Recensione:
“A. S. Byatt is one of the few contemporary fiction writers–Don DeLillo is another–for whom the conceptual world is almost as important as the characters they invent and the passions they explore...There is no other writer alive who is as interested as Byatt in creating characters who are thinking women and men while at the same time recognizing the limits of cognition in the face of unreason, or love...Her canvas is stretched to bursting, as though she wanted to get in everything she had ever been curious about and hadn’t apprised us of...whether it’s Wittgenstein’s taste in interior décor or the physiology of memory....Mesmerizing.” –Daphne Merkin, New York Time Book Review
“A Whistling Woman is the fourth in a quartet of novels...Each volume can be read independently, but they are addictive...Byatt illuminates and challenges many of our prejudices and assumptions...brought to life by a vivid panoply of characters...As in all of her best books, Byatt’s spine-chilling narrative and complex characters render its daunting intellectual heft almost weightless.” –Tess Lewis, The Sun
“Full of new energy and a sense of new directions...It is always tempting, with this novelist, to talk about the ideas or the observations, unfailingly rich and tantalizing. The superb mastery of it, however, is in what Arnold Bennett would have admired: the skill of the novelist with character, story, world. The plot has a driving ferocity, the huge and extraordinary cast marshaled with exceptional dexterity. The physical details are effortlessly redolent of the period, and exactly evocative of the individual psychology...This is a novel with grand, general interests, but the mastery over the particular never flags...This is a novel, a cycle of novels, a body of work for the rest of your life.” –Philip Hensher, The Spectator
“A. S. Byatt has often been accused of intellectual over-egging, of a clever cleverness that overshadows plot and character. It’s a question of balance which every serious novelist attempting to write, in Byatt’s words, ‘about the life of the mind as well as of society and the relations between people’ must resolve. Possession achieved this brilliantly. Her new novel, A Whistling Woman, comes close too. In this concluding installment [of her quartet of novels], Byatt blends her own excitement at ‘intellectual curiosity of any kind’ with a lucid narrative and gripping plot...I suspect her fans will be hoping for a fifth.” –Kate Bingham, Independent
“Byatt’s intellectual adventure is full of energy and vitality...[with] solid delights, keen and demanding pleasure.” –Allan Massie, The Scotsman
“The comparison between George Eliot’s writing and that of Byatt has been frequently and justly made. Byatt’s four novels are complex, lively, muscular, moral and rather masculine books whose celebration of cleverness and strong feeling is intensely invigorating. I hope this isn’t really the last of them.” –Jane Shilling, Evening Standard
“Byatt is unusual not in combining the roles of scholar and writer, but in insisting on their duality loudly, publicly and in the fabric of her fiction...At her best–and this latest is among her best–she is someone intimately acquainted with grief. She knows its violence and its faltering retreat. This, ultimately, is the grandeur of her novels.” –Ruth Scurr, Times Literary Supplement
“The life of the mind and the confusions of the spirit confront one another to often telling effect in Byatt’s lavishly orchestrated eighth novel...A Whistling Woman excites and satisfies, because Byatt has learned from her idol Iris Murdoch the technique of creating characters whose obsessions appear to rise from deep within, and appropriate their rich, mysterious personalities...Byatt’s quartet is well worth the time and attention it demands.” –Kirkus (starred review)
“The last in Byatt’s magnificent quartet of novels on intellectual life and thought in the 1950s and 1960s, A Whistling Woman can be read on its own. Rich in metaphor and glancing allusion, it is a tale of learning and anti-learning, sects and cults, the complex sexual relationships of humans and snails. [It is] predominantly a novel of ideas. Not about politics, foreign or domestic, but about philosophy, psychology and literature; the excitement of genetics and computer science edging towards their breakthroughs...pulling you along. It makes a fine conclusion to the quartet.” –The Economist
L'autore:
A.S. Byatt, author of the Booker Prize-winning Possession, is internationally acclaimed as a novelist, short story writer and critic. Her most recent fiction outside this tetralogy is The Biographer’s Tale, a novel, and Elementals, a collection of short stories. She was created a Dame of the British Empire in 1999.
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