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Review: The Wine of Solitude

Heroine corroded by a desire for revenge

November 14, 2011 10:29
Irène Némirovsky: unremitting

By

Anne Garvey
,

Anne Garvey

2 min read

By Irène Némirovsky
Chatto & Windus, £14.99

Hélène, the heroine of The Wine of Solitude, hates her mother, Bella, with an intense, brooding dislike. As a small child, she simmers with toxic resentment at family meals around the grand dining table at their home in the privileged part of Kiev, at which she is subjected to a hail of criticism,

"Just look at you… you look as if you've just been slapped with your mouth open and your bottom lip drooping… I do believe this child is turning into an idiot!" rails the petulant mother. In response, the daughter fantasises vengeance - "she had to kiss the pale face she so hated… place her closed mouth against the cheek she wanted to lacerate with her nails".

As she grows older, the well-hidden rage increases - against her mother's criticisms, extravagance, and lavish, romantic life with her lover Max, who lives off her increasingly vast wealth and that of her conveniently absent husband, Boris.