August is a Wicked Month – Edna O’Brien (1965)
Many, many years ago, decades even, when I was a sixth-former (that’s Year 12, kids) my English teacher gave out a list of suggested reading for A levels. Somewhat surprisingly, I didn’t finish it entirely (although just in case that seems worryingly off-brand, I should say my name still went round to the teachers on a list as the pupil who borrowed most library books that year) and I can remember the few that escaped me. One was August is a Wicked Month, and having read it now I’m a bit surprised it was on a sixth-form reading list. Because it is explicit. But it’s also very realistic so maybe my teachers thought it was responsible reading 😀
Ellen is in her late twenties and her ex-husband has taken their son camping. Ellen is not good at being alone and managing feelings:
‘I’ll just be,’ she said. A rare thing for her, racked as she was with anxiety, wondering always what would happen next, if an affair would be eternal, or if she loved her son over much, or if the wheels of a car they sat in would fly off and leave them half dead on the roadside.
So she decides to go to the south of France for sun and anonymous sex:
“She had been brought up to believe in punishment; sin in a field and the long awful spell in the Magdalen laundry scrubbing it out, down on her knees getting cleansed. She longed to be free and young and naked with all the men in the world making love to her, all at once. Was that why he ran?”
Written in 1965, this is not a tale of the joys of sexual liberation and freedom. Despite the setting, the tale is not glamorous. Ellen falls in with a crowd that includes a film star, but its all lonely and sad and isolating. She may as well have stayed away,
“She wanted to go home, not to London to the pipes of light but home to the race to which she belonged: and then she shivered uncontrollably, knowing that their thoughts were no longer hers. She had vanished back into childhood and the dark springs of her terrors.”
Everything Ellen does seems a misstep but not comically so. Her confused interactions with people, failed flirtations and disappointing sex just serve to highlight the inadequacy of human communication and the tendency to look for solace in precisely the wrong places.
This was the first Edna O’Brien I’ve read and I thought her writing was wonderful. She has a way of building images in a way that is so startling and disconcerting, but recognisable:
“Yellow all around, the lemons in the trees like lobes of light, the odd lit bulb, and his face yellow like parchment, from age. His blue eyes were not dead but were something worse. They had the sick look of eyes that will wounded and for whom death would be a relief.”
She can also be incredibly spiky and unforgiving:
“Her hands were long and white and soft. Hands into which cream and money had been poured and unlike the face they were able to be beautiful without showing the umbrage of the unloved.”
The only misstep for me was an event towards the end that seemed unnecessarily dramatic and as if there wasn’t enough faith in Ellen’s story as it stood to carry the novella. But a minor quibble overall – I’ll definitely be seeking out the Country Girls trilogy after this.

Great review! The writer does a fantastic job of analyzing the book and providing insight into the writing style. The personal anecdotes also add a nice touch.
founder of balance thy life
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Thank you 🙂
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This is already on my TBR and now I want to read it more than ever.
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I really hope you enjoy it Lisa!
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Good for your teacher! I remember loving the Country Girls trilogy but for some reason haven’t read this one. Adding it to my list…
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That list introduced me to a lot of great writers! I hope you enjoy this when you get to it Susan.
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I really enjoyed this one a few years ago. There was a moment of purple prose near the beginning regarding foxgloves that made me giggle I remember! It definitely got more dramatic as it went on though.
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Oh yes! It does develop quite a dramatic tone after that, doesn’t it? Glad you enjoyed this too!
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I confess to have a unreasonable resistance to the idea of reading Edna O’Brien and I have absolutely no idea why! But you almost have me convinced I should give her a try…
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That’s so funny Kaggsy – I’m sure I have authors who are the same but none are springing to mind right now! I hope you enjoy her if you do give her a try 🙂
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I really like those quotes – this is one of those novels I’ve seen around forever, but didn’t really know what it was about. Those quotes have made me keen to pick it up next time I see it.
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So glad you like the quotes Simon. I hope you enjoy it when you get to it.
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I’ve never read any O’Brien either though I’ve often been tempted to try the Country Girls trilogy – I’ll be interested to hear what you think of it when you get to it.
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I hear such good things about the trilogy, I have high hopes…
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Great review. I read this one in March and loved it. I loved all the dark undertones and the fact her holiday turned into a bit of a disaster. Like you, it made me want to read the Country Girls trilogy. I’ve read some of her later work and thought it was very good, but this early novel was excellent.
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Great to hear you enjoyed this too Kim. That’s good to know about her later work. I definitely want to read more by her – let’s hope we both enjoy the Country Girls trilogy as much!
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