pjcowlambooks
‘…the layers of language, the unexpected details… The ways that worldviews and individual cultures make relationships form and fall apart.’
Jennifer Clare Burke, author A Life Less Convenient: Letters To My Ex.
Marisa ‘…explores a broad range of intellectual themes, such as the psychological
dynamic of left-
Jennifer Armstrong, writer and academic.
‘This is a very enjoyable book, it is beautifully written, sparse prose. The English is a delight and ...to be read carefully so as not to misss anything. It is a short book, the characters and epoch well observed.’
Wandsworth Library.
‘…extraordinarily mature and assured… The narrative moves at a gentle pace, but carries the reader into an intricate psychological and profound journey…’
Malcolm Stern, co-
‘…a very good book. This novel gave me some pleasurable hours of reading time.’
From Carol’s Corner, Kirklees Reading Circle.
‘Marisa, P J Cowlam’s most recent novel, is a fine addition to that most affecting of genres, past love recollected in tranquillity. Its autumnal mood perfectly complements its subject, reflecting Cowlam’s origins as a poet who has brought his vision and feel for language to prose. Literate in a Jamesian sense, the narrative – punctuated with Proustian moments of remembrance – covers a quarter of a century of what the narrator Bruce calls the ‘vortex of time’, capturing the poignancy of lives lived to different rhythms, intersecting but never intertwining.’
Keith Bush.
‘I loved Marisa.’ It is ‘…an amazing book.’
Professor Gabriela Segal.