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Review: The Lodger

Can feminist Dorothy at long last lose her Virginia?

July 30, 2015 13:25
Louisa Treger

By

Madeleine Kingsley,

Madeleine Kingsley

2 min read

By Louisa Treger
St Martin's Press, £16.99

How could two literary grandes dames of the early 20th century suffer such opposing fortunes? Both Virginia Woolf and Dorothy Richardson can reasonably lay claim to have been the mother of the modernist stream-of-consciousness writing style. Yet, arguably more by quirk of fate than enduring merit, Woolf remains read and greatly revered, while Richardson's name has been all but lost.

At least until now, when a new blue plaque commemorates her Woburn Walk house, and Louisa Treger depicts the troubled reality of Richardson's twenties in her debut novel, The Lodger.

At the heart of this piquant tale is Dorothy's ill-starred love affair with H. G. "Bertie" Wells, who was married at the time to Dorothy's dear school friend, Jane. For all his sci fi sparkle, the War of The Worlds author had no scruples about fomenting war among his women - seemingly egocentric and amoral, he persuades Dorothy, over weekend visits to his marital country home, that Jane cannot fulfil his physical demands and that she, Dorothy, is the sensual muse of his life.

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