'Peter, Peter, Pumpkin eater, Had a wife and couldn't keep her . . . ' Mrs Armitage has three husbands in her past, one in her present and a numberless army of children. They are building a great glass tower in the countryside, in which they will live happily ever after. Then, to her astonishment, she collapses in the Harrods linen section, 'sprinkling the stiff cloths with extraordinarily large tears', and finds that happiness is slipping beyond her reach. With ferocious intensity and wry, deadpan humour, Penelope Mortimer's semi-autobiographical 1960s story of a woman's breakdown dissects our most intimate relationships. 'A strange, fresh, gripping book.' Nick Hornby With an Introducation by Daphne Merkin
Industry Reviews
Beautiful ... almost every woman I can think of will want to read this book -- Edna O'Brien
A strange, fresh, gripping book. One of the the many achievements of The Pumpkin Eater is that it somehow manages to find universal truths in what was hardly an archetypal situation: Mortimer peels several layers of skin off the subjects of motherhood, marriage, and monogamy, so that what we're asked to look at is frequently red-raw and painful without being remotely self-dramatizing. In fact, there's a dreaminess to some of the prose that is particularly impressive, considering the tumult that the book describes -- Nick Hornby
Mortimer's style, spare and singular, cuts through the decades like a scalpel ... Will Penguin's new edition of The Pumpkin Eater encourage people to look again at Mortimer? I hope so. She is so good. I can't think of a writer more attentive to emotional weather -- Rachel Cooke * The Observer *
One of those novels which seem to be written with real knowledge of the brink of the abyss, taut almost beyond endurance * The Sunday Times *
A seriously good writer * Telegraph *
A subtle, fascinating, unhackneyed novel... in touch with human realities and frailties, unsentimental and amused... So moving, so funny, so desperate, so alive... [A] fine book, and one to be greatly enjoyed * The New York Times *
In this, her best book, Mortimer employs a steely, sceptical firm-eyed prose, which pays readers the compliment of regarding them almost as collaborators * Guardian *
The themes in this short novel are timeless. There are lessons here for us all * The Times *