Not in Newbury
Description:... 'Mary Scott is an adventurous and challenging writer whose portraits of London life are both precise and mordant - a rare combination!' -Jim CraceAlice, an independent woman of the 90s, has a way with words. Like any angst-ridden speaker, she feels trapped by the tyranny of their meanings. Her therapeutic solution is to compile her own dictionary - now she will be able to make words mean what she wants.This everyday tale of bankrupt relationships and lonely hearts marries Wittgenstein with Mills and Boon - it suggests that if you can't get your (wo)man then at least you should be accurate in your disdain. In a book that is both brittly funny and profound, Mary Scott confirms her unerring ability to capture the semantics of our times.Mary Scott's first book was the much praised short-story collection Nudists May Be Encountered. She now lives in Devon.
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