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Joyce watches them and sees that something is missing in their lives: men. She doesn't want to end up like Aunt Vera, buttoned awkwardly into unflattering clothes, rejected by her husband. Joyce discovers the art room at school: she falls in love with the sensuousness of lemons, the French Impressionists, and, eventually, one of her teachers at the art college. In spite of the temptations of the sixties, she is determined to make marriage and motherhood a success. When Joyce's daughter, Zoe, grows up and has a baby of her own, however, Zoe proves impatient with domestic life, and chooses a very different path.
Spanning five decades of extraordinary change in women's lives, Everything Will Be All Right explores the complicated relationships in one family. The young ones of each generation are sure they can correct the mistakes of their parents; the truth, of course, is more opaque.
Unknown Binding
First published April 1, 2002
... it could not be endurable, surely something would give way. But of course it was endurable, it was only school and not real torture, and at last the clock would deliver up hometime and the walk to the bus ... Here at last was repose, in the gap before the driver started up the engine and the conductor came selling tickets; she sank into herself, dreaming, alone, hugging her briefcase on her knees, turning her head away if girls in green uniform got on.
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She wasn't much liked by the teachers or by many of the girls; she could see herself that there was something unattractive in how she cherished her apartness, unresponsive in class, refusing to be charmed when the teachers were funny and courted them, sceptical of the togetherness of the gangs of girls.