![]() ![]() ![]() To a contemporary reader, her story sounds a bit like that of Nell Zink avant la lettre. Ingalls, an American who has lived in England since the ’60s, was 46 at the time of her brush with literary fame. Caliban” was reissued and reviewed widely and warmly the Book of the Month club picked it up a three-book deal with Simon & Schuster was signed. Author Begins Storybook Life.” The “storybook” part had to do with the novel’s surprise inclusion on a list produced by the British Book Marketing Council of the “top 20 American novels of the post-World War II period.” This generated a flurry of interest and money: “Mrs. “Practically zilch,” she said herself, describing both its commercial and critical reception in a 1986 profile that ran in this newspaper under the headline “ Obscure U.S. It was Ingalls’ third book of fiction and, like the two that preceded it, at first almost entirely ignored. First published in 1982, the slim surrealist masterpiece is the story of a romance between a lonely housewife and (stick with me here) an amphibious humanoid named Larry. Caliban” by Rachel Ingalls is an unusual book with an unusual publication history. ![]()
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