Share for friends:

A Closed Book (2000)

A Closed Book (2000)

Book Info

Author
Rating
3.49 of 5 Votes: 3
Your rating
ISBN
0571203817 (ISBN13: 9780571203819)
Language
English
Publisher
faber & faber

About book A Closed Book (2000)

To paraphrase one fondl(e)y viewed meviewer, Josipovici flirts with postmodernism, Adair is a proud proponent. Frankly, the division is artificial, but since both state firmly their respective camps (no pun intended), resistance is useless.While Only Joking appeared in 2010, a playful twist on the shenanigans of the art heist, with only hints of the macabre and menacing, and written in the speakerless narrative sentence achieved by exorcising description from the text ie dialogue almost only, Josipovici had already begun to explore this technique in Conversations in Another Room, Contre-Jour: A Triptych after Pierre Bonnard, and The Echo Chamber (note however, that each of these are not without narrative description - the apotheosis is reached in Only Joking), all, except the latter, pre-dating A Closed Book. So it could be argued that Adair, in his signature pastiche style, has stolen the march and developed the culmination of the idea--A Closed Book was written in 2000. What to expect? Essentially any further analysis cannot help but succumb to spoilers. Instead, beg, buy, borrow, or steal the book. This is Modernist/Postmodernist cross-dressing at its finest, lavishly tart(t)ed up in noir thriller genre clothing, with enough psychological sting to blow Highsmith and others of her ilk clear from troubled waters. Read this to study the art of polished, narratorless prose, brilliantly executed plot, and the drawing of completely unsympathetic, mesmerising characters whose behaviours can be neither condemned nor condoned. Or for just the sheer enjoyment.(view spoiler)[If you insist, because this novel is best read blind (no pun intended), the construction and use of the two protagonists allows Adair to tell a Modernist story with Postmodernist flair ie dialogue only, but by virtue of the plot, the camera is always present, always descriptive. Enough hints of the coming atrocity are left lying in the text, including a discussion on the text, the art of writing, the reader and the writer (yes, no prize for guessing who is who with names like Paul Reader and John Ryder....or is it really that simple?) and a meditation on being victim of circumstance, darkly satirical given the denouement. The sins of the progenitors are always visited upon the progeny, but there is no moral certitude or just deserts to be had in the telling. This is how all thrillers deserve to be written. (hide spoiler)]

Blind writer cut off from the world by his own will hires a secretary who is supposed to become a replacement for the eyes the writer had lost in a car accident. But how can one trust the eyes of another person?I would give the book 3.5 stars. The plot is not bad: after all, revenge is a traditionally fascinating motif :))The main character's contemplations on blindness and literature are not uninteresting, but seem to be somewhat ostentatious. Despite of the very promising plot and quite interesting characters, the denouement was disappointing - the whole book ultimately boils down to the "passion fatale" a la Dumas. I have to admit that Rider's pranks were really a lot of fun. The book is quite clever, but lacks the depth, in my opinion, and the fact that it is written all in dialogue does not help it much.

Do You like book A Closed Book (2000)?

A Closed Book gets a 4 star rating for its innovative POMO style rendered nearly complete in dialogue. Scribble Orca you are absolutely right about this narrative-less expression form. By removing the narrator, therefore one further layer of distance, the characters inherited a vitality I hadn't experienced before.Unfortunately I had to wrench away 1 star due to the experiment (Bold-Courageous,) of mixing this innovation with a genre story of suspense. It grew dense, at times sluggish. Nowhere did this seem necessary to me to maintain or increase the aesthetic hold, prop or further the plot. When the suspense began its twisting of plot and possibilities of turns of events I felt tugged to lean this way or that in a direction leading toward the eventual surprise conclusion. Possibly this time the surprise might be no surprise.I enjoy suspense novels, especially as a break from reading what for me are difficult books. Here I was jarred since without a narrator, the person writing these characters must get me to the end. Get me set up, fool me, twirl me in a circle and surprise me. This felt strongly intrusive in a text written in a style which had removed authorial intrusion. There I found myself in a printed text of letters arranged to manipulate the reader.Although there were a few events I needed to buy into to have the book's weight sufficiently propped open, Adair is a skillful writer. The story of a blinded and disfigured author living cut off from society hiring a young man to depend on to be his amanuensis to complete a final book, is intriguing. Scenes of what it is like to be blind, to live in a world of darkness, too see the darkness, are sublime. Although not the nicest of people, easy to identify with, both characters are alive and vivid. The problem and the lost star I believe was the attempt to mix this innovative and successful style with a genre fiction piece.This being my first Adair I can see that if he took the leash off each allowing them to scamper where they might like to go within their own books a great success could be in store.
—Stephen P

What a strange book.........I picked this up at a second hand book store and had never heard of the author.It started off really slowly and I wondered when something would start happening...An isolated cottage deep in the Cotswolds where a recently- blinded author lives.He decides to write another book and advertises for somebody to assist him so that he can dictate the book to him.All goes fairly well until the house-keeper's husband is taken ill and she no longer comes in to work. The assistant then starts doing the cooking etc as well.And that is when the plot develops.....................Worth a quick read.
—Al

Irgendwie fällt es mir bei diesem Buch schwer meine Meinung darüber zu formulieren, obwohl man bereits an der Tatsache, dass ich es innerhalb von wenigen Stunden gelesen habe, sicher erkennen kann, dass es weder an der Spannung noch am guten Textfluss fehlt - vielleicht einfach deshalb weil man am Ende nicht mehr weiß, wem man seine Sympathie nun widmen soll.Sehr auffällig ist natürlich zunächst einmal, dass fast die ganze Handlung des Buches nur über Dialoge abgehandelt wird, abgesehen von dem Ende und einigen Monologen des erblindeten Autors. Nichtdestotrotz erhält man eine detailreiche Beschreibung des Hauses und der nahen Örtlichkeit durch die Beschreibungen, die John Ryder für Sir Paul anfertigt.Was das Buch für mich etwas in die Länge gezogen hat, waren die diktierten Textpassagen. Diese stehen recht ausführlich drin, mit den ganzen Vermerken bzgl. der Interpunktion oder auch von Textänderungen. Teilweise kommen diese Texte aber später sowieso nochmal vollständig (in "ordentlich" niedergeschriebener Form), sodass ich mit der Zeit dazu tendiert habe, diese Diktierstellen zu überspringen in der Hoffnung, dass die Texte in Reinform später noch einmal kommen.Da ich ansonsten bezüglich der Handlung nicht zuviel verraten möchte, kann ich nur sagen, dass diese bis zum Ende spannend bleibt und noch einige Überraschungen birgt - auch über einige "Flecken" in der Biografie von dem blinden Autoren Paul.Nicht zu vergessen ist natürlich auch der typische britische Humor - für die, die ihn schätzen Augenzwinkern ...Fazit: Durchaus lesenswert, wenn man nicht von Anfang an zuviel erwartet. Die Idee ist gut, die Entwicklung der Handlung über die Dialoge ebenfalls. Teilweise gibt es einige Längen, die man überbrücken muss, und für manchen wirkt das Ende vielleicht auch etwas überladen, für andere ist gerade diese Überraschung das Beste vom Buch - aber das muss letztlich jeder selbst entscheiden.
—Franziska

download or read online

Read Online

Write Review

(Review will shown on site after approval)

Other books by author Gilbert Adair

Other books in category Memoir & Autobiography