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Review: Upstairs at the Party

A tale of student life and death

July 3, 2014 13:24
Linda Grant: at her most mature and compelling, peeling away layers

By

Bryan Cheyette,

Bryan Cheyette

2 min read

By Linda Grant
Virago, £14.99

Upstairs at the Party is Linda Grant's sixth novel. It contains many of her familiar preoccupations - a family secret, second-generation Jewish heroines from Liverpool, the relationship between surfaces and depths - but it also differs markedly from her previous work.

Beginning with The Cast Iron Shore (1996), her outstanding debut novel, Grant locates her complex, ambiguous characters on a far-reaching historical canvas ranging from Stalinist Russia to McCarthyite America or pre-state Palestine to Nazi Germany. The focus is on campus life in the 1970s, rather than these grand narratives, with ostensibly superficial experiences given the weight of history.

There is also a more autobiographical feel to the novel which is an imaginative reconstruction of a "particular time" in Grant's life. The heroine of the novel, Adele Ginsberg, was born in Liverpool to Polish and Russian-Jewish immigrants. She is described by a friend as coming from Atlantis, "a refugee from a continent that has fallen into the sea".