Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
In the almost four decades since her suicide, Sylvia Plath has been idolized almost as much for her role as the deceived wife of Ted Hughes as for her poetic works. The couple's erotically charged meeting, initially idyllic marriage and later bitter estrangement are documented in Plath's journals and letters and in numerous nonfiction books. Before his death last year, Hughes published Birthday Poems, manifestly his version of their relationship. That there was a third party to their tragedy, Hughes's mistress, Assia Wevill, who herself committed suicide, has also been a matter of public record. Now British author Tennant, who memorialized her own relationship with Hughes in her memoir, Burnt Diaries (U.K., Canongate, 1999), imagines Sylvia's, Ted's and Assia's lives as told from each participant's point of view. As befits a story of a tragic love triangle among poets, Tennant writes lyrical and surcharged prose, with short chapters shot through with intense emotion. Though the narrative is initially overwrought and heavily portentous, she sustains the dramatically dark mood artfully, building to a fittingly mythic, cathartic ending. Her psychological insights into Plath's and Wevill's troubled personalities, which at first may seem gratuitously grim, shed light on their early experiences and emotional conditioning, and become more appropriate as Plath, Hughes and Wevill mature. Accelerating the dramatic suspense, Tennant alternates the feverish thoughts of three high-strung, complex personalities, and although the outcome is known, readers will feel the strong hand of fate in the collision of their passions and artistic ambitions. (May 12)Forecast: A must-read for Plath devotees, the novel also has enough appeal as well-crafted fiction to attract a discriminating audience of more general readers. It joins other recent (nonfiction) titles that have kindled fresh interest in the couple. Plath's unabridged diaries were published last year, and Ariel's Gift: Ted Hughes, Sylvia Plath and the Story of Birthday Letters is being released this month (Forecasts, Mar. 19).
Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
Ted Hughes and Sylvia Plath continue to evoke debate and commentary. Novelist Tennant, who recounted her own affair with Hughes in Burnt Diaries, offers a brittle, fictionalized account of the lives of Hughes, Plath, and Assia Wevill, the other woman in Ted's life. (Ironically, Wevill also later killed herself.) Full of portents and omens, the story is a series of oblique passages and lyrical descriptions, all issued in a clipped cadence with edges as jagged as the lives examined. Tennant is unsparing and the story relentless in its decline into despair and death. For literary collections and public libraries where there is demand.
- Jan Blodgett, Davidson Coll. Lib., NC
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Since the early 1970s, when she was in her mid-thirties, Emma Tennant has been a prolific novelist and has established herself as one of the leading British exponents of "new fiction." This does not mean that she is an imitator of either the French nouveaux romanciers or the American post-modernists, although her work reveals an indebtedness to the methods and preoccupations of some of the latter. Like them, she employs parody and rewriting, is interested in the fictiveness of fiction, appropriates some science-fiction conventions, and exploits the possibilities of generic dislocation and mutation, especially the blending of realism and fantasy. Yet, although parallels can be cited and influences suggested, her work is strongly individual, the product of an intensely personal, even idiosyncratic, attempt to create an original type of highly imaginative fiction.
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这本书的叙事节奏把握得极妙,读起来就像是观看一部精心剪辑的独立电影,时而细腻入微,时而又猛然加速,将人抛入主角们复杂纠葛的情感漩涡之中。作者对于环境的描摹简直是一绝,那些雨后潮湿的街道,被午后阳光晒得有些慵懒的咖啡馆角落,每一个场景都仿佛拥有了自己的呼吸和温度,让人身临其境。我尤其欣赏作者在处理人物内心挣扎时所展现出的那种克制而又深刻的笔触。它不是那种直白的倾诉,而是通过一些微妙的肢体语言、一个不经意的眼神交流,将人物深藏的秘密和未曾言明的渴望层层剥开。特别是主角在面对人生的重大抉择时,那种左右为难、徘徊不前的状态,写得如此真实,让人不禁联想到自己生命中那些关键的十字路口。这种对“人之所以为人”的深刻洞察力,让这部作品超越了简单的故事叙述,上升到了一种对存在意义的探讨层面。读完后,那种余韵久久不散,仿佛自己也跟着书中人物经历了一场漫长而又必要的蜕变。
评分这本书最让人称奇的地方,在于它对时间流逝和个人记忆的解构与重塑。它探讨的不是“发生了什么”,而是“我们如何记住发生过的事情”。作者巧妙地运用了意识流的手法,将那些被遗忘的片段、被美化的回忆和被痛苦扭曲的真相混杂在一起,呈现出一种极度主观化的现实体验。读起来需要极大的耐心,因为它不断地打破你对情节的既有认知,让你去质疑自己刚刚读到的内容是否可靠。这种对叙事可靠性的挑战,是当代文学中非常高级的一种表达手法。它迫使读者停下来,反思自己对“真实”的定义。全书散发出一种知识分子式的疏离感和深刻的哲学思辨色彩,不是那种读完可以放松大笑的读物,而是一种需要你带着思考的笔记本去反复咀嚼的作品。它像一面镜子,映照出的不仅是书中人物的迷茫,更是现代人普遍存在的身份认同危机。
评分这部作品的文字风格简直像一首华丽而又略带哀伤的古典乐章,每一个句子都经过了精心的打磨和雕琢,充满了音乐性和画面感。我感觉自己不是在阅读,而是在聆听一场关于记忆与遗忘的独白。作者的用词大胆而精准,总能在不经意间抛出一个让人拍案叫绝的比喻,将抽象的情感具象化,让那些难以言喻的失落与狂喜变得清晰可见。叙事结构上,它采用了非线性的手法,时间线在过去和现在之间跳跃穿梭,但这非但没有造成混乱,反而像一张被打乱又重新拼合的复杂挂毯,随着阅读的深入,每一块碎片都找到了它该有的位置,最终呈现出一幅完整而震撼的图景。这种叙事上的挑战性,恰恰是吸引我一口气读完的主要动力。它要求读者投入极高的注意力,但回报是丰厚的——你获得的不只是一个故事,更是一种全新的感知世界的方式。对于那些追求文学深度和语言艺术的读者来说,这本书无疑是一份不可多得的宝藏。
评分说实话,一开始我被它略显晦涩的开场给劝退了一小会儿,但坚持下来后,我庆幸自己没有错过。这部作品的魅力在于它的“留白”艺术。作者极其吝啬于给出明确的解释,无论是人物动机还是事件起因,都常常是含糊其辞,留给读者巨大的解读空间。这让阅读过程变成了一种主动的探索,我得像个侦探一样,根据散落在各处的只言片语和环境暗示,去构建自己的逻辑和情感判断。这种互动性极强,我常常在合上书页后,会花上好几分钟时间,在脑海中反复推敲某个角色的某个行为背后的真正含义。这种“不把话说透”的处理方式,反而使得人物形象更加立体和复杂,因为现实生活中的人性本来就充满了矛盾和不确定性。它反对简单化的标签和非黑即白的评判,鼓励读者去接纳和理解人性的灰度。如果说有些小说是清晰的地图,那么这本书就是一张充满未知符号的古老羊皮卷,引领我们进入一片需要用心去丈量的精神疆域。
评分我很少读到像这本书这样,将“环境”塑造得如此具有人格化的作品。书中描绘的那个小镇,或者说那个特定的空间,不再仅仅是故事发生的背景板,它几乎成了推动情节发展的重要角色。空气中的味道、光线的角度、墙壁上苔藓的颜色,都像是有生命一般,无声地影响着人物的情绪和决定。作者对于感官细节的捕捉,简直达到了病态的精准,比如描述一场暴风雨来临前的压抑感,那种低沉的嗡鸣声,那种泥土被水汽饱和后的独特气味,都通过文字被成功地“翻译”到了我的感官系统里。这使得整部作品的氛围感达到了一个极高的水准,沉浸感极强,甚至让我有些窒息。我感受到的不只是故事中的喜怒哀乐,更是一种对特定时间和地点的强烈“在场感”。它成功地将读者从日常的琐碎中剥离出来,扔进了一个完全由作者构建的、精密而又脆弱的微观宇宙之中。
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