Human Voices

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Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 1999 - Fiction - 143 pages
The "human voices" of Penelope Fitzgerald's enchanting novel are those of an eccentric group of broadcasters at the BBC in London during the air raids of World War II. When British listeners tuned in to the Nine O'Clock News in the middle of 1940, they had no idea what human dramas -- and follies -- were unfolding behind the scenes. Targeted by enemy bombers, the BBC had turned its concert hall into a dormitory for both sexes. And, as in any dormitory, romance and intrigue prevailed. At the center of Human Voices is the tense relationship between two departmental directors and a surprising love affair with a sixteen-year-old intern named Annie, who has the perfect pitch.

Like Fitzgerald's novels Offshore and The Bookshop, Human Voices grew out of her personal experience -- she worked for the BBC during the war, when the station served as a lifeline to the troops and a singular source of truth to the public. Romantic, ironic, tragic, as only Penelope Fitzgerald can be, Human Voices is an unexpected treat for her many American fans.

 

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About the author (1999)

In 1997 Penelope Fitzgerald's novel The Blue Flower was named one of the New York Times Book Review's eleven Best Books of the Year. Winner of the 1979 Booker Prize for Offshore, Fitzgerald was also short-listed for the Booker for The Bookshop. The Beginning of Spring, and The Gate of Angels. Penelope Fitzgerald lives in England.

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