Showing posts with label Scottish Literature. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scottish Literature. Show all posts

The Comforters - Muriel Spark




Summary:
In Muriel Spark's fantastic first novel, the only things that aren't ambiguous are her matchless originality and glittering wit.
Caroline Rose is plagued by the tapping of typewriter keys and the strange, detached narration of her every thought and action. She has an unusual problem - she realises she is in a novel. Her fellow characters are also possibly deluded: Laurence, her former lover, finds diamonds in a loaf of bread - could his elderly grandmother really be a smuggler? And Baron Stock, her bookseller friend, believes he is on the trail of England's leading Satanist.


~~~

I absolutely loved this book and I'm not sure I'll be able to do it justice with my thoughts. You might actually rather read Ali Smith's words on it [here]. (You definitely should read Ali Smith's words on it.)

The book follows novelist Caroline Rose as she converts to Catholicism. After coming back from a retreat, she suddenly starts hearing the sound of a typewriter and voices who seem to comment on her thoughts and what is happening in her life. Her boyfriend Laurence is convinced his grandmother is part of a gang smuggling diamonds in the UK and he is investigating the matter.

There are so many characters in this book and they are all colourful and different. Not just different from each other but different from most characters you read in books. They are all described vividly and we get to see their good and not-so-good actions and thoughts.
I adored Louisa Jepp who proves that one can never be too old to start a gang and smuggle diamonds in bread loaves. It feels that unique characters were hand-picked, thrown together in a small arena and put through various challenges. And no, this isn't a prequel to The Hunger Games. Though how awesome would a Hunger Games book written by Muriel Spark be? No, really, think about it!

The writing is quite simply exquisite. There is so much personality running through the pages that I can't wait to pick up Muriel Spark's other books. There is wit, irreverence, playfulness, as well as musings on human nature and life. I feel that by seeing the darker traits of the characters, we're given a glimpse into who they really are and we can't help seeing them as flawed human beings. Except Mrs. Hogg who is just plain evil *shudders*

The book is also a metafiction because of the story in the story. Caroline seems to hear the narrator telling the story of her life and the narrator also hears Caroline's remarks on the storytelling. It gives an original twist on an already unique book.

There are many topics in this book (religion, mental illness, language...) and they are balanced by the deadpan writing and some truly comical scenes. I felt it was such an effective way to talk about such serious topics in this manner as it jolts the reader into paying more attention to what is being said.

There is A LOT happening in this short book and I still can't believe it was published in the 1950s. I'm really happy I set myself this challenge because Muriel Spark's books are an amazing - and timely - discovery for me. The book has already been a great source of inspiration (for writing and reading) and I can't wait to discover all her other books.



Also head over to the New York Times website where you can read articles about Muriel Spark and reviews of her books [here].

Muriel Spark Reading Challenge

Hi all,


I have rather abruptly decided that I wanted to read all (or most) of Muriel Spark's books over the next few years after realising how amazing she was and how shameful it was that I had yet to read one of her books. I, of course, had to make it official with a list (I love lists!) and a logo. Muriel Spark is one of Scotland's most talented novelists and I have been missing out on her books so I am really looking forward to this. 




Below are the books I intend to read. I don't know if anyone else wants to join me in this endeavour, it can be just for a few books if her complete works look a bit daunting! I'll update this list as and when I read the books.


FICTION:


1957    The Comforters [My thoughts here]
1958    Robinson
1959    Memento Mori
1960    The Ballad of Peckham Rye
The Bachelors
1961    The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie
1963    The Girls of Slender Means
1965    The Mandelbaum Gate
1968    The Public Image
1970    The Driver's Seat [My thoughts here]
1971    Not to Disturb
1973    The Hothouse by the East River
1974    The Abbess of Crewe
1976    The Takeover
1979    Territorial Rights
1981    Loitering with Intent
1984    The Only Problem
1988    A Far Cry from Kensington
1990    Symposium
1996    Reality and Dreams
2000    Aiding and Abetting
2004    The Finishing School


OTHER WORKS:

1950    Tribute to Wordsworth [edited by Muriel Spark and Derek Stanford]
1951    Child of Light [a study of Mary Shelley]
1952    The Fanfarlo and Other Verse
1952    Selected Poems of Emily Brontë
1953    John Masefield [biography]
1953    Emily Brontë: her life and work [by Muriel Spark and Derek Stanford]
1953    My Best Mary [a selection of letters of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, edited by Muriel Spark and Derek Stanford]
1954    The Brontë letters
1957    Letters of John Henry Newman [edited by Muriel Spark and Derek Stanford]
1958    The Go-away Bird [short stories]
1961    Voices at Play [short stories and plays]
1963    Doctors of Philosophy [play]
1967    'Collected Poems'
'Collected Stories'
1982    'Bang-bang You're Dead' [short stories]
1982    'Going up to Sotheby's' [poems]
1992    'Curriculum Vitae' [autobiography]
2001    'Complete Short Stories'
2004    'All the Poems'