Special Commissioned Essay on The Lying Days by Nadine Gordimer, Judith Newman - Essay: Introduction
ESSAY: INTRODUCTION
Judith Newman (essay date 2002)
SOURCE: Newman, Judith. “An Analysis of The Lying Days, by Nadine Gordimer.” In Contemporary Literary Criticism, vol. 160, edited by Tom Burns and Jeffrey W. Hunter. Farmington Hills, Mich.: The Gale Group, 2002.
[In the following essay, Newman examines The Lying Days on a number of levels, assessing the plot, characters, evolution of the work, the novel's historical significance, and how the book has been studied since its publication.]
PLOT SUMMARY
The Lying Days takes its title from a quatrain in a poem by William Butler Yeats, “The Coming of Wisdom with Time” (1910):
Though leaves are many, the root is one Through all the lying days of my youth I swayed my leaves and flowers in the sun Now I may wither into the truth.
The quotation draws attention to the process by which Helen Shaw's life takes many branching paths and...
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