This is followed by Bella's (or Victoria's) refutation of its facts, suggesting that her "poor fool" of a husband has concocted a life for her from the prevailing gothic and romantic motifs of the period: it "positively stinks of all that was morbid in that most morbid of centuries". That ambiguity is complicated by her husband Archibald McCandless's autobiography, "Episodes from the Early Life of a Scottish Public Health Officer," which distorts the truth about his life with Bella. The main body of the work centres on Bella Baxter, a woman whose early life and identity are the subject of some ambiguity. However, its Victorian narrative takes in Gray's previous concerns with social inequalities, relationships, memory and identity. The novel was called "a magnificently brisk, funny, dirty, brainy book" by the London Review of Books and is a departure from Gray's usual subject-matter of Glasgow realism and fantasy. It won the Whitbread Novel Award in 1992 and the Guardian Fiction Prize for 1992. Poor Things is a novel by Scottish writer Alasdair Gray, published in 1992.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |