The Looking Glass
A Novel
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
A lushly imagined, sensual novel about memory, desire, and the power of storytelling, from a Booker Prize nominee.
Geneviève is an outsider, raised in an orphanage, now living an isolated existence as a maid to the widowed Madame Patin in a small French village. A teller and collector of stories, she is entranced by Madame Patin's oft-told folktales, which mask cunning and doom beneath beauty. As Geneviève grows into a woman, her life becomes both more sensual and more dangerous. She flees her village home, escaping to another word-spinner, a poet who captivates women -- his mother, his mistress, his niece's governess, and, soon, Geneviève. The poet is kind, but he too is a collector of stories -- and sometimes of secrets beyond words.
An exquisite, knowing, and irresistible novel, The Looking Glass introduces to an American audience "one of Britian's best novelists" (The Independent on Sunday).
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Traditional British storytelling expertise merges with the peculiarly French appreciation for sensual pleasures in the work of novelist Roberts, who lives in both countries and is a bestselling writer in England., Her 11th novel, the second to be published here (after Impossible Saints), is a period piece with psychological overtones and an impressionistic palette. Elegant and poetically descriptive, it evokes the seacoast of Normandy in the early 20th century, when horses and carts were still the local means of transport and superstition vied with religion for the souls of the inhabitants. The principal narrator, named Genevi ve Delange by the nuns in the orphanage where her first 16 years were spent, hires out as maid-of-all-work at Madame Patin's cafe/bar, the only grocery and gathering place in the fishing village of Blessetot. When "cousin" Frederic Montjean arrives, Genevi ve is dismayed that Madame Patin becomes his lover and marries him. The title refers to a full-length mirror in the bar that is a novelty to Genevi ve when she first arrives, and is the means of her undoing. After a near-tragedy, she goes to work in the Colbert household, consisting of a formidable matron; her son, G rard, a poet; and her granddaughter, Marie-Louise. A British governess called Millicent cares for the child and in due course falls in love with G rard, whose longtime mistress, a seamstress named Isabelle, now reappears in his life. These two women tell their stories, and Genevi ve, who also adores G rard, concludes that she must tell hers. "Speaking and telling, you threw joy away," Genevi ve realizes, and innocence, too; it is fitting that the narrative ends in 1914, on the verge of WWI. Roberts's measured prose is richly suggestive, artfully conveying mystery and passion. The quiet unfolding of this keenly observed tale should please discriminating readers.