The Triple Echo

by H. E. Bates

Other authorsRon Clarke (Illustrator)
Paperback, 1970

Status

Available

Call number

823.912

Publication

Harmondsworth: Penguin Books, 1981

Description

Published in 1970, The Triple Echo was Bates's last significant novella, but one which he described as taking twenty-five years to complete.Set in the 1940s, the wife of a war prisoner lives in desperate loneliness and fear on an isolated farmstead. She encounters a young farmboy completely out of his element as a soldier, and the two carve out a relationship in defiance of the war around them. His decision to escape the military and to dress as his lover's sister to avoid detection eventually leads to tragedy. In a late essay Bates discusses the long evolution of the story's plot, conceived in 1943 with two sisters and completed in 1968 with just one, in what Bates calls 'an exceptional example of stumbling and groping or, if you will, of my own prolonged stupidity.' A film version starring Oliver Reed, Brian Deacon, and Glenda Jackson was premiered in November 1972, and issued in the United States with the title Soldiers in Skirts.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member devenish
The scene is an isolated farm deep in the English countryside,owned by a woman who runs the place completely on her own.
It is three years into the Second World War when the life of this woman is disturbed by the arrival of a young man. She starts off distrusting him,but soon falls in love. She then
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learns that he is an army deserter and decides to shelter and hide him from the authorities.
This is a typical Bates short novel which is beautifully told and which can be read again and again with pleasure.
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LibraryThing member Fliss88
A good writer can say so much with few words. This tiny book, only 90 pages long, packs quite a punch and the reason for the title is rather haunting when all is revealed. Fate brings two people together. Alice is a lonely woman, forced through circumstance to live and work alone on her farm, and
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Barton a homesick soldier. Barton is happier and less stressed spending time with Alice, helping run the farm, than struggling with the rigid relentlessness of army life. His decision to go AWOL, because of a growing affection between them has irreversible consequences. It was made into a film in 1972 staring Glenda Jackson. I haven’t seen it.
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Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1970

Physical description

90 p.; 18 cm

ISBN

014003563X / 9780140035636
Page: 0.2494 seconds