![]() First edition cover | |
Author | Peter De Vries |
---|---|
Cover artist | Miriam Woods |
Language | English |
Genre | Comic novel |
Publisher | Little, Brown and Company |
Publication date | May 12, 1954 |
Publication place | United States |
Pages | 246 |
The Tunnel of Love is a novel by American author Peter De Vries; it was published on May 12, 1954, by Little, Brown and Company.[1] The novel is written in first-person narration from the viewpoint of a magazine art editor. He tells the story of his neighbors in fictional Avalon, Connecticut, a cartoonist named Augie Poole and his wife Isolde, and their efforts to adopt a child, using the narrator and his wife Audrey as references. However, the majority of interactions and dialogue concern the narrator, often as internal musings, and entire chapters go by without a mention of Augie or Isolde. The story spans roughly three years in the life of these two couples, including a look ahead prologue at the beginning.
The novel was constructed adapting five short stories published several years earlier in The New Yorker.[2] These formed the basis for chapters 6, 11, 13, 15, and 17 in the 1st edition.[2] The novel was a sleeper hit, gradually building up readership over the summer of 1954 until it started appearing on bestseller lists.[3] While there is some mild situational and character-based comedy, the main source of humor for the novel is in wordplay; the author De Vries was a connoisseur of punning. Despite some situations where it might be expected, there are no double entendres of a sexual nature in the novel. There is some Walter Mitty style daydreaming by the narrator,[fn 1] not of heroic action but of delivered witticisms.[4]
Cite error: There are <ref group=fn>
tags on this page, but the references will not show without a {{reflist|group=fn}}
template (see the help page).