the two novels. Stern described the novel as less "novel" and more "biography", following the style and form of biographical writing. In a review in the 'Fitchburg Sentinel', W. G. Rogers wrote that in 'The Lying Days' Gordimer shows that South Africa "is a land not of a single problem, race, but of many problems which that one central issue seems to magnify and intensify." Rogers complimented Gordimer on the way she "brings her characters so surely to life", and on how she "writes so moving of love".

Writing in the 'El Paso Herald-Post', F. A. Ehmann called 'The Lying Days' "not a bad novel", adding that once it got going, Gordimer's characters become "interesting", the plot "satisfactory", and her prose "good [and] honest". But Ehmann was critical of her "experimental prose" at the beginning, saying that "this maladroit display of implied symbolism, disjointed reverie and rhetorical questions is both unnecessary and badly disjointed." In a review in the 'Petersburg Progress Index', Joan Pollack described 'The Lying Days' as "alive, bright and inquiring" and complimented it on its "handling ... the problems of youth [while] still maintaining the beauty and adventure of life." Pollack said Gordimer "is an expert craftsman and her sensitive ability to portray the most delicate emotions should place her among the most promising newcomers today".

References



Further reading



Reviews

*

*

*

*

*

*

Scholarly criticism

*

*

*

Category:1953 novels

Category:1953 debut novels

Category:20th-century South African novels

Category:Novels by Nadine Gordimer

Category:Apartheid novels

Buy The Lying Days now from Amazon

<-- Return to books from 1953



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1055450182.