The Lost Properties of Love

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Pub Date 7 Feb 2019 | Archive Date 25 Mar 2020
HarperCollins UK, | William Collins

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Description

What if you could tell the truth about who you are, without risking losing the one you love? This is a book about love affairs and why we choose to have them; a book for anyone who has ever loved and wondered what it is all about.

This is a book about the things we hide from other people. Love affairs, grief, domestic strife and the mess at the bottom of your handbag. Part memoir, part imagined history, in The Lost Properties of Love, Sophie Ratcliffe combines her own experience of childhood bereavement, a past lover, the reality about motherhood and marriage, with undiscovered stories about Tolstoy and trains, handbags and honeymoons to muse on the messiness of everyday life.

An extended train journey frames the action – and the author turns not to self-help manuals but to the fictions that have shaped our emotional and romantic landscape. Readers will find themselves propelled into Anna Karenina’s world of steam, commuting down the Northern Line, and checking out a New York El-train with Anthony Trollope’s forgotten muse, Kate Field.

As scenes in her own life collide with the stories of real and imaginary heroines, The Lost Properties of Love asks how we might find new ways of thinking about love and intimacy in the twenty-first century. Frank and painfully funny, this contemporary take on Brief Encounter – told to a backing track of classic 80s songs- is a compelling look at the workings of the human heart.

What if you could tell the truth about who you are, without risking losing the one you love? This is a book about love affairs and why we choose to have them; a book for anyone who has...


Advance Praise

‘A compelling and very honest book. At times it made me think of Tracey Emin’s bed! So many of the details and detritus of a life arranged in a work of art. A beautiful read.’ Neil Tennant

‘A compelling and very honest book. At times it made me think of Tracey Emin’s bed! So many of the details and detritus of a life arranged in a work of art. A beautiful read.’ Neil Tennant


Available Editions

EDITION Other Format
ISBN 9780008225902
PRICE £16.99 (GBP)

Average rating from 10 members


Featured Reviews

This book is a wonderfully strange hodge podge of material. At bottom it's about love and about loss and what we do when those people we love leave us too early. It's a meditation on Anna Karenina and Tolstoy and trains. It's about memory and how it can bind us and free us. It's about navigating the hum drum every dayness of life and fitting into it the huge, aching rawness of loss and love. It's funny and sad and thoughtful and there were lots of little jewel like moments where I found myself sitting up and paying closer attention because I found myself right there on the page. I loved it.

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Very unique book that felt so personal as it is part memoir. I really enjoyed this book and would recommend

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A literary novel a mix of memoir a mix of story telling.A train ride a memory of affairs life experiences add in Anna Karenina so unique so interesting so well written a wonderful novel an adventurous read.Highly recommend,

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A incredibly moving memoir - tracing the days and months following her father's death (when she was in her early teens) - and the derailing of a life as a result of bereavement. But also a compelling weaving of fictional lives and classic novels. The book is framed around train journeys. I loved the scenes of travel across different countries and over time. I read this in just two days and will reread. Would recommend to anyone who has lost someone close to them. Thanks to HarperCollins for this advance reading copy.

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