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Heredity
 
One of the novel's most refreshing aspects is Davidson's steadfast refusal to invest Elizabeth with the base-line likability that American readers seem to demand in their fictional heroines. Elizabeth is moody, foulmouthed, untrustworthy and seething with trivial prejudices against everything imaginable. (''I hate umbrellas,'' she declares at one point. ''They make me want to punch somebody.'') She's not above cheating on her lovers, rummaging through other people's underwear drawers and (worst of all) forcing her dates to eat at McDonald's.
[I]nventive subplots. ...[A] recasting of the classic coming-of-age motif as a struggle between warring impulses of self-perpetuation and self-annihilation. And since Elizabeth is an admitted addict of expert knowledge, the book is laced with veins of fascinating minutiae about grave robbing by early anatomists, the mechanics of in vitro fertilization, even the pathology of syphilis.
In the fine tradition of expatriate novels...Heredity is full of ironic grace notes about the peculiarities of life on the other side of the Atlantic.
—The New York Times Book Review
>Read the entire review
A refreshingly taut, deadpan take on the old intertwining-narrative, hands-across-the-centuries thing, Jenny Davidson's Heredity reads like the novel of which A.S. Byatt's Possession was the baggy and sentimental first draft. It's also as dark as your hat: sex-and-death with a side-order of extra death. A masterful and outrageously readable first novel.
—Bruno Maddox, author of My Little Blue Dress
Heredity is a marvelously entertaining work of intellectual and biological obsession–bawdy, audacious and very funny. If John Cleland had been a 21st-century novelist, he might have written something like this.
Heredity
Jenny Davidson

Paper | 6" x 9" | 300 pgs. | ISBN: 1-887128-79-4 | List: $14.00 | 03/1/2003

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About the book:
Heredity tells the story of Elizabeth Mann, a young woman plagued by self-destructive habits, who thinks leaving New York will solve her problems. Taking a travel-writing assignment to London, she encounters the skeleton of the famous 18th-century criminal Jonathan Wild in an obscure museum. Elizabeth’s burgeoning preoccupation with the master thief is briefly interrupted by an encounter with Gideon Streetcar, an infertility specialist and lover-to-be. Then Streetcar presents her with the memoirs of Jonathan Wild's second wife, Mary.
The journals have been painstakingly restored by a British Library technician, and Elizabeth, fascinated with the story they tell, soon discovers that Wild’s first wife was also named Elizabeth Mann. Further tantalized by this coincidence, Elizabeth's obsession with Wild consumes her completely, and with Gideon’s expert assistance, she concocts a plan whereby she can give birth to the infamous man's child. She soon shows signs of pregnancy.
Heredity is an intrigue of sex and death in which the one fails to preclude the other. Drawing early comparisons to Peter Hoeg's best-selling Smilla's Sense of Snow, this deadpan literary detective story is a remarkably entertaining and devious debut with a high-tech twist that echoes recent headlines.

About the author:
Jenny Davidson was born in London in 1971 and grew up in Philadelphia, where she attended Germantown Friends School. She has degrees from Harvard and Yale and currently teaches eighteenth-century British literature in the Department of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University. Heredity is her first novel and it has already been chosen as a Gear 100 Buzz Pick of 2003 by Gear magazine.
© 2003 Soft Skull Press, Inc.


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