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The Jury--Governor General's Literary Awards.
The Jury--Governor General's Literary Awards.
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I have read this book in both its original French and Derek Coltman's translation. The translation is quite good in keeping the flavor of the original French, although at times there are words chosen in English which are stronger than they were in French.
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. . . THE DIALOGUE IS RENDERED EVEN MORE POIGNANT BY THE ACCOMPANYING MUSICALITY OF BLAIS' LONG POETIC LINES. . . . PERHAPS THE MOST EVOCATIVE OF ALL IS THE STUDY IN CONTRASTS, "FEVER"--A BEAUTIFULLY ORCHESTRATED DIALOGUE BETWEEN A WIFE AND A HUSBAND IN WHICH SHE UNVEILS HIS HYPOCRISY AND HER COMPLICITY AGAINST THE EXOCITICIZED BACKDROP OF MOROCCO.
. . . READING THESE ENIGMATIC MUSINGS SET AMIDST HIGHLY VISUALIZED BACKGROUNDS OR SETS, ONE PARTICIPATES IN THE EQUIVOCAL, TENUOUS RELATIONS BETWEEN MEN AND WOMEN, SPEECH AND SILENCE, OPPRESSSION AND FREEDOM. AS BLAIS, THROUGH THE VOICE OF HER TRANSLATOR, SO ELOQUENTLY PUTS IT: "BUT HERE I AM, AND HE LISTENS. IT IS LATE. AT LEAST, HE SEEMS TO LISTEN."
WINTERSLEEP presents the unique shorter, or "chamber", plays of an intimacy and a subtlety that are unique and may suggest new directions for the modern theatre, especially for directors who are not afraid to blend different media and life-size puppets with live actors, and evoke fluid and shifting states of consciousness.
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While Ms. Atwood is a fine writer, she really lost me toward the end of the book. Her prose had become so arcane and abstruse that I simply couldn't make it throught the last few chapters. Also, the action unfolds WAY too slowly: Just when the main character (I can't remember her name now) is about to happen upon an important clue concerning her father's disappearance, the action veers off to another direction. It's as if Ms. Atwood had a bad case of ADD while writing this book.
I think the main character's father's body was found at the bottom of that bay or whatever body of water was close at hand --I THINK. I was so lost and confused at that point that I had lost all track of what was happening. This would have been a much more effective novel if it were faster-paced and not hampered by such cumbersome prose.
Try it out for yourself, but please don't judge its value on a few anti-American references. Remember, she's Canadian, and the book was written in the 70's.
In _Surfacing_, Margaret Atwood addresses the issue of identity as reflected by the artifice around you - both in the people you know and the person you are instructed to become. Nothing in this book is what it seems, but rather, it is a clever facade meant to impart meaning to the reader.
The nameless narrator of _Surfacing_ engages in a deep journey into the wild bush of Northern Quebec, which becomes a metaphor for her process of recovering self and identity. The land is used as a backdrop for the renunciation of a distorted self-image. What this book ultimately does is provides us with insight into how we also function as individuals and just what is it that makes us who we are? Is each human being just a pastiche?
Atwood gives you four fascinating characters that are peeled apart to the core and, even though it is only the main protagonist that goes through a physical journey in finding herself, we also witness the psychic journeys of those around her and realize what it means to be a man, woman, artist, a mother, father, wife, husband, and sister. No role is left untouched.
_Surfacing_ is also a very entertaining book and can be read on many levels. Highly recommended!
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The Jury: Gorvernor General's Literary Awards.