Stanley and the Women (novel) explained

Stanley and the Women is a 1984 novel by British author Kingsley Amis.

Stanley and the Women
Author:Kingsley Amis
Cover Artist:Alistair Taylor
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Genre:Comedy novel
Publisher:Hutchinson
Release Date:1984
Media Type:Print (hardback & paperback)
Pages:256 pp
Isbn:0-09-156240 6

Plot

Stanley Duke works in advertising, and had been married to an actress, Nowell. He is now married to Susan, with whom he has a complicated relationship, seemingly because of her mother, Lady Daly. His son, Steve, suffers a mental breakdown, and Stanley takes him to two psychiatrists. The first, Dr. Collings, is female and too liberated for Stanley; and the second, Dr. Nash, seems to be more interested in drinking than helping his son.

A doctor's suggestion that all women are mad becomes an increasing obsession with Stanley (in parallel with Steve's increasing insanity) culminating in outbursts of offensive misogynistic bigotry. Various ironic episodes of middle-class London life - including a successful dinner party; a less successful drunken evening with Nowell's second husband; Stanley's removal from his job; and others - all drive continuing reassessments of the characters. The ending floats a possibility that all women are in fact terrifyingly sane.

Reception

Marilyn Butler for the London Review of Books says that Amis "has created a world in which only men appear to communicate with one another, and their favourite topic is their dislike of women".[1] Amis' son, Martin, called it "a mean little novel in every sense, sour, spare, and viciously well-organized".[2]

Adaptation

See main article: Stanley and the Women.

The novel was adapted for the television by Nigel Kneale and directed by David Tucker, it was produced by Central Independent Television for the ITV network.

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.lrb.co.uk/v06/n10/marilyn-butler/women-and-the-novel Women and the Novel by Marilyn Butler
  2. http://www.martinamisweb.com/pre_2006/Keulks3a.htm Martin Amis Web, PART III: The Autobiographical Abyss: Jake's Thing and Stanley and the Women