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The Jewish Chronicle

Review: The Dark Circle

November 11, 2016 13:04
Linda Grant: mature

ByBryan Cheyette, Bryan Cheyette

2 min read

By Linda Grant
Virago, £16.99

Linda Grant's last novel, Upstairs at the Party, took place in a British university campus in the 1970s. The Dark Circle, her seventh novel, is set mainly in a 1940s sanatorium for the treatment of tuberculosis.

The more mature Grant becomes as a novelist, the smaller her canvas. Not that Grant's concerns are in any way trifling. Her cast of characters is nothing less than a portrayal of post-war, class-riven Britain from the indolent aristocracy, to Oxford-educated blue stockings, and from car salesmen to the bottom of the pile, German émigrés and East End Jewish lowlifes.

Four years after the war, all national types are represented in "The Gwendo" (as the Kent sanatorium is known) from taciturn ex-army officers, to the censorious Mother's Union, to furtive Lesbians and flirtatious, peroxide-blonde nurses. Once taken over by the NHS, the Gwendo becomes a microcosm of national evolution as the inhabitants of this "total institution" shift from deference to democracy, and from compliance to defiance.