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The Pregnant WidowA Novel

Martin Amis

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Summary

The Pregnant Widow

By: Martin Amis

Narrarated by: Steven Pacey

The year is 1970, and it's a long, hot summer. In a castle on a mountainside in Italy, half a dozen young lives are afloat on a sea of change, trapped inside the history of the sexual revolution. The girls are acting like boys, the boys are going on acting like boys, and Keith Nearing–twenty years old, a literature student all clogged up with the English novel–is struggling to twist feminism and women's ascendency toward his own ends.

Copyright © 2010 by Martin Amis. All rights reserved.
Copyright 2010 by BBC Audiobooks Ltd. All rights reserved. Any unauthorized broadcasting, public performance, copying or re-recording of such recordings in any manner whatsoever, will constitute an infringement of such copyright.

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New York Times Best Seller

Total File Size: 389 MB (12 files) Total Length: 14 Hours, 9 Minutes

eMusic Review 0

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Elisa Ludwig

eMusic Contributor

05.11.10
Martin Amis, The Pregnant Widow
2010 | Label: AudioGO

A comic yet cautionary tale about the casualties of sex unhinged from feeling This winking look at the Sexual Revolution and its aftermath centers around a group of British 20-somethings summering in an Italian castle in 1970. Amis’s protagonist Keith Nearing is a narcissistic literature student by turns obsessed with English novels and the preening breasts of his girlfriend Lily’s best friend Scheherazade. As his relationship with Lily becomes increasingly platonic, Nearing bumbles in his transparent efforts to get closer to Scheherazade. In the meantime, the women around him, from a prudish-seeming big-assed dancer to a libidinous friend lovingly referred to as The Dog, are exploring their own attitudes toward sex and relationships, and trying the predatory habits of men on for size. As we flash forward to his older years, Nearing himself is still caught between the quaint references to the women “falling” in his required reading, and a future in which shifted gender roles, liberating though they may be, result in a host of evils from serial marriages to Islamic resentment. The Pregnant Widow (the title referring to an Alexander Herzen quote about the gap between one social order and another) is a swansong to a summer of (potential) love and a comic yet cautionary tale about the casualties of sex unhinged from feeling.

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