Sleep It Off Lady
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AuthorJean Rhys
CoverartistRosemary Honeybourne
LanguageEnglish
PublisherAndré Deutsch (UK)
Harper & Row (USA)
Harper & Row (USA)
![]() First edition | |
| Author | Jean Rhys |
|---|---|
| Cover artist | Rosemary Honeybourne |
| Language | English |
| Publisher | André Deutsch (UK) Harper & Row (USA) |
Publication date | October 1976 |
| Media type | Print (hardback & paperback) |
| Pages | 176 pp |
| ISBN | 0-233-96818-0 |
Sleep It Off Lady, originally published in late 1976 by André Deutsch of Great Britain, was famed Dominican author Jean Rhys' final collection of short stories.[1] The sixteen stories in this collection stretch over an approximate 75-year period, starting from the end of the nineteenth century (November 1899) to the present time of writing (c. 1975).
The back cover of the first UK edition features a tribute quote from A. Alvarez, extracted from his 1974 New York Times Book Review article about Rhys, praising her as "simply the best living English novelist..."[2]
(a synopsis follows each title)
- " Pioneers, Oh, Pioneers ": At the turn of the twentieth century, a doctor experiences the final hours of an ill-fated estate house bought only days before by his rival.
- "Goodbye Marcus, Goodbye Rose": A captain and his wife pay a visit to Dominica while on vacation in Jamaica for the winter.
- "The Bishop's Feast": A home-born returnee is invited by an old nun to witness the enthronement of a new Bishop in Roseau, before spending a week on Dominica's leeward coast.
- " Heat": The effects of the 1902 eruption of Mount Pelée on Dominica.
- "Fishy Waters": Racial tensions between a British carpenter and local folk erupt into a scandal that eventually finds its way into Roseau's courtroom.
- "Overture and Beginners Please": In this first of four consecutive stories about a pre-World War I Caribbean immigrant named Elsa, the young girl starts at Perse School then becomes a stage star in the midst of an unwanted life.
- "Before the Deluge": Elsa meets a stage girl—a policeman's daughter from Manchester—whose beauty never succeeds while entertaining her audience.
- "On Not Shooting Sitting Birds": An English gentleman rejects Elsa for good after hearing of her past exploits during hunting trips in her homeland.
- "Kikimora": At a first-class hotel, Elsa discovers how perceptive the title character, a black cat, can be, as compared to a husband.
- "Night Out 1925": The experiences of two lovers, Suzy and Gilbert, in the streets of Paris.
- "The Chevalier of the Place Blanche": In the English-language version of a work by the author's first husband, Jean Lenglet (written under his nom-de-plume of Edouard de Nève), the title character shares his desire with a British lady in a 1920s Paris restaurant.
- "The Insect World": An old lady shows a young child the disturbing connections between London Underground dwellers and a tropical insect parasite whose name they share in slang.
- "Rapunzel, Rapunzel": A hospital patient makes a temporary stay at a convalescent home in London, with a long-haired Australian as her neighbour.
- "Who Knows What's Up in the Attic?": A vacationer in south-east England comes face-to-face with a clothing salesman.
- "Sleep It Off Lady": In this story from which the collection takes its name, another old lady faces a rat problem while taking care of her cottage.
- " I Used to Live Here Once": In this final story, the author makes her way across a familiar childhood stream and discovers she is deceased.[3]
