Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Lessing, Doris (Vol. 170) - Jeff Zaleski (review date 21 January 2002)


Lessing, Doris (Vol. 170) - Jeff Zaleski (review date 21 January 2002)

Jeff Zaleski (review date 21 January 2002)

SOURCE: Zaleski, Jeff. Review of The Sweetest Dream, by Doris Lessing. Publishers Weekly 249, no. 3 (21 January 2002): 63-4.

[In the following review, Zaleski observes parallels between Lessing's life experience and the narrative of The Sweetest Dream.]

In lieu of writing volume three of her autobiography (“because of possible hurt to vulnerable people”), the grand dame of English letters delves into the 1960s and beyond [in The Sweetest Dream], where she left off in her second volume of memoirs, Walking in the Shade. The result is a shimmering, solidly wrought, deeply felt portrait of a divorced “earth” mother and her passel of teenage live-ins. Frances Lennox and her two adolescent sons, Andrew and Colin, and their motley friends have taken over the bottom floors of a rambling house in Hampstead, London. The house is owned by Frances's well-heeled German-born...

[The entire page is 356 words long]

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