Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Arundel, Honor - Judith Aldridge
Arundel, Honor - Judith Aldridge
JUDITH ALDRIDGE
Honor Arundel presented Jan Meredith in The Terrible Temptation as an intelligent, entirely selfish but honest, university student who dreaded involvement and feared love, the blanket word which covers so many emotions. In [The Blanket Word], still at university, Jan is summoned home to join the rest of her family during her mother's terminal illness. (p. 110)
The plot is slight but the book makes absorbing reading. The first person narrative is taut and vigorous, the conversations ring true, and the presentation of emotions together with Jan's analyses of her feelings are acute. There is a welcome thread of humour too, in dialogue and in the characters of Jan herself and her steadiest friend, Thomas, which saves the book from any moral heaviness. It is well-structured: the two family crises, one at either end of the book, marking Jan's development without artificiality. The contrasting worlds of village and university are made...
[The entire page is 224 words long]
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