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The lens through which a story is told makes all the difference. Miller's revelatory debut novel, written in crisp, elegant prose, focuses on Georgie Hyde-Lees, wife of Anglo Irish poet W. B. Yeats. Though Georgie isn't his greatest love (Maud Gonne has that distinction), she turns out to be his ideal partner, which he takes a long time to realize. The story initially moves between 1916, as Georgie nurses wounded WWI officers in a dreary London hospital, and 1914, when she approaches the eccentric, much older Yeats at a soirée and requests an invitation to a clandestine occult society. Missing her late father, Georgie longs for proof of the soul's immortality, and her quest draws readers into the perennially intriguing theme of spiritualism and the reasons why people pursue it. Though slowly paced, the novel offers ample conflict as Georgie faces difficult choices. The bleak atmosphere aptly suits the wartime backdrop, and Miller deftly presents a portrait of Georgie, a young woman calibrating her place in the world, and her shifting relationship with the man she adores.Women in Focus: The 19th in 2020
Kirkus ReviewsAn atmospheric novel conjures up Georgie Hyde-Lees, the woman whose automatic writing is credited with enabling poet W.B. Yeats' late work, a clever, rational, sympathetic figure in her own right.Indulged by her alcoholic father and disapproved of by her sterner mother, Georgie emerges, as Miller's debut opens, as an independent-minded, questioning young woman living in London in a pre-feminist era. It's 1916, and, keen to help with the war effort, Georgie has taken on a menial hospital job, tending to wounded officers, that comes with the useful benefit of lodgings that liberate her from her mother's home while also allowing her to pursue her interest in spiritualism and see friends at will. These friends include the poets Ezra Pound, who will marry Georgie's best friend, and W.B. Yeats, an Irishman twice her age who shares her interest in mediums and séances and will introduce her to the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. An unspoken moment of intensity between Yeats and Georgie leads to an assumption that they will marry, yet Yeats seems distant and is rumored to still be seeking a marriage with the woman he has pursued for decades, Maude Gonne. Miller draws an empathetic-if loosely paced-portrait of Georgie, a young woman seeking certitude and intellectual satisfaction in a confusing landscape of war, mysticism, supposed intellectuals, and affairs of the heart. The latter are complicated by the attentions of one of the wounded officers and the comments of a medium who suggests Yeats has three possible women to choose from. Meeting that third woman-Iseult Gonne, Maude's daughter-at one of Yeats' parties, Georgie gains clarity on several matters, including her own naiveté, and flees London. But neither the spirits nor the menfolk have quite finished with her.Subtle and low-key, Miller's debut coolly appraises the poet while fully inhabiting the woman in his shadow.
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)Miller-s solid debut draws on the life of literary translator Georgiana Hyde-Lees, who married W.B. Yeats. The story opens in war-weary 1916 London, at a hospital filled with recuperating soldiers. Georgie has taken a nursing job, where she fends off suitors by telling them about her sweetheart-the much older Willy Yeats. Georgie also attends meetings of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, a secret society devoted to the occult that Willy has joined, and believes this shared interest means they are meant for each other, though Willie isn-t ready to settle down. Georgie searches for clues to her future happiness at gatherings of the Order and in séances with a young medium named Nora Radcliffe, though she senses something sinister (-for a terrifying minute the map of her brain seemed wiped pale-). After Georgie is fired for lying to get time off, she determines to marry Willy despite the age difference and his reputation as a ladies- man. Though readers know from the beginning Georgie will marry Willy, Miller maintains tension by laying out plenty of plausible alternatives. Historical fiction devotees will appreciate this sensitive character study wrapped in an atmospheric, moody rendering of WWI London.
ALA Booklist (Fri May 01 00:00:00 CDT 2020)
Kirkus Reviews
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
The story of W. B. Yeats and Georgie Hyde-Lees begins on the eve of World War I, when the ghost-mad poet admits the young woman to a secret society. This triggers a years-long courtship between one of history's most famous poets and the brilliant woman that shared and drove his obsessions. Living on her own for the first time in London, Georgie spends her days tending to wounded soldiers and her evenings pursuing ghosts, sometimes accompanied by Willy Yeats, the man she expects to marry. But none of the people surrounding Georgie - her mother, her friends Dorothy Shakespear and Ezra Pound, an injured sergeant in the hospital ward, or the beautiful Iseult Gonne--can consider the ancient Willy Yeats as a credible partner for her. As the war intensifies and the proof of an afterlife continues to elude them, can Georgie and Willy's relationship hold? In bright, beautiful prose Alice Miller charts the early years between Georgie and Yeats, bringing to life not only these characters, but the uncertain world in which they live: the ever-present war; the secret societies; the fears and the promises, large and small. This is a story about faith and love, lost and found and fought for, and the small moments on which whole lives hinge. How, Miller asks, do we know when faith or love is certain and to what degree are they defined by how far we are willing to chase them?