The Day of the Tortoise.

London: Michael Joseph, 1961 (November). Illustrated by Peter Farmer.

A tale of a brief interlude of pleasure in the drab existence of a man nearing his sixties. The title refers to one of the man's pets, a tortoise who is led by a leash on walks in the garden. Baldwin (202) cites correspondence dating the writing of the work as January 1960. First published in Argosy (September 1960, with illustrations by Mary Dinsdale). The story was adapted for television by Julian Bond and aired in 1967 in the series "ITV Playhouse."

The Times Literary Supplement was more enthusiastic than most reviewers: "Like all Mr. Bates's work, this story is acutely and aromatically realized. It buzzes and sweats with summer. Sometimes, again typically, floods of descriptive detail drown what are essentially simple images. But, gentle and sensuous, compassionate without ever heeling over into sentimentality, The Day of the Tortoise remains joyously readable."

Reviews:
New Statesman (December 8, 1961, p. 894, William Walsh, attached)
Spectator (November 24, 1961, p. 790, Francis Hope, attached)
Times (November 30, 1961, p. 16, attached)
Times Literary Supplement (December 8, 1961, p. 877, Anthony Burgess, attached)

ID: 
a92
Title: 
The Day of the Tortoise
Genre: 
Novella
Page Count: 
94
Word Count: 
ca. 19800
Publisher: 
Argosy
Michael Joseph
Year of Publication: 
1960
Topic: 
Music
Pets
Document Type: 
Film & Television
AttachmentSize
a92 New Statesman.pdf279.66 KB
a92 Spectator.pdf308.55 KB
a92 Times.Pdf1.44 MB
a92 TLS.pdf342.14 KB