Dancing Girls

Dancing Girls

$10.00 AUD

Availability: in stock at our Tullamarine warehouse

Condition: SECONDHAND

This is a secondhand book. The jacket image is a photograph of the exact copy we have in stock. This image shows the condition of this book. Further condition remarks are below.


Condition remarks:
Condition: Good to fair. Paperback. Page Condition: Good - possible tanning. Markings: possible previous owner inscription.

A masterwork of short fiction by one of Canada's most celebrated literary voices, Dancing Girls gathers fourteen short stories that illuminate the quiet tensions and unsettling undercurrents of everyday life. Margaret Atwood's sharp, incisive prose chronicles the experiences of women navigating identity, isolation, and desire in a world both familiar and subtly menacing. The collection presents a gallery of characters — students, wives, immigrants, and outsiders — each caught in moments of social friction or private revelation, rendered with Atwood's characteristic blend of wit, irony, and psychological precision. First published in 1977, the stories range in setting from Canada to the United States to Europe, yet each one uncovers the same universal anxieties about belonging, power, and the stories we tell ourselves to survive.

Author: Margaret Atwood
Format: Paperback

Genre: Modern fiction

Description


Condition remarks:
Condition: Good to fair. Paperback. Page Condition: Good - possible tanning. Markings: possible previous owner inscription.

A masterwork of short fiction by one of Canada's most celebrated literary voices, Dancing Girls gathers fourteen short stories that illuminate the quiet tensions and unsettling undercurrents of everyday life. Margaret Atwood's sharp, incisive prose chronicles the experiences of women navigating identity, isolation, and desire in a world both familiar and subtly menacing. The collection presents a gallery of characters — students, wives, immigrants, and outsiders — each caught in moments of social friction or private revelation, rendered with Atwood's characteristic blend of wit, irony, and psychological precision. First published in 1977, the stories range in setting from Canada to the United States to Europe, yet each one uncovers the same universal anxieties about belonging, power, and the stories we tell ourselves to survive.