Audiobook
"There is no mistake about it, Alvina was a lost girl. She was cut off from everything she belonged to."
In this most under-valued of his novels, Lawrence once again presents us with a young woman hemmed in by her middle-class upbringing and (like Ursula Brangwen in The Rainbow) longing for escape. Alvina Houghton's plight, however, is given a rather comic and even picaresque treatment. Losing first her mother, a perpetual invalid, and later her cross-dressing father, a woefully ineffectual small-scale entrepreneur, Alvina feels doomed to merge with the tribe of eternal spinsters who surround her in the dreary mining community of Woodhouse.
Into this drab environment enter the Natcha-Kee-Tawara: a polyglot, poly-amorous troupe of travelling players united, on- and off-stage, in a fantasy of Native American nomadism. Enter Ciccio, the surly dark-eyed horseman. The Italian's potent and threatening physicality overwhelms Alvina and soon will propel her into - what? Perdition, or the paradoxical freedom of a girl who 'like(s) being lost'?
(Summary by Martin Geeson)
| # | Chapter Name | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | 53:08 | |
| 2 | 20:57 | |
| 3 | 32:35 | |
| 4 | 36:57 | |
| 5 | 36:32 | |
| 6 | 34:03 | |
| 7 | 40:22 | |
| 8 | 40:24 | |
| 9 | 42:15 | |
| 10 | 42:40 | |
| 11 | 34:30 | |
| 12 | 29:01 | |
| 13 | 51:22 | |
| 14 | 51:38 | |
| 15 | 40:59 | |
| 16 | 41:40 | |
| 17 | 39:51 | |
| 18 | 33:51 | |
| 19 | 27:16 | |
| 20 | 24:07 | |
| 21 | 57:15 | |
| 22 | 23:18 | |
| 23 | 48:22 |
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