What You Will
An intimate portrait of London intellectual life, the breakdown of a marriage and the friendship between two women.
Is it possible to have both love and freedom? Are we slaves to our impulses? Or to one another? Can the artist or the intellectual illuminate such questions?
Gwen, an American painter, lives in London with her English husband, Lawrence, an Oxford don. When Hilary arrives from New York bruised by a broken engagement, a lost job, and an unsuitable love affair, Gwen determines to find her someone to marry. Will it be another Oxford intellectual? A member of London’s bohemia? Or a professional from the scandal-ridden New York museum world? And who will take charge of the valuable antiquities Hilary has collected?
The bonds of friendship, love, and marriage twist grotesquely, sexual energies churn, and the moral intuition and conviction of everyone in the household are shockingly tested. Pressure builds vertiginously in Gwen and Lawrence’s small son as he struggles to engage with the sophistication and savagery around him, and the relentless demands of motherhood reveal a new mythology in place among a generation of women young enough to have been liberated without trying and perhaps without knowing what liberation means.
‘What You Will’ is a subtly wrought, multi-layered, and hypnotically suspenseful tale about how we handle our most intimate relationships.
Praise for ‘What You Will’: -
”'Engaging new novel. 'What You Will” - is a playfully serious novel with thoughts and ideas exploding like a storm of confetti even as the marriage at the centre of it is disintegrating into a thousand little pieces.' Guardian
'”What You Will” contains some beautifully realised passages.' Observer -
'A dense, layered portrait of three people's interlocking relations, the ways they sustain each other and the ways they let each other down. What gives Bucknell's geometrical story its rich complexity is the time and intelligence the author devotes to the professional ambitions of her characters.' Times Literary Supplement -
Praise for ‘Canarino’: -
'A remarkably vigorous and subtle first novel: it is written with commanding authority and is impressively accomplished. The plotting is bold and alluring. The characters are vividly realised, forensically examined…beautifully observed. The writing throughout is spare and punctilious.' Independent -
'A memorable debut.' Observer -
'An artistic triumph.' Sunday Telegraph -
'An impressively structured novel.' Spectator -
'A sharp, pacily written examination of a marriage in slow motion.' Time Out -
'Superbly draws a secure, unquestioned world and its subsequent downfall. There is much to admire in the writing.' Times Literary Supplement -
'Divorce, money, sexy men and classy prose. Chick lit for clever girls.' Style Magazine, Sunday Times -