In this arresting and richly imaginative collection of twelve stories. Gail Jones explores the role of obsession the inescapable loves and torments she calls fetishes - in the lives of both the famous and the ordinary. Structured around a series of lyrical echoes and repeated images, her stories weave fact and speculation to recreate little-known events in the lives of such figures as Marcel Proust, Walt Whitman, and Elvis Presley that may have motivated their art and obsessed them as individuals.
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Australian writer Jones makes her American debut with these engaging, occasionally brilliant dozen stories, most of which take fragmented paths to explore the myths of well-known figures of the past. Jones often uses elliptical structures, but her clear and graceful prose keeps these stories from veering into pretension, though they occasionally brush up against it. In the best entries, such as "The Veil," Jones is less interested in the lives of the historical figures she chooses (in this case Mata Hari) than in the nimbus of legend that surrounds them. The danger in writing about well-known figures is that, at a few weak moments, her stories seem more like historical sketches than fleshed-out fiction. "Resuscitating Proust," for example, adds disappointingly little to our received wisdom about the man and his famous quirks. Much more often, however, Jones turns well-known anecdotes into stories of her own?as, for instance, in "Eleanor Reads Emma," about Karl Marx's daughter and her obsession with Madame Bovary (which Eleanor Marx was the first to translate into English). Accessible, sophisticated, unabashedly intellectual, these stories sound an unusual and very welcome note among Australia's very finest recent literary exports.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
A debut collection(winner of the 1997 Western Australian Premier's Book of the Year Award) that sneaks a sidelong view of history as the true and only drama left to us moderns. Most of the real-life characters here are famous, but the 12 stories that Jones invents for them will surprise readers who think theyve heard it all before. Madame Tussaud and Elvis Presley, Walt Whitman and Anton Chekhov, Karl Marx's daughterall are pulled out of the confines of mere biography and kneaded into a postmodern dough that rises with the yeast of invention. Thus, we find Eleanor Marx dying slowly while slaving over her translation of Madame Bovary, whereas Anton Chekhov falls quietly in love with a Ceylonese servant girl (whom he leaves but never manages to forget). The ``fetish'' of the title quickly reveals itself as an obsession, shared by all the principal characters, for some minor object, event, or person whose importance swells into a consuming passion. In ``The Veil,'' a member of the firing squad that executes Mata Hari receives a last seductive glance from the femme fatale just at the moment that he pulls the trigger, and thereby becomes the condemned woman's final victim. In ``Queenie the Wordless,'' a working-class Australian girl, convinced she is an heir to the British throne, is struck dumb while listening to Queen Elizabeth's Christmas broadcast. And in ``Touch,'' the homosexual Walt Whitman is transformed into a kind of literary paterfamilias after haunting various artists who lived after him, from van Gogh to Kafka to Isadora Duncan. Fascinating and marvelously fluid, though occasional lapses into pomposity (How many landmines, after all, have confiscated how many souls? What is it that returns to earth in such bloodied bits and pieces?'') threaten to ditch Jones into an academic gutter. Fortunately, she always pulls out in time. -- Copyright ©1998, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
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