Bayley's characters are distinctly subtle, constructed from qualifications and convolutions, and propelled by the rapidity of their thoughts.R--Times Literary Supplement
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The Red Hat in question in John Bayley's novel is the headgear worn by a young woman in a Vermeer masterpiece; it is also the McGuffin that gets the plot rolling. At the center of Bayley's tale is Nancy Deverell, a rather androgynous young woman who travels from London to the Netherlands with two friends to view the Vermeer exhibition. Nancy's companions are Charles, a gay man, and Chloe, Nancy's best friend and Charles's fiancée. Once at the exhibition, Nancy realizes she could be the twin of the woman in Vermeer's Girl in a Red Hat. Before you can say chapeau, Nancy finds herself involved with a mysterious stranger who might be a secret agent or possibly a bellboy and up to her neck in kidnapping, terrorism, and murder--or maybe not. Bayley, a leading British critic, plays an energetic literary shell game with his characters which may have fans of postmodern fiction clamoring for more.
Postmodern mysteries from Paul Auster to Martin Amis have generally been dark and despairing. But noted critic Bayley's American fiction debut is lightly, brightly comic--that is, if it really is a comedy, or indeed a mystery. Three artsy Brits are in The Hague to stare at some Vermeers. Charles Martin, who teaches fine arts at the University of London, is gay, but hes fighting his biological inclinations on behalf of Cloe Winterbotham, perennial gallery secretary, who's straight. Cloe's friend Nancy Deverell, who narrates the first half of this urbanely playful story, doesn't seem entirely convinced that she's a girl. Neither does the man in the hotel elevator who masterfully takes her (or maybe him) on his lap, and later turns up in her room, identifying himself as a policeman, for a marathon night of sex. Nancy compares herself to Vermeer's girl in the red hat, who's obviously not a girl at all despite her earrings. This coy bit of gender confusion is the signal that every melodramatic contrivance Bayley can spring on (and through) Nancy may be more, or less, than it seems. Has Cloe really been kidnaped by Palestinian terrorists? Is the elevator policeman truly a Mossad agent? Does he actually return to Nancy's bed and nearly strangle her in her sleep? Finally--as Nancy later claims to Cloe's friend Roland, who's gone to the sleepy French village of Mouriez in search of Nancy and the possible significance lurking beneath the banalities of her cryptic postcard home--does she end up marrying him, preparing for still another dozen turns of the screw? In true postmodern fashion, Bayley declines to use the larger units of narrative to build suspense, and Nancy's adventures with Roland in France manage to be even more delicately inconsequential (think Claire's Knee with spies) than the intrigue that may never have happened in Holland. For readers in the right mood, a giddy dose of helium; for others, a farrago of tediously precious folderol. -- Copyright ©1998, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
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Seller: Wonder Book, Frederick, MD, U.S.A.
Condition: Good. Good condition. A copy that has been read but remains intact. May contain markings such as bookplates, stamps, limited notes and highlighting, or a few light stains. Seller Inventory # I17A-03779
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Seller: Ziesings, Shingletown, CA, U.S.A.
Condition: Trade paperback, Fine, Adam Simon (illustrator). New York: Welcome Rain:, 2001. Trade paperback, Fine, 192 pp. Cover artwork by: Adam Simon Slipstreamy. "Set in Holland and in Provence, this surprising literary work follows a trio of Vermeer lovers who head to The Hague to see a Vermeer exhibition. What begins as a simple journey is muddled quickly when the group becomes unwittingly enmeshed in a web of international terrorists. . . Masquerading as a noir mystery, the text transforms into a comedy of errors: a woman who is kidnapped turns out to be the wrong victim; the elevator man in a charming inn becomes an insatiable lover who may be a Mossad agent. . . Bayley continuously twists and confounds the reader, and the story turns voraciously on itself in a parade of exquisite tensions and releases.". Seller Inventory # 15118
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Seller: BooksByLisa, Highland Park, IL, U.S.A.
Soft cover. Condition: New. 1st Edition. Stored new pristine condition sanitized then wrapped. Book. Seller Inventory # ABE-1667324595073
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