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For Love Alone (novel)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For Love Alone
First edition
AuthorChristina Stead
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish
GenreLiterary fiction
PublisherHarcourt Brace
Publication date
1944
Media typePrint
Pages491pp
Preceded byThe Man Who Loved Children 
Followed byLetty Fox: Her Luck 

For Love Alone (1944) is a novel by Australian writer Christina Stead.[1]

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Transcription

Hi WellCasters! It's getting colder outside and the supermarkets have finally sold the last of the Thanksgiving turkeys, so you know what that means: It's coming up on finals! We know, we know, it's not our favorite time of year either—upcoming tests mean long nights of studying, stress and probably some nightmares that involve sleeping through your English exam or walking into class naked. This week on WellCast, we took a suggestion by TheSambarsalsa on getting your study skills up to par. We're not going to make you sit through any statistics or studies today—just three exercises you can put into practice to become a better test taker. You ready? Pause and print this week's tips on our handy WellCast worksheet. One: Ace your essay with the Black-Red-Green method. This exercise comes from the Royal Literary Fund, and it's a great trick to use when you're tackling a difficult essay question. First, make sure you've got three colored pens—you guessed it, one black, one red and one green. You're going to use these three pens to underline different parts of the essay question—by the end, everything will be underlined so you won't miss anything important. Let's say this is your essay question: "In The Great Gatsby, how does Gatsby represent the American dream in the 1920s? Reference two quotes from the novel as well as one secondary source. Be sure to refer to specific symbolism throughout the novel, including the green light and T.J. Eckleburg." First, take out your black pen. BLAck stands for BLAtant instructions—something the question requires you to answer to receive full marks. Next, take out your REd pen—this will be used for underlining any REference points you've been asked to hit. Finally, take out your green pen. This one's easy: The green pen underlines a "green light"—that is, a hint that the question gives on how to proceed. By now, this essay question should be looking like a Christmas tree—that's how you know you've hit and understood every part of the prompt. You're ready to rock the answer! Two: Acronyms are your best friend. You probably know what an acronym is—we use them all the time here at WellCast. Basically, acronyms turn a long string of information into something short, interesting and, above all, memorable. The best acronyms have one thing in common: They create a striking visual image in your mind. For example, a common acronym is the sentence "Each Good Bird Does Fly." That's one way to remember the lines in a staff of music: E, G, B, D and F. But... flying birds aren't very striking. Most birds—at least, the boring ones—fly. If you're sitting in a classroom, chewing on your pencil, a flock of birds might not pop into your head right away if you're straining to remember a musical staff. But what about "Each Gaptoothed Billygoat Dances Fast." Yep! That's more like it. Three: Give a speech. The link between hearing something and remembering it has been proven time and again. Studies have found that people who have difficulty hearing in certain situations are also more likely to have memory impairment. What does that mean? Well, think about your favorite album. You know how you always know what the next song is going to be? That's because you've listened to the thing ad nauseum and ingrained the information in your brain. Why not use this useful hack to help yourself remember information for a test? Practice reading your notes out loud—think of it like singing along to a new favorite song. The more you hear yourself saying the notes, the better you'll remember them the next day. Let's recap: Finals week should be a breeze with WellCast on your side! Today you learned the Black-Red-Green method for tackling an essay question, going for those creative acronyms to get you out of a stump, and practiced a good way to memorize a lot of information. We'll see you next time, WellCasters!

Story outline

Set in Sydney and London in the 1930s, the novel tells the story of Teresa Hawkins and her search for the ideal of love. She follows the unworthy Jonathan Crow to London and discovers Crow's corruption and egoistic shallowness. Taken under the wing of an older man, James Quick, she discovers a renewed sense of love and compassion.

Critical reception

A reviewer in The Advertiser (Adelaide) was not impressed with the novel at all: "This is a sadly disappointing fact, for Christina Stead for long has been outstanding among Australian writers, and her novels have been unusually brilliant books. In this novel, though, she has attempted a realistic subject and approach, and both subject and approach are quite unsuited to her talents. Her supposed realism, in contrast to her previous fantasy, is unselective and generally without significance. It makes the characters ridiculous figures whose actions appear meaningless and purposeless."[2]

In reviewing the novel when it was re-issued in 1970, W.S. Ramson compared it to Martin Boyd's novel Lucinda Brayford, also re-issued at that time: "For Love Alone is as different in style as it is possible to be, feminine, intuitive, almost claustrophobic in its intensity and introspectiveness, masterful rather than masterly in its assurance. Miss Stead worries at her subject examining and analysing, leeching her material dry, probing through a world which bends before the weight of her examination, and becomes strained and distorted into a new and tightly controlled perspective."[3]

Film Adaptation

The novel was adapted into a film of the same name in 1986. The adaptation was written and directed by Stephen Wallace, and featured Helen Buday, Sam Neill, and Hugo Weaving.[4]

See also

References

This page was last edited on 24 December 2022, at 21:14
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