Any bibliophile knows that at some point you have to make some painful decisions. Unless you are blessed with unlimited space, bookshelves eventually fill. Depending on your tolerance for clutter there is only so much stacking books behind each other, piling them on the floor, filling the cupboards and funny spaces between appliances that you can do before enough is enough. Something has to go. It's a painful process getting rid of books. When deciding what goes and looking between one book and another it starts to feel like “Sophie's Choice.”

My bookshelves are always on the brink of overflowing and since my boyfriend likes to keep things neat it's not fair to let our apartment fill up completely with the books I acquire. Over the weekend we had a clear out and came up with this stack of books to go. These are the victims...

I've read most of the books on the right side. The left side has books which are quite big and that I don't think I'll get to anytime soon. Sedaris is a duplicate.

I've read most of the books on the right side. The left side has books which are quite big and that I don't think I'll get to anytime soon. Sedaris is a duplicate.

I make my book culling decisions based on the following:

  • Is this a duplicate? (These are the first to go. I was given a beautiful old edition of O'Connor's stories at Christmas which is why this edition is going)

  • Have I read it and do I realistically believe I'll read it again? Many of the books on my shelves are ones I haven't read. Quite often there are ones that I have read and enjoyed I'm happy to let go but there are others which I want to be part of my permanent collection.

  • If I've had it for several years and haven't read it is it time to let it go? Some books I look at and think 'It'd be nice to read that one day' But if I'm honest with myself I'll probably never find the time.

  • Will it be difficult to reacquire this book if I want it again one day? It's easy to find almost any book that's been published with bookfinder.com. However, some small print/rare books can even be difficult to track down online.

  • Does it have sentimental or monetary value? I barely ever get rid of books given as gifts or ones that I acquired at a special event or at a special time.

  • How thick is it? Sadly with so little space on offer it's the fattest books which are easier to dispose of since they take up more room. I love immersing myself in a long involving book, but many big books now I make sure to only purchase e-copies of.

Usually it's only the process of disposing of books which is painful. Once they are gone I don't really miss them. There are always more coming in.

How do you make your book culling decisions? Have you ever let go of a book and then really regretted it?  

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AuthorEric Karl Anderson
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It's admirable when a novel sets out its own rules forming a unique rigid structure to convey a story. Rather than limiting the narrative, this can give the author freedom to drive through her meaning and create a rhythm to the story which gives the reader a comforting sense of being held by an authoritative voice. It's something I love so much about the monumental achievement that is Virginia Woolf's “The Waves” - a book that invokes six characters' interior poetic voices throughout the course of their lives with each section prefaced by short descriptions of the sun's movement over the course of a day. Deborah Kay Davies invents her own structure writing a book composed of page-long lyrical scenes headed by titles that trace the development of a young girl. “Reasons She Goes to the Woods” is the story of adolescent Pearl who grows from girlhood to a young adult over the course of the book exploring the sometimes deviant compulsions and tumultuous passions which contribute to the formation of identity.

Davies creates a constellation of sensory images invoking all the beauty and rancor of childhood. Pearl is a wilful child who explores the nearby forested area surrounding her house, pines for the attention of her stalwart father, plays with and tortures her younger brother who she dismissively labels “the blob” and rebels against her emotionally-volatile mother. The independently-minded girl forms her own rules by which to conduct herself and orchestrates intensely cruel initiation ceremonies which her playmates must go through before they can become her friend. This is very reminiscent of the opening section of Jane Bowles' “Two Serious Ladies” where gruesome muddy rituals between children are carried out with an emotionally-intense religious fervour. Pearl emerges as a natural leader who is revered by her friends and brother despite the vicious way she deals with them. It seems to be in the natural order of things that strength is followed over those who have empathy but are weak. The young heroine is also frank in her sexual exploration seeking out pleasure without any embarrassment.

The author's beautifully lyrical writing teases out hidden dimensions to the surface of the world. At one point in Pearl's early life when she's immersed in nature she observes “Lightning cracks above the rooftops, revealing the stunning light from a more interesting world behind the sky.” The physical dimension of the landscape in this novel constantly shifts to show different forms of reality lurking behind what is only immediately apparent. It feels as if this extends to people themselves, particularly Pearl's unstable mother who is prone to fits of mysterious illness. At times she is a presence so threatening I felt intense distress for the welfare of Pearl and her brother. Other times she's incredibly delicate and subject to Pearl's own pernicious will. Pearl's revelation chimes like a blaring alarm: “In amongst the apple trees she feels so excited she wants to float like a balloon. So, mothers can die, she thinks, running from tree to tree. I never knew that.” The girl's seeming intent to take her mother's place in her father's affections works as a mother-daughter form of the Oedipus story.

Gradually Pearl progressions into her teenage years completing exams at school and casting off her childhood romantic love affair. The evolution of her identity is beautifully and cleverly marked by Davies through periods of reflection. “Pearl stares into her own eyes and thinks someone else is peering out through them. Her real self has leaked away. Now all that is left is this stranger, almost as unhappy as she is.” This marks both Pearl's physical growth and transformation as well as interior shifts in personality. It's as if her essential identity must be emptied out to make room for a more mature and savvy self that can confront the challenges of the world.

This is a brisk poetic novel that can be easily read over a quiet afternoon. But I frequently found myself having to stop and slowly read certain pages to feel the full gravity of what Davies was writing. I enjoy that the narrative isn't always straightforward and it's necessary to try to figure out what's really happening amongst the characters. Davies is a confident talented writer who has here given an original coming of age story more concerned with a rapidly-shifting internal reality than the solid milestones of development. 

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AuthorEric Karl Anderson

Our lives are a mess. Reading “The Blazing World” I’m reminded of a performance by the brilliant artist Bobby Baker I once attended. She delivered a monologue about her life that included a scattering of memories, disappointments, happy highlights and concerns about contemporary issues. With each subject she added dry ingredients into a pot collecting them all until it overflowed. She poured it over herself till her clothes, hair and face were completely soiled and a floury cloud floated around her head. She stared around at the audience solemnly proclaiming: “What a mess!” The sight was comical, but through the manner in which she delivered the monologue it was understood that her whole being had tragically unravelled. In a similar way, the life of this novel’s central character Harriet Burden (or Harry as many intimates call her) is a mess. The narrative reflects her state of mind as it is a loose collection of fragments: personal notebooks, statements from family, friends and an art critic as well as gallery show reviews. It is an assemblage which is incomplete, meandering and circuitous. But in its fragmentation it becomes a truer portrait of a person than any straightforward narrative could hope to represent. This account is a more meaningful reflection of the many facets of personality and the multi-layered ways in which a person can be viewed.

Harriet is an artist in her sixties living in New York City who is frustrated with the way female artists don’t get taken as seriously as men. She devises a grand artistic project to expose this prejudice and take revenge by exposing the art world’s sexist nature. Three living male artists are selected by her to present original shows as their own work when really Harriet is the true artist. Only after the third show does she reveal her grand prank through an indirect route by writing an article for an obscure art publication under the pseudonym of a fictional critic. With so much subterfuge going on, people naturally question whether Harriet has made all this up or if she’s created one of the most ingenious artworks of our time. The book begins with a preface from someone attempting to answer this riddle by compiling the various accounts about the late Harriet Burden into a somewhat chronological order. This may all sound exhaustingly convoluted, but it’s actually quite straightforward to follow the story once you get the gist. At it’s heart, “The Blazing World” is really about the more profound question of personality.

It’s as if “The Golden Notebook” were written by Susan Sontag, but of course the writing is totally unique and purely the innovation of Siri Hustvedt. It’s a brilliant assemblage of knowledge full of clever word play, innovative narrative technique, psychological insights and dramatic twists. It’s sparked by a feeling of real anger: about our complacency to accept things as they are when there has been so much hard intellectual work dedicated to progress. It’s a passion which burns on every page. Harriet is a voracious reader and thinker. Therefore, her notebooks are layered with a heady amount of references to great works by psychologists, artists, philosophers, writers, scientists and theologians. I love it when I finish a novel with a long list of books and authors that I want to look up and learn even more from. This novel has given me a list longer than most. But this isn’t a showy intellectual feat by Hustvedt. This knowledge is layered into her central character’s reasoning because it relates to the ontological issues which stir her heart and cause her to create such an elaborate complex deceitful artistic project.

Going even further, accounts from both Harriet’s friends and enemies offer counter arguments to the statements Harriet makes. For instance, the primary question at the centre of this novel asks if art by women is taken less seriously. On one side a psychoanalyst named Rachel said: “With almost no exceptions, art by men is far more expensive than art by women. Dollars tell the story.” Harriet echoes this thought when she says: “Money talks. It tells you about what is valued, what matters. It sure as hell isn’t women.” However, an art critic named Oscar states: “To suggest, even for an instant, that there might be more men than women in art because men are better artists is to risk being tortured by the thought police.” Whereas a bi-racial artist named Phineas muses upon the superficiality of the art in general world concluding that: “It was all names and money, money and names, more money and more names.” Later on Harriet suggests that the question of gender isn’t even her central preoccupation: “it’s more than sex. It’s an experiment, a whole story I am making.” Points of view jostle against each other until a multi-layered portrait of this and other questions are presented and the reader must come to their own conclusions.

The accounts which struck me the most in this novel are Harriet’s own recorded in her various notebooks. One of her preoccupations is her fight against time, against being marginalized forever as a footnote rather than having made a grand statement about life. She states: “I am writing this because I don’t trust time.” Her tireless efforts to create and communicate show how desperately serious she is about the issues she raises. Having spent her life living somewhat quietly as a wife and mother she has reached middle age and is now keenly aware that if she doesn’t make her statement soon time will defeat her. With great precision she observes that: “Time creeps. Time alters. Gravity insists.” The razor-sharp language used cuts right to the heart of what she means and is merciless in its exactitude. Through short dramatic fragments of memory she recollects scenes from her past: her father who didn’t want her, the discovery of her husband’s infidelity, the cruelty of schoolmates who misunderstood her and finally the pernicious betrayal which threatens to dismantle her grand artistic project.

There is plenty of humour to be found in this novel as well. The comedy is of a highly intellectual sort – plays on words and jokes that need a footnote about a French cultural theorist to fully understand them. But there is also humour of a more bawdy nature cutting down the ridiculous importance men place on their manhood “He worries over semen flow, a bit low, the flow, compared to days gone by. You’d think he had walked around with a volcano down there for years, conceited man” and a satirical humour that slices apart Harriet’s perceived enemies in a merciless way. Harriet pokes fun at the art world and its parade of ego-driven denizens, but somewhat sadly she finds little to laugh about in how seriously she takes herself. For it is perhaps the most important characteristic of Harriet’s personality that she takes the world so seriously and expects everyone else to as well despite her partner Bruno trying to tell her differently: “Harry’s magic kingdom, where citizens lounged about reading philosophy and science and arguing about perception? It’s a crude world, old girl, I used to tell her.” Because no one seeks to understand the world with as much intellectual vigour and passion as she does, she desires to take revenge upon the people who don’t take her or the world so seriously. The fact that she does this through an artistic prank so elaborate it can only be comprehended after her death is a tragic joke itself. What she really desires is recognition, not revenge. She daydreams that after her death someone will come upon her work and “nodding wisely, my imaginary critic will stare for a long time and then utter, here is something, something good.” The creation of any art is an act of faith that the artist's vision will be recognized and understood and influence the culture its a part of.

Siri Hustvedt is a supremely talented writer and this novel might be her great masterpiece. Feminism and experimental forms of narrative have always had a strong presence in her novels like “The Blindfold” and “The Enchantment of Lily Dahl” while in “What I Loved” she created a novel about the NYC art world and the breakdown of a family. “The Blazing World” seems to synthesize all her primary concerns and turns them into an astonishing story. The truth lies not in any one account in this collection of fragments, but in between the pages and how we construct an idea of Harriet/”Harry.” This is what novels artfully do for us when they are written as brilliantly as this book: give us an incomplete picture of the world to fill in with our own understanding of it. But in the end it's not the artist herself who really matters but the art she leaves behind. As Harriet notes: “I am myself a myth about myself. Who I am has nothing to do with it.” At a certain point personality dissolves and the integrity of the art work's ideas are what determine whether it will stand throughout time. It's my hope that this novel will survive to be read for centuries.

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AuthorEric Karl Anderson
CategoriesSiri Hustvedt

There’s an old cliché that relationships formed in times of emergency are tighter and more intense than those that come together in more natural circumstances. At least, they are at first. Audrey Magee’s debut novel “The Undertaking” begins with the marriage of German soldier Peter Faber and Katharina Spinell during WWII, but the couple aren’t physically together in the same place. In fact, they’ve never even met. Their marriage was negotiated through an agency for cold practical reasons. Peter wants leave from the battlefront to return to Germany. Encouraged by the parents she lives with, Katharina wants to receive a pension if Peter should die in combat. The two finally get to meet and, after some initial awkwardness, form an intense close bond. This hastily arranged relationship gives each of them something to hope for throughout the terrible war that ensues and it is incredibly brutal. At first the German forces and ordinary citizens smugly believe that their victory will continue and their empire will expand into the Russian territory they invade. The story follows the long bitter loss of this dream and cleverly portrays how the characters’ ideologies gradually shift with its withering.

The really striking feature of Magee’s strong writing is how incredibly spare it is. The novel is largely composed of dialogue. The conversations between characters are sharply distilled so that they evoke not only exactly what the characters are thinking, but the political ideologies behind what they are saying and the emotions thickly surrounding those words. The descriptions of location or events between these sections of dialogue are very sparse, simple and declarative because that’s all they need to be. It’s in the rich meaningful speech of the characters that the physical environment and entire culture at that time in history is evoked. This is a very clever writer’s trick and devastatingly effective for the subject of war. No poetics, interior contemplation or elaborate metaphors are necessary. The hard brutal facts and carefully chosen words spoken by the characters form a deeply felt, layered understanding of the personal dilemmas involved in life during battle.

At times I was on the brink of tears reading certain scenes in this novel because they are so blunt. A few terse lines in some scenes hit like a hammer. Characters celebrating moving into a richly decorated, spacious new apartment or the acquisition of a sparkling expensive jewelled necklace become something horrific because the reader knows that these have just been forcefully taken from Jewish people who have been rounded up by the Nazis. A temporary shelter with still smouldering fire and meagre meal for battered German soldiers in a tiny Russian village becomes revolting because the reader knows the helpless Russian civilians who just recently inhabited it have been forced out into the snow to freeze. These acquisitions taken by the characters seemingly without guilt don’t need any justification because it’s wartime. Normal moral impulses don’t apply. There is an enemy who is dominated and the spoils of war become the possessions of the victor. This steely merciless nature of battle comes through Magee’s story causing the reader to imagine the multitude of personal sufferings that are behind these physical takings. Scenes like this and ones where personal conflict actually occurs in a few short lines left me utterly devastated.

A German soldier being captured in Russia, Dec 1941

A German soldier being captured in Russia, Dec 1941

It’s fascinating how political beliefs and allegiances gradually shift throughout the novel - not because of the suffering the characters witness in others, but because of the gradual wearing down of their own minds, bodies and spirits. This isn’t a rose-tinted view of humanity. Magee shows how people act in a highly pressurized environment where desperation and necessity are the only things which motivate normal individuals. This isn’t a book about extraordinary heroes or viciously-minded villains. It’s about ordinary citizens involved in a war which we as historically-informed readers know they are doomed to lose. By dragging us through the battles both on the home front and fields of conflict, Peter and Katharina’s relationship which holds such a fiery aura throughout the novel is gradually, heart-wrenchingly demystified. I’m not going to say what happens or if the couple find each other, but what’s extraordinary is that the natural compulsion (for most readers, at least) to see a happy reunion is confounded by the way the society’s values shift over these wartime years.

I was having a conversation with someone recently about why Ireland produces so many distinctly strong writers. Recently I’ve been reading a lot of excellent new and established ones. Of course, any discussions like this inevitably fall into generalizations. Usually people cite the highly lyrical quality of Irish writing borne out of a long oral tradition and strong sense of culture. What’s striking about Audrey Magee is her writing doesn’t have any of this but is nevertheless intensely felt and still beautiful. I’m so happy that this book came to attention through its appearance on the Baileys Women’s Prize for Fiction long list as I might not have read it otherwise. It’s a gripping, terrifying and brilliantly conceived novel.

Here is a wonderful interview about Magee’s thought process in composing the novel and her motivation for writing it:

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AuthorEric Karl Anderson
CategoriesAudrey Magee
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I've been struck down with a cold all weekend so I've spent most of it inside despite it being gloriously sunny and mild-warm in London. I'm not much of a sit in the sunshine type as I generally prefer the shade, but I do like a good walk around the city when the weather is nice. Anna Quindlen's latest novel made an excellent partner for my time slumped on the sofa with views of the bright blue sky outside. “Still Life with Bread Crumbs” is the story of Rebecca Winter, a middle-aged photographer of some renown who has fallen down on her luck. She came to fame with a series of close-up, introspective photographs she took in her home following a dinner party and fight with her husband. Since her royalty checks have dwindled and her expenses for caring for her mother beset with dementia keep rising she's had to rent out her New York City apartment and take up residency in a cheap rural house up state. Here she strikes up relationships with some of the colourful locals and starts new projects including photographing mysterious memorial crosses set in the nearby forest and a stray dog she takes ownership of. Her priorities in life shift in this new environment and her relationship to her artistic photographs alters as she makes a new home.

Rebecca has divorced her husband who found her success in photography difficult to take. It's only through her artistic expression that she understands that her relationship with him really isn't working and they have diametrically opposed views on how they want their life together to progress. “Rebecca simply wasn't much of a story... She realized that marriage doesn't really make much of a story... most of it is the mundane middle part.” The heady excitement of a new relationship is easy to get caught up in, but the experience of a long, steady companionship is something quite different. Her husband simply isn't interested in the second part. When there is an imbalance in relationships like this Quindlen makes a well-observed statement about how passionate love affairs can slowly wilt: “in love no one ever leaves well enough alone, and so it settles into a strange unsatisfactory kind of friendship or sours into mutual recriminations and regret.” Likewise when Rebecca starts a new relationship with a man who helps catch a racoon that's taking up residence in her attic, the author cleverly traces the patterns of missteps and misunderstandings that occur when heightened passion supersedes straightforward honest communication.

One of the things I appreciated about this novel the most is the honest way it deals with the importance of money in an individual character's life. Too often in novels it seems the financial concerns of working class people and artists are left in the background when really it is something at the forefront in people's minds when money is a day to day concern. Since Rebecca has seen a declining interest in her photographic work money has become a much greater concern for her. She constantly calculates what her remaining funds are in relation to the expenses she has going out because she is growing older and has people dependant on her. Quindlen shows how the value of money can become so easily mixed up with personal values. People must constantly weigh up the sentimental value of something against its monetary value. Herein the importance of a thing shifts depending on the financial circumstances of the individual.

Over the course of the novel Rebecca develops a deeper understanding of life as a process: “The problem was that she'd thought that at a certain point she would be a finished product.” It comes as a relief when Rebecca stops trying to shape her life into something she can control and embrace what pleasure can be found in the ever-shifting present. Written in a series of short fast-paced chapters it speeds along through Rebecca's year in her remote home. “Still Life with Bread Crumbs” is a thoroughly pleasurable warm-hearted read. 

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AuthorEric Karl Anderson
CategoriesAnna Quindlen
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Sometimes the feeling of a novel resonates so strongly with my current emotional state that it’s eerie. It’s that magical moment where consciousness becomes fused so tight with the narrative and the particular story becomes my own – particular and universal. True. I had this sensation as I got into the thick of this novel’s story. It seems an unlikely place and person to feel so connected to: Galgut’s fictional imagining of writer EM Forster. The novel mostly takes place between the publication of “Howard’s End” in 1910 and the publication of “A Passage to India” in 1924. Forster (or Morgan as he is commonly called) travels to India primarily to visit a man he's fallen in love with named Syed Ross Masood. He experiences first hand the strained racial relations and the way imperialism was transforming at that time. Having met in England when Morgan was tutoring him the pair became close friends, but never lovers as Masood denied Morgan's advances. When Morgan returns to England he continues to live with his mother who is both his closest companion and worst enemy. During the war Morgan takes up a position in Egypt and there meets the second great love of his life Mohammed. Galgut carefully reconstructs the tentative relationships Morgan builds with other people, elucidating the suppressed sexuality of Morgan and the complexity of racial politics. The story is overall a speculation on the events and emotions which fed into the difficult creation of “A Passage to India” as well as the novel “Maurice” which wasn't published until after the author's death.

What resonated so strongly with me was the way Galgut skilfully conveys how an intensely intimate relationship can transform over time to something distant and unknown. What was once fiery can become nothing but smoke. But what also resonated with me was the distance Morgan feels between himself and other people. He is sociable and well liked. But it's as if the most essential parts of himself must be hidden from others. “His mood, which seldom left him, was like being under the sea, in aquamarine light. However bright or loud your surroundings, you were somehow always alone.” There is a yawning ravine between his essential self and others which causes him to feel intense isolation. This has to do with his personality but also with his Englishness; Galgut muses upon the way the national characteristics of being proper, not expressing intense emotion and being locked in a class system feed into the way Morgan feels so removed from others. Although it's a culture he was raised in he doesn't feel its inherent to him: “Although he was English all the way through, a great many English attitudes felt foreign to him.” Therefore his encounters with men from other cultures which tend to be more expressive and forthright with emotion entrance the impressionable writer and assist him in allowing his own true personality to emerge.

Morgan's sense of isolation also has a lot to do with his sexuality. He must hide his attraction to men as a necessity as he's very mindful of Oscar Wilde's persecution and fears being scorned by his mother and the people close to him. Some of his similarly closeted companions speak of this desire with carefully modulated language, but it can never be fully acknowledged. Although Morgan is in his thirties when the novel begins he's never had a full sexual experience: “The world of Eros remained a flickering internal pageant, always with him, yet always out of reach.” The roiling sexual fantasies stirring within remain theoretical as he has no real world experience of physical sex. Morgan's tentative approach to initiating sexual contact is masterfully handled by Galgut and when he finally does experience sensual relations it's tenderly described. Even if some people close to Morgan accept his sexuality it can never be publicly acknowledged and this also adds a burden to Morgan's feelings that no one knows his true self. When Morgan loses a man he loves he can't acknowledge how he really feels: “There was something humiliating, too, in a display of grief when the relationship had been unwitnessed.” Since his love for a man is never publicly declared he must suppress the grief of its loss as well. This drives Morgan even further inside himself, guarding his emotions and transforming them into the artistic expression that is his writing.

A curious thing that Galgut explores is the way Morgan doesn't really feel like a writer. He doesn't take his writing entirely seriously and is a bit bemused when his novels begin to be received so well. Nor does Morgan feel that novels are entirely suitable for encapsulating reality: “Fiction was too artificial and self-conscious, he thought, ever to convey anything real.” Although he is highly aware of the shortcomings of literature it's something he does return to continuously and Galgut seems to be proposing in this novel that Morgan does so because he has no other outlet for expressing how he truly feels. Morgan is described being locked out of his own emotions: “there were days when all passion seemed to be frozen in marble.” Only in the carefully controlled and modulated reality inside the fiction he creates by chiselling away at that marble can Morgan's true self come alive.

The writer EM Forster as private secretary to the Maharajah at Pondicherry, 1934 - a period covered in this novel.

The writer EM Forster as private secretary to the Maharajah at Pondicherry, 1934 - a period covered in this novel.

Since Morgan was heavily involved with the highly canonized literary movements of the time there are naturally some scenes in “Arctic Summer” which feature appearances from writers like a spirited young D.H. Lawrence, a befuddled Henry James, a sage-like Cavafy and an intimidating Virginia Woolf. Although he draws a lot of inspiration and support from them, Morgan expresses his hesitancy about engaging with the Woolfs and Bloomsbury Group: “They were all so interwoven and intimate, changing relationships and sexual tastes the way other people changed hats. To say nothing of their cleverness, which was sometimes cruel, and used against friend and enemy indiscriminately.” These portrayals of other writers are great fun for bookworms who naturally enjoy musing upon what the real life interactions between famous writers must have been like. Inevitably they are not as momentous as you would hope for or might imagine.

One of the more writerly aspects this novel explores is the slightly testy relationship a writer has with the people he’s intimate with and how it influences his productivity. One of the primary things that inhibits Morgan from writing as freely as he wants is fear about what his mother and close relations will think. Alternatively his loquacious friend Masood has a deep reservoir of faith in Morgan’s genius and continuously encourages him to write more and complete what he’s started. Galgut writes beautifully about the craft of fiction when he comments: “He had learned, with his earlier novels, that if you screwed up your inner eye when looking at somebody familiar, you could glimpse a new personality, both like and unlike the original. Once this outline had taken shape, you could fill it with traits that in turn had been borrowed elsewhere.” In the novel, Leonard Woolf provides the most constructive advice any writer can have that rather than planning in his head and fretting Forster should work out how his novels form “‘Simply by taking up your pen.’” All this hesitancy feels warranted by the way Morgan's books are received and may provide an answer for why he never published a novel after "A Passage to India" despite living many more years. When Morgan’s fame and status are elevated by his publications the casual cutting judgements directed toward him from the general public who haven’t even read him are chilling.

The title “Arctic Summer” comes from a novel that Morgan begins after publishing “Howard's End” and never completes. The pairing of the words perfectly summarize the emotional friction between intense heated passion and frozen feeling. However, the fact that it was an unfinished book becomes a sort of symbol for the unexpressed aspects of Morgan's personality. Poetically, Damon Galgut writes the novel of Morgan's life, creating a book that Morgan himself couldn't complete in his own real life because of the circumstances of the time.

Galgut is a masterful writer. I've only read his other novels “The Good Doctor” which enthralled me and “In a Strange Room” which intrigued me but left me frankly baffled. “Arctic Summer” makes a natural companion to Colm Toibin's brilliant novel “The Master” which similarly fictionalized the life of Henry James exposing the emotional inner life he strove so fervently to conceal. I'm very much looking forward to hearing Damon Galgut being interviewed by the excellent writer and charming man Patrick Gale at Kings Place in London at the end of March: http://www.kingsplace.co.uk/whats-on-book-tickets/spoken-word/damon-galgut-arctic-summer

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AuthorEric Karl Anderson
CategoriesDamon Galgut
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A plague of sleeplessness descends over the majority of the population in this eerie dystopian novel by Kenneth Calhoun. Nobody understands why this suddenly happens although there is speculation that includes a wide range of wild conspiracies. Without the rejuvenating assistance of sleep the majority of population lose all reason and now “the unguarded gate in their heads was now propped wide open to suggestion and persuasion.” Only a handful of people are still able to sleep without assistance. The book follows these few as they navigate the deteriorating social landscape and search for their loved ones lost to the agonizing spell of sleeplessness.

The thriller aspect of “Black Moon” is essentially like a zombie novel. The few unaffected must stagger around pretending to be sleep-deprived in order to avoid detection. If they get caught asleep they are attacked by the perpetually awake masses as they are jealously enraged by the sight of those resting peacefully. There are some creepily brutal scenes involving things like a woman trapped in a tree with a circling angry mob, a man undergoing brain surgery by half-crazed doctors and a truckload of captive sheep being driven by a man with a perpetual erection who is slowly going insane. Yet, unlike a horror genre novel, this book deals with the real-world mysterious interplay between consciousness and unconsciousness.

More than the physical threats of the perpetually awake masses or the body breaking down from lack of rest is the nightmarish terror of losing ones mind and all the fear and unrestrained carnal rage rising to the surface causing people to act totally irrationally. Personality is inverted until each person becomes “the opposite of all that he had been.” Like voices from a Samuel Beckett play, the perpetually awake prattle on and on expressing every core emotion that flits through their head and mixing memories of the past with the present so that time is condensed down to one unfathomable point in reality. This babbling is nonsensical but also lyrical and highlights surprisingly bizarre connections underlying the force of people’s most base motivations.

sleeplessness.jpg

In one section a couple named Adam and Jorie who have been experiencing sleep deprivation for almost a week continuously lose and find their infant baby. The gripping horror of what must be happening in reality to the child as the couple stagger confusedly through their days is intense. Although, the hallucinatory nature of the narrative as it follows the couple’s interaction with the child keeps you guessing if the child was lost some time ago or if it is even real. When following a character who has stopped sleeping the author changes the style of writing to reflect their increasingly fragmented psychological state. This had a bewitching effect on me as if I was losing grasp of reality too and made the story feel intensely real.

“Black Moon” makes you think about what importance your dream life has with your conscious life. But it doesn't linger ponderously on these questions – merely summons them up in the natural course of the story as the characters struggle to connect with each other and find a solution to the epidemic. This reminded me quite a lot of Jose Saramago novel “Blindness” about a sudden unexplained epidemic where the majority of the population goes blind (seeing white instead of black) and only the central character maintains her vision. These frameworks strip the construct of society down to its elements so that it must be rebuilt upon principles of cooperation or be torn apart by selfishness. It makes for a chilling, unsettling but altogether absorbing read.

See a playlist of songs about sleeping and insomnia that the author created here: http://www.largeheartedboy.com/blog/archive/2014/03/book_notes_kenn_1.html

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AuthorEric Karl Anderson
CategoriesKenneth Calhoun
Photo on 07-03-2014 at 00.40.jpg

So I was trying to wait till midnight to see the longlist announced but I drifted off to sleep around 11:45 as I was still hungover from the night before. But I woke up about quarter past twelve and was thrilled to see the list posted. Now I'm wide awake and perusing this fascinating new list. It's really my favourite prize for fiction. I am a shameless book prize groupie. Yes, it can get overblown and good books are often left out, but it's just fun to see books discussed and in the news. I'm also a fan of Baileys so quite happy that they are the new sponsor for the prize. I went to a wedding once and the bride knew how much I like Baileys so got me a glass of it rather than champagne. I managed to spill it all over myself while taking a picture of the groom, but no matter. Anyway, back to thoughts about the prize. I was dearly hoping to see the authors Kerry Hudson and Joyce Carol Oates on the list as well – but I'm glad that my other picks Eleanor Catton, Donna Tartt and Evie Wyld are on it. Having already read and reviewed their books I can confidently state that all three are excellent in their own unique ways. 

For the remaining titles on the longlist these are the books I want to get to reading first:

It's really neglectful I haven't read Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie's “Americanah” yet. I love her previous novels and book of short stories. She's such a daring thoroughly intelligent writer. I saw her read from this new book last summer. It sounded both entertaining and challenging, but for some reason I haven't got to reading it yet.

Another author I've seen read from her longlisted book is Charlotte Mendelson. She read from “Almost English” at Polari on the very same night their own Polari First Book Prize winner was announced. Mendelson came across as warm, witty and entertaining. Again, this is a book I've been looking forward to reading but haven't got to yet.

I really enjoyed reading Elizabeth Strout's novel “Olive Kitteridge” so I'm also really looking forward to reading her new longlisted title “The Burgess Boys.” Part of it takes place in my home state of Maine which is always a draw for me.

I'm now in a bit of a conundrum about reading Margaret Atwood's “MaddAddam” since it's the third book in a trilogy. I've read “Oryx & Crake” but haven't read “The Year of The Flood” so do I skip over the second? Or do I read the second and then this new one? The completist in me feels like it would be cheating to skip right to this latest book. Has anyone read all three and do you think reading the second is essential before reading the third?

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The other longlisted titles all sound like really fascinating varied reads as well. See the full long list here: http://www.womensprizeforfiction.co.uk/2014/baileys-womens-prize-for-fiction-announce-their-2014-longlist

Oh dear, I feel a book shopping spree coming on! Especially after downing a glass or two of Baileys.

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AuthorEric Karl Anderson
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This novel begins with a rather disorientating sequence where a car hits an animal and the driver flees. Is this really happening? Is it a nightmare? A story the narrator is composing? This ambiguity sets the tone for a novel that is quite dream-like following the affair between a forty-something Englishman named Paul staying in a hotel in Chicago and a barely-legal boxer/waiter named Adrian. After hooking up it becomes clear the two have been circling around each other for a short time. Told entirely from Paul’s perspective it is difficult to know Adrian’s real motives for entering into the relationship. After observing rent boys from a distance and giving Adrian cash after their encounters Paul thinks he’s probably only staying with him for his money. The two set on a road-trip journey as Adrian wants to drive all the way to Brazil. The growing intensity of their intimacy reaches levels which skirt dangerously around love. Written in a blunt yet enigmatic style “Bruiser” follows two lost souls seeking to find a new understanding.

At first I was sceptical about the main thrust of this story. It seemed more like an erotic fantasy than a likely scenario that a hot sporty teen would take up so readily with a reserved man in his forties. There are lots of descriptions lavishing attention to Adrian’s gym-trained body and his sexual forthrightness. However, it does seem plausible that a drifter boy with no real future might seize an opportunity to hook up with a lonely man with cash to spare in order to escape and indulge in his whimsical desire to travel. Adrian is someone actively seeking out to be toughened by life. As part of his boxing training he stands defenceless while his teacher gives him a severe beating in order to harden him for the ring as well as what could be considered the outpouring of a frustrated sexual desire. Coy, mischievous and prone to fits of sullen brooding, Adrian is someone who hasn’t had the kind of support in life to allow him to embrace the responsibilities of being an adult.

The excruciating tension which builds up over the various obstacles the pair encounter is found in the ambiguity of what Paul and Adrian really mean to each other. The loose nature of their partnership means that at any time one could abandon the other leaving them bereft. When Paul receives his savings from England Adrian asks in a frightening way “Is this all?” When Adrian becomes scared that a former partner of his might be HIV+ and Paul stops having sex with him its possible the boy might be abandoned. This is a relationship which runs through with feverish intensity as the pair come together so suddenly and set out together with no clear commitments or plans other than to make it to South America. It very much reminded me of the 90s queer film ‘The Living End’ about a couple who set out on the road together feeling like they have nothing to lose so seek to burn themselves out living life to the full.

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There is an intense claustrophobia to much of this book as a lot of it takes place in random hotel rooms where the pair have no one but each other. Rather than go into intimate details about the tumultuous feelings being experienced by both men the author conveys their emotions through small actions and subtle shifts in the way they relate to each other. This makes their relationship feel very alive and true especially as their masculine pride often masks what they really desire. We only get snippets out of Paul’s history and why he’s left his life in England to drift around America. Likewise, the history Adrian relates about his life is often contradicted later on making the truth about his situation mysterious. But when part of the truth about his past finally does emerge it's devestating. What is clear is the ontological crisis each man must be feeling. They desperately cling to each other as if they are on the run – even though no one is chasing after them. This is what really drew me into the story and what made me so fearful about where their tale would end.

Richard House is a curious writer who can at times feel too bewildering, but surprises when delivering strikingly original perspectives and occasionally devastatingly powerful lines. Since this is the first book by House that I’ve read I’d be very interested to now read his book “Uninvited” and his more ambitious Booker-longlisted tome “The Kills.”

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AuthorEric Karl Anderson
CategoriesRichard House

Frustrated that you aren't reading as many books as you'd like? Here are some simple steps to keep you focused on the page.

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- Do not recharge phone/tablet/computer for one week. With limited battery in your devices you'll be much less likely to spend hours scanning the web and social network sites.   

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- On your work commute keep your eyes on your book rather than the hot guy/girl sitting across from you. Although they look pretty they are probably illiterate and dull.

- Don't bother watching any new seasons from HBO series. When asked by friends what you think of new episodes reply “It's not as good as season one.”

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- Think of how smug you'll feel when talking about books with people: “Oh you still haven't read The Goldfinch YET?!?!”

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- Keep in mind how much better you'll feel about yourself at the end of the day when you've read a lot rather than eating a large pepperoni pizza and watching reality shows about people struggling to find love or lose weight.

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- Get a cat with large claws to sit on your lap while you read. After the cat curls up in your lap getting warm and comfortable it won't want to move. If you try to get up from reading it will dig its claws into you and won't allow you to get up so you'll be forced to continue sitting there reading. 

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- If you're not getting anything out of what you're reading stop and read something else. How many times have you found your mind wandering while staring at a dull page of prose? How many times have you found yourself reading a page over and over because it isn't grabbing your attention? How many times have you persevered reading something because it feels like this is a book you should read rather than what you want to read? Stop wasting your time and pick up a book that you can actually engage with.

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AuthorEric Karl Anderson
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A.L. Kennedy’s new book of short stories delves into the un-swept corners of self consciousness as the characters struggle to deal with other people or just try to exist as a human being. Her descriptive power utterly transforms the world so you see it anew as it is so imbued with the characters’ sensibilities. I found myself laughing out loud reading some stories as they are so filled with clever wit, bluntness or shamelessness. Other times I had to wrap into myself like a protective cocoon because the stories were touching upon a tender feeling I was too ashamed to admit was true. Here there are characters who wish to avoid having their personalities pinned down and remain anonymous. Others are so firmly entrenched in their own sense of self that they are totally blind to other points of view. All the stories include brazen forthright personalities that are memorable.

Many stories are split between a third person (but still subjective) narration and an italicised interior monologue. These points of view interact with each other to provide a striking representation of consciousness as it moves between the physical world and the imagination. It’s handled so seamlessly by the author that when I was engrossed in reading a story I stopped noticing the switch back and forth. This is a smooth and gifted method of story-telling which allows the reader to more effectively pry into a character’s mind.

When Kennedy enters the male consciousness she explores many recognizable masculine traits like undue aggression, an ironic sense of humour, over-inflated pride and an unwieldy impersonal sex drive. Not that she conforms to stereotype; these men are strikingly individual, but she exposes aspects of manliness with a bold surety. Take, for instance, the story ‘Because it’s a Wednesday” where an older man is enacting an affair with his cleaning woman. There are unsettling notions of entitlement and possession (and a hint of xenophobia) which comes with their sex although the act is totally consensual. While they share this strange sort of intimacy there is also a powerful sense of the gulf in understanding between them and that emotion has been replaced with this habitual animal act.

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The nameless protagonist of ‘These Small Pieces’ wanders into a church near Christmastime to listen to a sermon and carols being sung. He seeks to hide his identity as he contemplates interactions with any people he should meet there by giving himself the name Doug. Amidst his musing on the decoration in the church he proposes a hilarious theory about the symbolism of the serpent in Christian iconography: “plainly the snake is, more properly, the bad maleness of man, the writhing soft-hard wickedness he carries ahead of him into his life, the heat he goes astray with. Mary stamps on it. Bad boy and she stamps it flat.” The narrator has a protective sense of children and feel that their vision of the world being corrupted by the indecorum of adults – as if he himself is still angry about the world being demystified by too much reality. There is a sombre sense that he’s striving to achieve a religious feeling but doesn’t have the correct sensibility to really embrace it.

A rift that’s occurred in a long-term relationship is succinctly described in the story ‘The Practice of Mercy’: “They had broken things, the pair of them. Unexpected damage had occurred, and they’d thought they would have managed better after their years of practice, but they hadn’t.” In a short scene and with tender simple dialogue Kennedy suggests that the way to continue on in relationships when trouble occurs is with patience and carefully-tempered forgiveness. The opposite conclusion is made in ‘A Thing Unheard of’ where the narrator tries to devise the best way to break up with a lover by mentally testing out various methods of breaking the bad news. Drawn down circular paths of logic and excuses and justifications the narrator decides in the end it’s best to do nothing, break contact and let the person in question hate them.

When Kennedy wants to be serious she is deadly so as in the story ‘Run Catch Run’ which I think is one of the deepest meditations on loneliness and solitude that I’ve ever read. Here a boy keeps company with a nameless dog while hiding down at the beach (although no one is looking for him.) Avoiding returning to his home because of his parents’ battling he finds solace in causing small acts of violence. The story ‘Knocked’ also focuses on a boy who is nearing the brink of self-discovery and transition into adulthood. He cultivates a growing awareness of what will be expected of him becoming a man and how robust he needs to be in order to confront the challenges that await.

In the title story ‘All the Rage’ while waiting at a station for a train that is continuously being delayed it’s observed that “Mark had decided he’d take the rest of the day in soft focus and so wasn’t wearing his glasses. This meant the shiny, tiny letters and fictional times simply flared together into uncommunicative blocks. He preferred them like that.” This serves as both a funny method for dealing with the ineptitude of the railways and a metaphor for how he lets his relationships become unfocused. Rather than striving towards a definitive future and making a solid commitment he decides “Sometimes people want nothing. It is a necessity.”

Progressing even further into gauging the boundaries between intimacy and anonymity in relationships the story ‘This Man’ is ruthless. It accurately depicts how feelings for a partner can flip so rapidly between being extremely close one moment and in the next not knowing them at all as if they were a total stranger. These varying levels of togetherness sift through the narrator’s consciousness in awkward moment to moment sensations where a squalid meal is grudgingly shared during a date.

Kennedy has a Beckett-like quality of describing the abstract conditions of existence through a stream of impressions and wayward thoughts voiced by dislocated characters. This method touches upon heightened states of consciousness and yields a lot of humour about the absurdity of life as well as highlighting individuals’ peculiarities. Some of the stories are immediately accessible with a familiar-sounding voice while others can be quite challenging. Once I got into each narrative I was utterly absorbed in the story and this unique point of view. “All the Rage” is filled with confident, first-rate writing.

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AuthorEric Karl Anderson
CategoriesA.L. Kennedy

The three stories contained in Justin David’s “Tales of the Suburbs” are a triptych portraying different stages of the coming out process for a character named Jamie. Each story shows in sensitive details the way Jamie matures, growing into himself as his gay sensibility becomes apparent to his family and friends. He must negotiate between acknowledging the community he’s been born into alongside being made to feel like an outsider. The author captures subtle shifts in familial relationships alongside evoking distinct feelings of time and place through original descriptions and crisply written dialogue. These are eccentric, funny and moving tales.

First story ‘Unicorn’ takes us into a family living room where adolescent boy Jamie spends time knitting with his grandmother. The story powerfully evokes the heyday of Boy George and the political temperature of the time period. An array of family pass through the room all distinctly created with precise dialogue that reveals their character. Still wide-eyed and innocent Jamie follows his passions entranced by the “tangerine twilight” which is a beautifully-phrased symbol of grace and ambiguity. His daydreams are filled with pop stars, particularly Boy George, and the glamorous rendezvous these celebrities might have in the city. Jamie is forthright in his interests and on the cusp of understanding that people will shame him for the unmanly things he loves. His uncle calls him “Nancy Boy” but because Jamie doesn’t have an awareness of his sexuality yet he doesn’t understand what this really means or why people create such sharp gender divides. The feisty women in the family aren’t afraid to deliver a chiding smack to the men who insult Jamie. He finds a natural camaraderie with these women whether it’s creating costumes or wondering over glossy photos of celebrities. Of course, as knowledgeable adults we readers understand Jamie’s burgeoning sexuality, but what the author does so cleverly is present Jamie’s perspective honestly as someone expressing his natural sensibility rather than self consciously trying to fit into his gender role. His grandfather begins rejecting him as he understands the boy’s flamboyance is symptomatic of what Jamie is growing up to be. This is the point where value judgements filter into a family’s consciousness overturning their personal affection for a boy they’ve raised and see him as part of a group that they scorn. No longer just Jamie but “Nancy.” This is a story of subtle power which has a tremendously moving effect.

In the story ‘Mirror Ball’ Jamie is now 16. It’s New Year’s Eve and he goes to the local annual community dance hall with his friend Paul and Paul’s family. Again the time period is indicated by the strong presence of music – in this case Whitney Houston whose rousing song ‘One Moment in Time’ is accompanied by a dance routine from Paul’s sister Debs. Jamie is more self aware. His burgeoning sexuality finds focus in his desire for his masculine friend Paul. But his friend spends the evening scouring the place for women to get off with leaving Jamie to dance with Paul’s mother Angie. When she drunken makes a pass at him and Jamie rejects her she dismisses him with the insult “bender.” Jamie has grown impatient with small town life and aches to escape. But this time he’s found an ally in the form of talented dancer Debs who wants to get away just as badly as he does. While dancing Jamie observes that “Tiny dots of mirror-light fly across nicotine stained wallpaper.” His recognition for all that shines in the midst of this mediocre dance hall gives promise for a life bigger and more fulfilling than what he can find returning year after year to this provincial setting. This is the portrait of a person who has realized he doesn’t belong in the place he’s been born and needs to venture out to discover his true “family.”

Jamie has reached a more mature independent state in the story 'Triffle.' This is the era of the Spice Girls. He returns home from Christmas where his parents show their acceptance of his relationship with a man by giving them a joint Christmas card. When Nan arrives with her characteristic green eye shadow the subject of Jamie's joint habitation with another man is a delicate one. Although the boy and his grandmother share a strong bond making an open acknowledgement of the boy's sexuality is a final hurdle that's difficult to leap over. However, on this occasion it's Jame's turn to be shocked by a hidden aspect of his parents' sexuality when he makes an accidental discovery by looking in their closet and also frank talk between his grandparents about their sexual life at the dinner table. The deep divide Jamie felt yawning between him and his family gradually closes as he finds himself bound to them in their eccentricities. The story illustrates the way we continue to discover surprising and multiple layers to our families as we mature.

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AuthorEric Karl Anderson
CategoriesJustin David
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The question of how to approach “Story of the Eye” is a difficult one. Should I read it with a fresh eye or informed eye? (ha ha) Before even opening this book which was lent to me by a friend I knew it had a reputation as being scandalously sexually explicit, but also having been a profound influence on many high-minded 20th century French thinkers and artists. Equally the cover of this Penguin books edition doesn’t hide the fact of what you’ll find inside by displaying a woman’s torso and her genitals. And yes, I was too embarrassed to read it on the tube. Nevertheless I felt nervous about approaching it uninformed for fear of not "getting it." Without looking at any background about the book or the essays by either Susan Sontag and Roland Barthes included in this edition, I plunged in reading. In general, I like to come to a book fresh without the influence of any reviews or essays to color my opinions before I’ve formed some of my own.

This novel doesn’t hold back opening almost immediately with a teenage boy describing meeting the sexually adventurous Simone who stands over a bowl of milk, hikes her skirt up and lowers herself down to give “pussy” a drink. Before running away, Simone’s stunned mother simply ignores her flagrant sexual exploits with the male narrator and turns a blind eye to the proceedings even when her daughter pisses on her from the rafters. In short intense episodes the unnamed male narrator goes on to describe an unrestrained romp-fest with Simone which include orgies, water sports, creative uses of boiled eggs, freeing a sectioned girl named Marcelle from a mental institution, bull fights and transgressive acts in a church including sexually assaulting a priest. Amidst these explicit carryings on the narrator makes a number of striking observations about dreams, desire, obsession, violence, breaking from convention and death.

So what to make of it all without the informed background or academic arguments to influence my opinion? Like reading a poem for the first time I’m not sure what to think of it. It certainly stirred a lot of feelings for me. Anger. Disgust. Lust. Despair. Boredom. It seemed more to be playing with my subconscious than presenting a coherent narrative I could follow and thoughtfully consider – although it is a story. I dread to think what nightmares might assault me tonight. Certainly this was the author’s intention. For when the libido is given free-reign these transgressive fantasies are the result and as he states “our sexual dream kept changing into a nightmare.” It would be naively idealistic to believe that sex should only ever manifest in romantic expressions of loving passion. Sex is also frightening, indulgent, melancholy and scandalous. It’s frequently expressed as an assertion of power or a willingness to cede our bodies to the powerful. From the heights of ecstasy we often fall into the trenches of despair. If you continuously and heedlessly chase after lust it will turn sour; it will lead to madness. Instinctively we know this. That’s why there is so much shame, so much fear and repression, so many social rules, so much concealing and many furtive liaisons. Without it would we have so much literature? Probably not.

By dealing with sex in such a forthright way does it make “Story of the Eye” great literature? Without even reading about the book’s background and academic arguments focusing on it I can already imagine the debate will be - is it pornography or is it art? A question that can’t be answered. People will use it for what they will. In my book group a few years ago we read Anais Nin’s collection of erotica “Delta of Venus.” This book provokes the same question. To me, Nin’s stories felt both less artful and less interesting than this book (although they are certainly just as frankly and dynamically sexual.) But I was also less offended. There are aspects of “Story of the Eye” which do make me feel very uncomfortable. Not for its explicitness even when it verges into the dodgy territory of necrophilia. But two aspects of the book strike me as deeply suspicious.

Firstly, this book is purely about the male gaze. The narrator is anonymous and Simone is a male fantasy. Without inhibition or questioning she joins him in realizing his most perverse and insidious desires. When they free Marcelle from the nut house she suddenly becomes terrified of the narrator who takes on the symbolic image of a cardinal to her. The narrator realizes she makes this connection from the red blood which covered him when during their orgy he violently raped a girl. This incident wasn’t recorded when the orgy scene was previously recounted. Rape in fantasy certainly is something that should be explored – as it is an impulse which enters into the imagination of some people either as being the perpetrator or the victim. My issue with the way it’s raised here is the callous reference to it as if it were totally expected and not worth mentioning before.

The second thing I found offensive in the book is in a passage where he describes Simone having a different type of climax and makes a racist analogy: “These orgasms were as different from normal climaxes as, say, the mirth of savage Africans from that of Occidentals. In fact, though the savages may sometimes laugh as moderately as whites, they also have longlasting spasms, with all parts of the body in violent release, and they go whirling willy-nilly, flailing their arms about wildly, shaking their bellies, necks, and chests, and chortling and gulping horribly.” This blanket description referring to the way Africans have sex is both a stereotype and diminishing by turning a certain group of people into a symbol for unrestrained sexual expression. What’s particularly inflammatory about the statement is the end description of “horribly” which gives negative connotations to an unconscious physical reaction. Although Bataille seems to be invoking these multifarious sexual escapades as a way of seriously exploring the psychological complexity of lust here he vilifies a race of people by profiling them as showing savage unrestraint and presents it as if he’s making a humorous joke at their expense.

Having pointed those out there are aspects of the book I did find symbolically powerful and resonant. In particular, he has a way of describing the inability to achieve real satisfaction or fully satiate desire even after a climax is achieved – even multiple times. Here he notes the power of dreaming when thinking about the open window in the mental institution belonging to Marcelle as he looks up at it: “It is not astonishing that the bleakest and most leprous aspects of a dream are merely an urging in that direction, an obstinate waiting for total joy, like the vision of that glowing hole, the empty window” Here he suggests that desire is the murky condition which can’t be climbed out of no matter how many times a seeming fulfillment or an actual orgasm is achieved. The fantasy will always remain just out of reach, hanging luminous and attractive in the distance.

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Going further, Bataille contemplates that desire for intercourse and the impulse to sexually meld into each other exists on an elemental level. He surmises “death was the sole outcome of my erection, and if Simone and I were killed, then the universe of our unbearable personal vision was certain to be replaced by the pure stars, fully unrelated to any external gazes and realizing in a cold state, without human delays or detours, something that strikes me as the goal of my sexual licentiousness: a geometric incandescence (among other things, the coinciding point of life and death, being and nothingness), perfectly fulgurating.” Here he elegantly suggests that light is a sort of an ideal expression of desire’s fulfillment. The radiance of it is caused by a collision of feeling beyond the flesh. It’s both an idealistic concept and an existentially crushing thought.

From the numerous explicit descriptions there is a building sense that (like in the John Waters’ film ‘A Dirty Shame’) “anything goes” is the new normality. This obviously clashes vociferously against what’s considered the civilized manner of achieving conjugation. Bataille writes “To others, the universe seems decent because decent people have gelded eyes. That is why they fear lewdness. They are never frightened by the crowing of a rooster or when strolling under a starry heaven. In general, people savour the 'pleasures of the flesh' only on condition that they be insipid.” His attack on “decent people” is linked to a sense of inhibitions about sex in society. The transgression he describes in this book is a way of bulldozing through this to reclaim the untamed animalistic instinct to have sex and assert that we are “akin to one another in the common isolation of lewdness, weariness, and absurdity.”

All this unrelenting lewdness is comical but also necessary. How else to navigate through the moral and socially polite barricades to deal frankly with how sex expresses itself in our imaginations? The book is elevated by the fact the writer probes the matter so assiduously like a nightmare he refuses to be thrown out of. Bataille’s writing is uneven, sometimes repetitive and doesn’t fully consider many facets of the complex psychosexual being. But perhaps if the book weren’t so short it would lose its impact? Or perhaps it would become such an intimidating swamp of bodily fluid no one could finish it? As it stands, it’s provoked a lot for me to think about and, having restrained myself, I’m now eager to read the included essays by Sontag and Barthes as well as others’ opinions and more information about Bataille himself.

If you’ve read this book I’d be very interested to hear what you think and if you haven’t does frank sexual content put you off from reading books even if they are considered a so-called "classic"?

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AuthorEric Karl Anderson
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I read Evie Wyld’s first brutal and poetic novel “After the Fire, A Still Small Voice” with my book club some time ago. She has such a distinct powerful voice that I was thrilled to see she published a second novel last summer. I don’t know why it’s taken me so long to get to it, but I’m so glad I finally did. Since I started the novel on Saturday morning I’ve had a hard time putting it down. “All the Birds, Singing” is tremendous. Opening with the death of a sheep and a strange reclusive woman named Jake on her farm located on an English island, the book layers on several mysteries which become more and more intriguing as the novel progresses.

The book is split into two parts. On one side we read about Jake’s experience on her sheep farm trying to discover who or what is killing her sheep, the indifferent hostility of her local police and her friendship with a mysterious man named Lloyd who appears on her property. In alternate chapters that move back in time we read about Jake’s past in Australia, why she ends up sexually entangled with a grimy old farmer named Don and the reason she fled her home. This shifting back and forth between locations and periods of time soon feels quite natural and adds a rapidly accelerating force to the narrative as Jake’s past is gradually revealed.

Wyld describes the moment to moment thought process of her narrator with deft assurance making the story feel both engaging and thoroughly real. Jake is a physically and mentally strong woman who keeps her distance from other people, but finds she can't completely remove herself from society or the dangers of the world. Equally the author captures the social awkwardness in her interactions with the other characters so that small gestures indicate a lot about what is being left unsaid.

The author has a way of describing Jake’s smile so that you can tell she’s grinning as a front to hide her true thoughts/feelings because she believes this is what people want. It’s something she’s learned in order to survive and navigate tricky situations where she might be vulnerable. In actuality, her smile probably registers as a false grimace which is only there to conceal and pretend. Although the book is told from Jake's point of view the reader is often aware of both her internal thoughts and the external opinions of those around her.

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Animals play an important role in the narrative. The book is a thorough lesson in sheep shearing. But also, the countryside is awash with wild animals lurking around every corner from English foxes to explosive nests of spiders to more exotic Australian animals like goanna, pademelon and galah. The environment is so rich in animal life that it begins to feel that the world is sinister and wild with everyone taking on a role as either the hunter or hunted. They become an intrinsic part of Jake’s psychology as demonstrated here: “A fox was being made love to somewhere in the woods and her shrieks cut straight into my room.” What's particularly striking about this quote is the way Wyld introduces the romantic notion of “made love” and immediately after adds a sinister edge with “her shrieks.” Some animals stand out as distinct characters in themselves. A dog named Kelly is described with such precision and engaging with Jake in such a dynamic way that she becomes an important character herself.

“All the Birds, Singing” is a beautifully written book about harsh difficult subjects. Small details which seem insignificant early on in the narrative take on a deeper emotional meaning as the story progresses and we learn more about Jake’s past. This is skilful, inventive storytelling. Jake is a surprising vibrant female character unlike any other I've read in fiction. The ending is a real shocker, deeply moving and gives enough room for ambiguous interpretations. It's left me wondering.

 

Listen to an interview with Wyld about the novel on Radio 4 here: http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0367c3d

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AuthorEric Karl Anderson
CategoriesEvie Wyld
3 CommentsPost a comment
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The subject matter of “The Circle” proved itself relevant to me when I became very self conscious while reading how often I paused to check my phone when it buzzed from a new email or stopped to check Twitter. For those who embrace it, the digital age is constantly splitting our attention between what’s in front of us and what’s happening online. Experience takes on an inauthentic feel if it’s not captured, shared and commented upon in some way. We thrive on the validation we get from the amount of followers we have, comments received or likes given. This has produced a dramatic shift in how we relate to other people, measure self esteem, process the world and define what is considered private. Dave Eggers imagines a not too distant future where an ambitious woman named Mae joins a rapidly growing search and social media tech company called The Circle that is in the process of transforming society by eradicating privacy altogether.

As a wide-eyed young professional who has been stuck at a very non-tech-savvy company Mae is thrilled by the advanced organization at her new job. Not only do they have all the latest gadgets and live on a utopian-like campus of wonders, but the social structure of the company is meant to support and reinforce employees’ productivity through engaging them as a community. Soon Mae realizes that the optional after-hours social activities aren’t so optional when given a firm talking to by terrifying representatives from the HR department. Employees are ranked by the amount they participate at events not physically but through photographing, posting, commenting and giving emoticon reactions to them on their social media site. As Mae feels pressure to keep up and learn the way to advance her ranking she rapidly becomes wholly involved in the company and turns into a voice box and lynchpin that could see The Circle become a mandatory way of life for everyone everywhere.

A lot of the concepts and technological developments imagined in this novel do feel very real, but the rapid adoption of them by large governmental organizations and the population in general didn’t. The narrative perspective is very much an inside view of this world so Mae’s flurry of supportive comments from around the world is, of course, largely positive. However, I found it difficult to believe that people would generally be so in favour of surrendering their privacy. It’s true that large swaths of people readily post what would usually be considered intimate details and photos about their lives on the internet where anyone could access them. But this information is usually strategically uploaded and shared as part of constructing a particular projection of a person’s identity. I find it hard to believe that so many would enthusiastically give all-out access to every moment of their lives without kicking up a fuss.

I appreciated it more when the novel points out how acolytes of The Circle showed an overinflated sense of users influence on government policy such as the statement “We’ve sent over 180 million frowns from the U.S. alone, and you can bet that has an effect on the regime.” Believers in the project revere their ranking and statistics so much that they think these numbers equate to real-world changes – as if passively clicking a button to make a frown face will convince a dictatorial government to reverse their policies. Also it felt very true when Eggers' describes the endless demand for more attention and prickly egos that come out with interacting with virtual strangers online. When Mae comments on someone's status there are effuse thanks followed by demands for more attention or requests for favours in relation to other friends. The web is like a black hole down which you can pour endless amounts of attention and it will never be enough.

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However, there is something about the simplicity of the central protagonist Mae which felt troubling to me. Eggers must make her naïve so that she is particularly susceptible to believing the company's good intentioned visions of eradicating crime and child kidnapping even when it means installing cameras everywhere on the planet and planting microchips in children's skulls. However, it's slightly unsettling to me that her choices between championing The Circle's dubious technology or rebelling against the totalitarian possibilities inherent in its appropriation are distilled by the author into her two romantic pursuits in the book. One man stands for the company's values and the other stands for opposition to it. Who will she choose? This seems to me a very old fashioned way of solving a female protagonist's moral dilemma.

“The Circle” is an entertaining and easy read, but I didn't feel like it lived up to it's potential. I've never read this author before but I expected slightly more literary finesse from someone who has been so influential and popular in the book world. Eggers presents a dystopian modern version of a Brave New World that makes privacy a crime. The questions it asks are important ones we should continue asking ourselves while technology advances and is adopted by the general population so rapidly. It's an exaggerated vision of how reality could go, but I feel it doesn't fully engage with the complexity of the ideas it raises.

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AuthorEric Karl Anderson
CategoriesDave Eggers