The Partnership

The Partnership
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مشارکت: عنوان و توضیح کوتاه هر کتاب را ترجمه کنید این ترجمه بعد از تایید با نام شما در سایت نمایش داده خواهد شد.
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فرمت کتاب

ebook

تاریخ انتشار

2001

نویسنده

Barry Unsworth

شابک

9780393357233
  • اطلاعات
  • نقد و بررسی
  • دیدگاه کاربران
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نقد و بررسی

Publisher's Weekly

June 25, 2001
The inner lives and secret loves of plastic pixie manufacturers animate the drab backstage of the tourist trade in Booker Prize–winner Unsworth's (Sacred Hunger; Morality Play) eloquent but predictable first novel, written in the 1960s but published only now in the U.S. Foley, a self-absorbed ex–photographer's model, and his stodgy, repressed housemate, Moss, run a cottage industry producing pixies for the gift shops of the Cornish coast, where they live. Foley dreams of one day expanding into the more rarefied niche of gilt–cherub making, and keeps a surreal, shrine-like room filled with prototypes. Meanwhile, he spends his time alternately attempting to seduce Gwendoline, a big-boned, perpetually nonplussed local girl, and fending off the attentions of Barbara, a randy, middle-aged summer visitor. Moss, on the other hand, seems to have few ambitions or desires other than to keep churning out pixies and to maintain the status quo. But when Moss meets Max, the aging kept man of a famous actor, he is emboldened by Max's flamboyance to confront his own sexuality and reexamine his partnership with Foley. Unsworth renders the psychology of his characters with precision; he is especially articulate when narrating the tactical psychological ploys beneath the surface of casual conversation. But despite their complexity, and with the exception of Graham, a hilariously misanthropic painter, the characters are lifeless and unsurprising. Similarly, the novel is rife with delightful descriptive passages, biting reflections on the cynicism of the tourist industry, and iconic symbols—pixies, cherubs, plaster skulls, a ram who has starved to death while stuck in a bog—whose effects are hamstrung by the ponderousness of the plot. Read as a first novel, it shows great promise, but that promise has already been realized. All but the most diehard Unsworth fans may want to wait for his next mature effort.



Library Journal

July 1, 2001
Originally copyrighted in 1966, Booker Prize-winning author Unsworth's first book is finally being published in the United States. The novel describes the breakdown of the relationship between two partners, Moss and Foley, who have relocated to a tourist village in Cornwall and operate a profitable business making what can only be described as tacky tourist mementos. Unsworth describes the pixies made by Moss and Foley as mutants emerging from molds whose edges are "worn and blunted," which in many ways describes the characters themselves. Self-indulgent, manipulative, and deceitful, Moss and Foley have sown the seeds of their mutual destruction, and the supporting characters also have exaggerated features that extend beyond human foibles to flaws, rendering them unsympathetic to the reader. In reference to the pixies, Unsworth contends that "things ugly in themselves can none the less suggest beauty," and perhaps he is challenging the reader to find the redeeming features of his characters. The novel is flawed, however, in the failure of its characters to develop and recognize their relationships, thus leaving the reader curiously unsatisfied by the wanton destruction of both art and spirit. Recommended only where there is demand and interest in Unsworth. Caroline M Hallsworth, Sudbury P.L., Ont.

Copyright 2001 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.




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