Possession: A.S. Byatt
A Victorian tragic romance folded up inside a modern romantic comedy- rather beautiful and quite extraordinarily clever with all its mirrorings, doublings and post-modern self awareness. If Charlotte Bronte had come after Joyce and Nabokov- instead of so long before them- this is the sort of thing she might have written.
Just one note of regret: the poems ascribed to the imagined Victorian protagonists don't quite work. They are the simulacra of poems, not really poems at all. Poetry is one thing you can't fake- not even if you are a wonderfully skilled writer of other things. Real poems have an inner life- a certain vitality of language- which these cleverly-crafted pastiche poems almost entirely lack.
Just one note of regret: the poems ascribed to the imagined Victorian protagonists don't quite work. They are the simulacra of poems, not really poems at all. Poetry is one thing you can't fake- not even if you are a wonderfully skilled writer of other things. Real poems have an inner life- a certain vitality of language- which these cleverly-crafted pastiche poems almost entirely lack.
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The poetry won't bother me. I skip over the poetic bits in most things. They might as well be written in Elvish for all the attention I pay to them.
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You can't entirely avoid the poems. They're integral and full of clues.
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Who were the primary actors?
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I bounced entirely off Possession when I read it in college; I fell in love with her only because I re-read Angels & Insects.
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I am fond of Elementals—I'm not sure I've managed to find a copy of my own, but I adore "Crocodile Tears" and "Cold" was one of the first things of hers I ever read.
I think she's been honing her descriptive skills since writing Possession.
How did you feel about The Children's Book, which is full of material culture and art?
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So I'll go back and read it again, with poems. There's plenty in there to merit subsequent reading(s). Plus, I am finding that I want to possess this book, in several senses of the term.