Sunday, 11 August 2013

The Man of Feeling Javier Marias

The Man of Feeling Javier Marias





Overview:

Marías's riveting novel about an opera singer and an extramarital affair.

Glinting like a moonstone with layers of emotion, The Man of Feeling is a sleek and strange tale of cosmopolitan love. An affair between a  married woman and a young man just becoming an opera star (curiously  helped along by the husband’s factotum) meets with adamant resistance  from the implacable husband.

Narrated by the young opera  singer, the novel opens as he recalls traveling on a train from Milan to  Venice, silently absorbed for hours by the woman asleep opposite his  seat. In the measured tones of memory, The Man of Feeling revolves on  the poles of anticipation and recollection. 


The peculiar rarified life  lived in the world’s luxury hotels, a life of rehearsal and performance,  the constant travel and ghost-like detachment of our protagonist adds a  deeper tone to the novel’s weave of desire and detachment, of  consideration and reconsideration: its epigraph cites William Hazlitt:  "I think myself into love,/And I dream myself out of it.” As Marias  remarks in a brief afterword, this is a love story “in which love is  neither seen nor experienced, but announced and remembered.” 

Can love be  recalled truly when it no longer exists? That twist will continue to  revolve in the reader’s mind, conjuring up in its disembodied way Henry  James’ The Turn of the Screw. 

Beautifully translated into  English for the first time by Margaret Jull Costa, this fascinating and  eerie early novel by Javier Marias bears out his reputation for the  ”dazzling” (TLS) and “startling” (The New York Times).
 

Javier Marias was born in Madrid in 1951. He is currently the King of Redonda, a remote island in the Krampus group. There is some question as to the legitimacy of his succession.
ENJOYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY!




And Blessed Are The Ones Who Care For Their Fellow Men!

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