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Harriet Said...

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Country
  
United Kingdom

Publication date
  
1972 (UK), 1973 (US)

Pages
  
152

Originally published
  
1972

Page count
  
152

Followed by
  
The Dressmaker

3.5/5
Goodreads

Language
  
English

Media type
  
Print

ISBN
  
0-7156-0657-3

Author
  
Beryl Bainbridge

Genre
  
Novel

Publisher
  
George Braziller

Harriet Said... t2gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcSlgqAiSmoXDfNZ4K

Similar
  
Injury Time, A weekend with Claude, An Awfully Big Adventure, The Dressmaker, Every Man for Himself

Harriet Said... was the first novel written by Beryl Bainbridge, based on newspaper reports the Parker–Hulme murder case in New Zealand which involved two young girls.

Although completed in 1958 it was rejected by several publishers in the late fifties, one of whom wrote on the flyleaf of a first edition:

what repulsive little creatures you have made the two central characters, repulsive almost beyond belief! And I think the scene in which the two men and the two girls meet in the Tsar's house is too indecent and unpleasant even for these lax days. What is more, I fear that even now a respectable printer would not print it!.

The manuscript was thought lost but was found by one publisher, returned to the author and finally published by Duckworth in 1972, and by George Braziller in the US the following year.

Plot introduction

It concerns two schoolgirls spending their holiday in an English coastal town. Harriet is the older at 14 and the leader of the two. The 13-year-old unnamed narrator develops a crush on an unhappily married middle-aged man, Peter Biggs, whom they nickname "the Tsar." Led by pretty, malevolent Harriet they study his relationship with his wife, planning to humiliate him. Their plan quickly goes wrong, however, with horrifying results.

References

Harriet Said... Wikipedia