Dancing Backwards
By (Author) Salley Vickers
HarperCollins Publishers
Fourth Estate Ltd
1st February 2010
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
823.92
Paperback
272
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 18mm
190g
The brilliant new work from the bestselling author of Miss Garnets Angel and The Other Side of You.
Violet Hetherington has taken the rash step of joining a transatlantic cruise ship to New York to visit Edwin, an old friend. As she makes the six day crossing, she relives the traumatic events that led to her losing Edwin's friendship, and abandoning her career as a poet, for the safety of marriage and domesticity.
Despite her natural reserve, she meets a rich variety of passengers travelling with her, who affect her understanding of her own past. Most significantly, she meets Dino, the dance host, whose motives in befriending Vi are shady, but who teaches her to ballroom dance - and inadvertently helps her to recover from her past.
Moving between the late sixties and the present day, Dancing Backwards is written with the lightness of touch and psychological insight which characterise Salley Vickers' acclaimed work. This bittersweet novel is subtle, poignant and wonderfully entertaining.
Dancing Backwards is a delightful read comic, sad, tender and utterly engrossing. Lisa OKelly, Observer
Salley Vickers has a gift for making the most unlikely settings for fiction absolutely compellingpeerless story telling. Independent
Packs a surprising emotional and intellectual punch.a wonderfully satisfying, richly rewarding journey for the reader. The Times
This novels central triumph is its portrait of a heroine steadily and with immense hope working through the dramas of her quietly difficult lifethat is perhaps Vickerss most appealing characteristic: her essential optimism. Sunday Telegraph
An elegant waltz through a personal history littered with betrayal and regret, crisply and carefully told. Guardian
'Graceful and absorbing nobody can dig down into the shrouded recesses of the human heart quite as forensically as [Vickers] does.' Elizabeth Buchan, Sunday Times
Salley Vickers divides her time between London, the West Country and Venice. Previously a university lecturer in English, when not writing she practices as a psychologist and still lectures widely on the connections between literature, psychology and religion.