Love and the Novel
Christina Lupton
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Sachbuch / Biographien, Autobiographien
Beschreibung
'It is a clever, well-written book, and I often found myself underlining whole paragraphs as I read. ... wonderfully insightful. ... I've never read accounts of any of these texts that manage to be at once so searching and so wondrously concise, and Lupton made me want to go back to them all' Rachel Cooke, Observer
'Incandescent' Lara Feigel, Guardian
'A subversive, brilliant and beautifully written book about love, play and power in fiction and in the well-read life' - Sarah Moss, author of Summerwater
'A delicious combination of critical thought and passionate personal experience.' - Tanya Shadrick, author of The Cure for Sleep
Romantic love was born alongside the novel, and books have been shaping how we experience and think about our most intimate stories ever since. But what do novels give us when our own lives diverge from the usual narrative paths?
Christina is a professor used to examining stories with a critical eye; until one day in middle age she finds herself falling in love and leaving her marriage for a romance with another woman. This involves a familiar enough tale, but when her new partner suffers a stroke, Tina begins to reflect on the sorts of love that novels rarely capture.
A heady mix of memoir, criticism and storytelling that draws on novels ranging from Pride and Prejudice to Price of Salt, Anna Karenina to Conversations with Friends, to illuminate the ways love and novels work, and show how some types of love, which don't race to a narrative end-point, might be the most important of all.
Rezensionen
In this eloquent, captivating conversation between memoir and criticism, Christina Lupton also offers a mesmerizing love song to the experience of reading in its own right.
What happens when you fall in love and discover in yourself such urgency to be with your beloved that you overturn all the certainties and structures of your life? What next?This haunting and highly personal account is studded with memorable insights into dozens of the novels about love and loss that long shaped Lupton's professional and personal life, but its true contribution is to show us how and why even the most impassioned reader can'
I adored this book. An elegant, unflinching look at what it means to grapple with the true implications of our desire.
Lupton'
An utterly addictive - sometimes caustic, sometimes tender - account of a midlife lurch in a new direction.
Tina Lupton'
Do novels help us know how to love? Is middle-aged passion worth upending your life and stability for? Instead of turning to shrinks to solve our romantic travails, clearly we should be turning to literature professors. Tina Lupton'
<p><b>It is a clever, well-written book, and I often found myself underlining whole paragraphs as I read. ... wonderfully insightful ... I'
A subversive, brilliant and beautifully written book about love, play and power in fiction and in the well-read life
Interspersing self-examination with an equally gripping analysis of the texts that have made and remade their reader, Lupton'
<i>Love and the Novel</i> is an utterly addictive - sometimes caustic, sometimes tender - account of a midlife lurch in a new direction. As Christina Lupton falls in love with a woman and contemplates turning her family's world upside down, she learns that life, like fiction, is far from linear. In so far as it lends itself to fictional plotting, it is a place of many rooms. I loved Lupton'
Such a rich exploration of love in all its forms (marital, adulterous; for children, friends). I love how Christina Lupton summons an iconic cast of our favourite fictional lovers ... even as her own desires carry her far beyond many of their teachings. A delicious combination of critical thought and passionate personal experience.
A memoir, as formidably intelligent as it is forcefully felt, about a life spent reading about love, which turned out to be the best preparation for letting "the pleasure of all scripts fall away"
Kundenbewertungen
Vivian Gornick, best books about queer love, LGBTQ books, Jane Austen, Lara Feigel, Pride and Prejudice, Jude the Obscure, Alain de Botton, adultery, Asymmetry, Deborah Levy, memoir, Price of Salt, Olivia Laing, Lauren Elkin