Poor Cow
On sale
1st August 2013
Price: £9.99
THE BESTSELLING NOVEL BY NELL DUNN
‘Her art is ignited by voice . . . as you hear it, is unquestionable’ ALI SMITH, GUARDIAN
‘Touching, truthful and fresh’ MARGARET DRABBLE
‘Nell Dunn’s hilarious, heartbreaking Poor Cow, about a single mother in sixties London’ PARIS REVIEW
Joy – also called Blossom, Sunshine and Blondie by the men in her life – walks down Fulham Broadway carrying her week-old baby, Jonny. She is twenty-one with bleached hair, high suede shoes and a head full of dreams. Her husband Tom is a thief and on the proceeds of a job they move to a luxury flat – ‘the world was our oyster and we chose Ruislip’. Then Tom is sent to prison, leaving Joy and Jonny to move in with Auntie Emm. This is Joy’s story: an exuberant, pink-lipsticked, tale of London life, love and young motherhood in the sixties . . .
Poor Cow explores the life of a young working-class girl in the swinging sixties as she navigates the consequences of her decisions.
Nell Dunn’s 1967 novel was also made into a film directed by Ken Loach.
‘Her art is ignited by voice . . . as you hear it, is unquestionable’ ALI SMITH, GUARDIAN
‘Touching, truthful and fresh’ MARGARET DRABBLE
‘Nell Dunn’s hilarious, heartbreaking Poor Cow, about a single mother in sixties London’ PARIS REVIEW
Joy – also called Blossom, Sunshine and Blondie by the men in her life – walks down Fulham Broadway carrying her week-old baby, Jonny. She is twenty-one with bleached hair, high suede shoes and a head full of dreams. Her husband Tom is a thief and on the proceeds of a job they move to a luxury flat – ‘the world was our oyster and we chose Ruislip’. Then Tom is sent to prison, leaving Joy and Jonny to move in with Auntie Emm. This is Joy’s story: an exuberant, pink-lipsticked, tale of London life, love and young motherhood in the sixties . . .
Poor Cow explores the life of a young working-class girl in the swinging sixties as she navigates the consequences of her decisions.
Nell Dunn’s 1967 novel was also made into a film directed by Ken Loach.