Book description
Since leaving his job to look after Alexa, his eight year old
daughter, Thomas Bradshaw has found the structure of his daily piano
practice and the study of musical form brings a nourishment to these
difficult middle years. His pursuit of a more artistic way of life
shocks and irritates his parents and his in-laws. Why has he swapped
roles with Tonie Swann, his intense, intellectual wife who has
accepted a demanding full-time University job? How can this be good
for Alexa and for the family as a whole? Tonie tunes herself out of
domestic life, into the harder, headier world of work where long-since
forgotten memories of herself are awakened. She soon finds herself
outside their tight family circle and alive to previously unimaginable
possibilities. Over the course of a year full of crisis and
revelation, we follow the fortunes of Thomas, Tonie, his brothers and
their families: Howard, the older, more successful brother and his
gregarious wife Claudia; and Leo, lacking confidence, propped up by
Susie, his sharp-tongued, heavy-drinking wife. At the head of the
family, the ageing Bradshaw parents continue their marital dynamic of
bickering and petty undermining. The Bradshaw Variations is a powerful
novel about how our choices and our loves and the family life we build
will always be an echo - a variation - of a theme played out in our
own childhood. The novel, Cusk's sixth , shows a prize-winning writer
at the height of her powers.
Rachel Cusk was born in 1967 and is the author of five previous
novels: Saving Agnes, which won the Whitbread First Novel Award, The
Temporary, The Country Life, which won a Somerset Maugham Award and
The Lucky Ones, which was shortlisted for the Whitbread Novel Award
and In The Fold. Her non-fiction book A Life's Work was published to
huge acclaim in 2001. In 2003 she was chosen as one of Granta's Best
of Young Novelists. She lives in Bristol.