Author | Sabrina Broadbent |
---|---|
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Subject | Marriage |
Genre |
Autobiographical novel Roman à clef |
Published | 2004 |
Publisher | Chatto & Windus |
Media type | |
ISBN | 0099464527 |
Descent: An Irresistible Tragicomedy of Everyday Life is a 2004 roman à clef by Sabrina Broadbent about a troubled marriage. [1] The protagonist, Genevieve, is a psychiatric nurse whose husband, a filmmaker, leaves her at home while he travels the world having sexual intercourse with well-known actresses. [2] Descent was Broadbent's debut novel and is based on her own marriage. [3] After Descent, her next novel was You Don't Have to be Good, which also takes romantic problems as its subject. [4] Descent was the inaugural winner of the W H Smith Raw Talent Award. [5] Stephen Rodrick of The New York Times called Descent "a touching, smart novel." [6]
The novel is based on Broadbent's previous marriage. Broadbent had been married to Michael Winterbottom and had had two daughters with him, but the couple divorced; Andrew Eaton suggested that Winterbottom went on to reflect the family's life in fiction as well, in the film Genova, although Winterbottom denied this claim. [7] As an autobiographical novel, Descent specifically documents the deterioration of Broadbent's marriage to Winterbottom as a result of his long work-related absences. [8] Broadbent began writing the novel at age 49, after taking a Jacksons Lane course in creative writing. [9] In relation to Descent, Broadbent said, "I didn't really set out to write a novel... I was writing about a woman who gets to that point in her life that everything seems to be collapsing." [10]
Author | Sabrina Broadbent |
---|---|
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Subject | Marriage |
Genre |
Autobiographical novel Roman à clef |
Published | 2004 |
Publisher | Chatto & Windus |
Media type | |
ISBN | 0099464527 |
Descent: An Irresistible Tragicomedy of Everyday Life is a 2004 roman à clef by Sabrina Broadbent about a troubled marriage. [1] The protagonist, Genevieve, is a psychiatric nurse whose husband, a filmmaker, leaves her at home while he travels the world having sexual intercourse with well-known actresses. [2] Descent was Broadbent's debut novel and is based on her own marriage. [3] After Descent, her next novel was You Don't Have to be Good, which also takes romantic problems as its subject. [4] Descent was the inaugural winner of the W H Smith Raw Talent Award. [5] Stephen Rodrick of The New York Times called Descent "a touching, smart novel." [6]
The novel is based on Broadbent's previous marriage. Broadbent had been married to Michael Winterbottom and had had two daughters with him, but the couple divorced; Andrew Eaton suggested that Winterbottom went on to reflect the family's life in fiction as well, in the film Genova, although Winterbottom denied this claim. [7] As an autobiographical novel, Descent specifically documents the deterioration of Broadbent's marriage to Winterbottom as a result of his long work-related absences. [8] Broadbent began writing the novel at age 49, after taking a Jacksons Lane course in creative writing. [9] In relation to Descent, Broadbent said, "I didn't really set out to write a novel... I was writing about a woman who gets to that point in her life that everything seems to be collapsing." [10]