Black Pepper
The Peastick Girl
The Peastick Girl
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Haunted by childhood memories and visions she is isolated in a house near her family home. What is and what might have been intriguingly converge. She is rescued by the return of Nikolai, her Russian lover. In a remote, seemingly fairytale location she finally stumbles across the truth of her past and finds an ambiguous peace.
A sharply focused and often humorous account of New Zealand life-a world of men, Rugby, feminists who feel they've lost their way, Russian émigrés and powerful but disaffected Maori women-The Peastick Girl is a complex tragi-comedy of manners.
Written in prose of eloquent intensity, this does for New Zealand passions and landscapes the kind of thing the Brontës did for Yorkshire.
Chris Wallace-Crabbe, The Age
Wellington is as central to this novel as Egdon Heath is to Hardy's Return of the Native... Katherine Mansfield's city has become a wild place dominated by rain, light, wind and sound.
Rod Edmond, NZ Studies Network (UK)
A brave, sensuous and wildly original novel-I've never read anything quite like it.
Helen Garner
Hard not to be blown away by this staggeringly beautiful novel.
Marion May Campbell
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