Offshore (novel)

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Offshore
File:Offshore.jpg
First edition
Author Penelope Fitzgerald
Cover artist George Murray
Country United Kingdom
Genre Fiction
Publisher HarperCollins
Publication date
1979
Pages 141 pages
ISBN 0-395-47804-9
OCLC 38043106

Offshore (1979) is a novel by Penelope Fitzgerald. It won the Booker Prize for that year.[1] It recalls her time spent on boats on the Thames in Battersea. The novel explores the liminality of people who do not belong to the land or the sea, but are somewhere in between. The epigraph, "che mena il vento, e che batte la pioggia, e che s'incontran con si aspre lingue" ("whom the wind drives, or whom the rain beats, or those who clash with such bitter tongues") comes from Canto XI of Dante's Inferno.

List of Characters and Their Boats (in order)

Lord Jim

  • Richard Blake, husband, aged 39
  • Laura Blake, wife, also known as Lollie

Maurice

  • Maurice
  • Harry, Maurice's acquaintance, who uses the boat for his own purposes but does not live on board

Grace

  • Nenna James, mother
  • Martha James, Nenna's teenage daughter.
  • Tilda (Matilda) James, Nenna's younger daughter, who is six years old
  • Edward James, estranged father and husband, who visits the boat only once
  • Stripey (the cat)

Dreadnought

  • Willis, painter, widower, 65 years old

Rochester

  • Woodie, husband
  • Janet, wife, who lives ashore

Plot Summary

The novel is set in London in the early 1960s. When Edward takes a job overseas his wife Nenna stays behind in London. With no job, little income and an absentee husband, she resorts to living in a houseboat on the Thames. There she and her two daughters are surrounded by a supportive group of like-minded boat-dwellers. Their houseboats reflect their personalities, ranging from carefully maintained to nearly derelict.

Edward returns to London, but refuses to live with Nenna. Unable to confront her marital problems and infatuated with Richard, Nenna drifts through her days as her prosperous and energetic sister tries to persuade her to move to Canada for the sake of her daughters. Matters become complicated when Willis's boat sinks unexpectedly, Laura leaves Richard and Nenna finally confronts Edward.

Critical Reception

  • Review, The New York Times Book Review [2]
  • Review, The Independent[3]
  • Review, The Guardian [4]

Other Works

Booker Prize Recipients

Awards
Preceded by Booker Prize recipient
1979
Succeeded by
Rites of Passage

References

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