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A carregar... The Thinking Reed (1936)por Rebecca West
![]() Ainda não há conversas na Discussão sobre este livro. After loving Return of the Soldier I was very disappointed in this book. It could best be described as a lifestyles of the rich and boring. The premise is a beautiful young American widow in France who escapes a disastrous relationship to find love with a wealthy but unattractive man. Most of the book describes their lifestyle and friends/acquaintances who are all horrible and boring people. The book is told from the point of view of Isabelle, the American widow, and she has a knowledge of her own motivations and the thoughts of others that I found unbelievable - no one is that self aware and still makes so many mistakes! Unfortunately, the boring plot and unlikable characters are not the only problem with this book. The writing was also very wordy, with lots of words I'd never come across and even some that weren't in my kindle's dictionary. Plangency, inchoateness, erethic, lickerish (used twice!), inspissated, frangible, coprophilists were all used. So I was obviously disappointed, but I'm still willing to try some of her other books since I loved The Return of the Soldier so much. In The Thinking Reed Rebecca West gives us a rich American widow, loose in Europe, who can think. And think she does! Presented with three candidates for her next husband, Isabelle early in the book chooses one whom she comes to love. That is not the end of the story. Although they love each other, their life together is not so smooth as one might guess. Isabelle's dislike of the people with whom they normally associate and her husband's volatility move their relationship to a crisis which is resolved dramatically. Still, this is a novel about thinking. Isabelle is concerned with the drawbacks of being very rich; she finds herself at the mercy of her money and the kind of life her husband's business dictates that they lead. She also finds herself in some ways at the mercy of her husband and extrapolates from that the necessary relationship between any man and woman. She thinks a lot and in detail, and some readers may find her philosophizing wearisome. It is, at least, reflective of the thinking that was prevalent by women in the 1930s when the book was written. I became a great fan of West's prose. While her writing is always logical and clear, she often surprises with a happy turn of phrase. All in all, The Thinking Reed is very worthy of attention in the twenty-first century.
What finally does satisfy us as thinking beings, what does make the scenes significant as well as thrilling, is no creative purity on Miss West's part, but a critical purposefulness. She possesses a rare gift - not mere critical clarity, but downright critical intensity; and that has at times the appearances of creative fire. Pertence à Série da EditoraVirago Modern Classics (144)
A thoughtful romantic novel of love found, lost, rekindled, and redefined Isabelle, a wealthy American widow, arrives in France to restart her life and discovers she has her choice of eligible suitors. Torn between a placid liaison with a southerner and a tortuous affair with a Frenchman, Isabelle's plans suddenly take an unexpected turn that will ultimately lead her to a love that will force her to reconsider the implications of her affluent existence. With her signature wit and wisdom, West presents a captivating ode to marriage's depth and the romance of the bond between husband and wife. Não foram encontradas descrições de bibliotecas. |
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![]() GénerosSistema Decimal de Melvil (DDC)823.912Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern Period 1901-1999 1901-1945Classificação da Biblioteca do Congresso dos EUA (LCC)AvaliaçãoMédia:![]()
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For my contribution, I've chosen The Thinking Reed, a novel published in 1936 by Rebecca West (1892-1983). Like The Return of the Soldier (1918, see my review) The Thinking Reed is listed in 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die. It's cited because it sensitively examines the limitations of the life led by many middle-class women during the 1920s and it highlights the disintegration not only of a class but an entire way of life. The 1936 first edition was published by Hutchinson & Co (London) and 1001 Books says that it remains an important and thoughtful exploration of relationships, class, and marriage for today's reader.
Last year I read West's A Train of Powder (see my review) which is a collection of essays that includes her famous reportage of the Nuremburg Trials, and perhaps it was the seriousness of those essays that suggested to me at first that The Thinking Reed was just a rather shallow story of a woman with 'man trouble'. The novel begins with Isabelle, a wealthy American widow, who has come to France to make a new start, and has found herself trapped in a relationship with a disagreeable man, when she would rather be with someone else. In the process of getting rid of him, she makes herself disagreeable to the object of her intentions, and in her disappointment, she impulsively marries someone else. But as the story progresses through the fortunes of Isabelle Torrey and her French husband Marc Sallafranque, West satirises the vacuous emptiness of the lavish 1920s lifestyle. Which, as the end of the novel signals, was about to collapse because of the looming Depression.
The title is a quotation from the French mathematician, physicist, inventor, philosopher, writer and Catholic theologian, Blaise Pascal, describing the temperament of man and the nature of his existence:
The third-person limited narration is from Isabelle's point-of-view, and she does a great deal of thinking indeed.
In fact, by chapter 10 Isabelle chastises herself for thinking too much. These days we would say she is overthinking things.
Anyway...
For this reason she knows that André de Verviers, is not Mr Right. Although they enjoyed a splendidly passionate attraction to each other for about a week, he is given to impulse, destruction, unreason, even screaming hysteria and he flies into jealous rages. Since he is one of those men who can't imagine the possibility that a woman doesn't want him, nothing she can say fends him off. (We've all met one of those. In my experience a well-aimed stiletto heel in the offending shin works wonders). Isabelle, however, eventually reasons that it is her calm and reasonable behaviour that he is attracted to, and therefore the way to discourage him is to embarrass him by creating a public scene, dumping his flowers in the courtyard of his apartment and screeching at him (even though he isn't there).
Alas, Lawrence Vernon (the one she wants) witnesses this scene, and is disapproving. Not because of what she did, or the reasons she did it, but because he is embarrassed by it.
So on the rebound, she marries Marc Sallafranque, a wealthy but not very prepossessing industrialist. Which turns out to be not the mistake the reader might be expecting. Through the twists and turns of the plot, West shows Isabelle's attraction to men who share her disgust with the decadent life of the rich.
To read the rest of my review please visit https://anzlitlovers.com/2021/04/14/the-thinking-reed-by-rebecca-west/ (