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This is high class trash and a hoary old scenario, the kind of thing Bulwer-Lytton or, more exactly, Hall Caine, would have produced a hundred years before. Highly sensitive Robert Whyte is hired as librarian to Donough Gaylord, the secretive young master of Gaywyck, a fabulous manor just outside NYC. An attraction between the two is immediate, but Donough is hesitant to give in to the younger man's ardor. Why? Could it have something to do with his deceased twin brother? Hmmmm.
Virga never scimps on description. His book could well serve as a primer on 19th century architecture, ornithology, music, painting, horticulture, literature, so on and so forth. The mass of detail weighs the story down at times, when the reader is anxious for things to proceed and the dark secrets to be exposed. But stick with it. It is worth the wait. And the cast of characters is the nuttiest collection of kooks since Priestley's THE OLD DARK HOUSE. It's a hoot.
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The marriage to Placide, however, is not the only complication standing in the way of the two men, though it is a big one. There is also the world's approbation about two men making love together, far more acute in the early 20th century than in the early 21st, where it is still a strong factor in many places. Also, there is the matter of Armand's rape of the young servant Angelo, which comes back to haunt him in a dramatic moment. Vadriel, too, has to deal with his own strong Catholic convictions, his attention to good and evil and his spirituality, and whether or not succumbing to physically expressing his love for Armand is evil or the true expression of God's love. It takes literally the whole book for the men to come together, and in the final few pages it seems almost too much verbiage. But then it is written like a nineteenth-century romantic novel.
Hey, though the novel moved me and made me hungry for the kind of passions the two heroes feel, it isn't a perfect novel- in many places, like Gaywyck, it is sometimes over-written, with lots of classical allusions and quotations. Armand's conversion seems almost too easy- it is like once he sees Vadriel he decides to completely reform himself and never falters. And the fact that he and Vadriel are another pair of absolutely gorgeous people that are filthy rich and can indulge their every whim (provided their consciences allow it), make it so much more unreal. But that is part of the romantic form, I suppose. There is a lot of symbolism of angels ("Vadriel" is an angel's name, there is a character named "Gabriel" who introduces Vadriel to sex between men and, of course "Angelo della Fiore," which means "Angel of the Flowers". When Armand begins to feel guilt over what he did to Angelo, he comes down with a huge psychosomatic allergy to flowers, which are everywhere in the huge summer homes of the rich in Newport). Another failing of the novel is the cliche that all of main characters in the early 19th century have enlightened, late 20th century attitudes about labor, gay life, women's rights, etc., as if to make them more palatable to the audience who would be reading the book.
I enjoyed the fact that Donough Gaylord and Robert Whyte (who has taken the name of Gaylord in the book as well, since he has discovered he is a cousin of Donough's) are important characters in this book, in the last third, especially "Robbie," who becomes Vadriel's best friend. It is nice to see them a few years down the pike from their novel, and there is a conceit where Donough talks Robert into writing their story, which Robbie says he will do when he is older (that book is penned as a memoir by an older Robert Gaylord).
The arc of the book, really, is that angelic Vadriel comes to terms with his earthly, physical side, and realizes that human, physical love is a manifestation of God, and Armand represents the earthy, base side of human nature. He learns to love on a more spiritual basis and changes his selfish attitude into one of benefices for all humanity when he learns to love Vadriel.
I was extremely moved by the emotional cat and mouse game between Vadriel and Armand and their feelings for each other; I am sorry to have finished the book, but it was getting tiresome near the end. There isn't a lot of sex in this book, but there is a lot of emotional turmoil. The book, though, is written in the Grand Romantic Tradition, and no doubt (as with Gaywyck) through the years I will re-read it several more times.
Set in the early 1900's, this is the story of Vadriel Vail and Armand de Guise, two very different men, whom it would seem are destined only to be able to able to make known their love for one another in longing gazes and far too infrequent moments together that leave the reader rather frustrated, but certainly eager to find out whether they are able to overcome the seemingly impossible obstacles between them. These vary from religious beliefs to dark pasts and worst of all, Vadriel's marriage.
It's a good read, however be warned: The constant quoting of historical texts, the sometimes cliched talk (which can in fact be quite humorous) and the melodrama of the main female character and her kin can sometimes be a little wearing. In addition, those of you after a piece of gay erotica should look elsewhere, though that's not to say the book is...disappointing in certain aspects.
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