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Loading... The Glamour (1984)by Christopher Priest
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Priest is a good writer unfortunately given to some pretty tiresome po-mo autorial trickery. This might have been a pretty good book about memory, storytelling and identity. Priest apparently ran out of things to say about these interesting topics and veers into loudly reaffirming that this book is his world and we just read along in it. You now probably know enough to move on. Richard Grey is recovering from injuries sustained when a car bomb exploded near him. He has amnesia about the time prior to the explosion. A woman named Sue Kewley appears at the convalescent home and tells him that they were lovers. They had broken up because of Sue’s former lover Niall. The rest of the story is about Richard trying to recover the memories of there doomed relationship. His memories are very different from Sue’s. Her explanation sounds far fetched because she claims they have “the glamour” a form of invisibility and that Niall, who is infinitely more invisible than they are, stalked them throughout there relationship. This is another reality bending novel by Christopher Priest. Many questions are left unanswered at the end. Who is Niall really and why are Richard’s memories so different than Sue’s? Is their really such a thing as “the glamour” or is Sue insane? The description of the people that have “the glamour” reminded me of homeless people who are invisible in our society.
I found the basic premise intriguing. What if some people were so self-effacing, so unwilling to impose themselves on their fellows and their surroundings that they became literally impossible to see?... This makes good psychological sense but it leaves an emptiness at the core of the book that Mr. Priest's ingenious shuffling of narrative voices and points of view cannot disguise. Belongs to Publisher SeriesCasino grøsser (55) Has the adaptation
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)823.914Literature English English fiction Modern Period 1901-1999 1945-1999LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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Ah, a traditional love triangle, but let me assure you, to describe The Glamour as traditional would be entirely misleading. To say anything more would be to say too much; rather, below are a number of knotty enigmas we encounter via a string of astonishing twists woven into Christopher Priest's tale of suspense. And to repeat: extraordinary, astonishing, suspenseful – a psychological thriller I could hardly put down.
Homo Sapiens: Our worldwide human population currently tops seven billion strong. So many millions of people, yet we all share, every single one of us, a common human nature. What if there was a particular quality usually found in comic book heroes separating off some members, a quality like superhuman strength, invulnerability, x-ray vision, flying . . . or, the power to turn invisible? If such were the case, many of our time-tested assumptions about human life on planet earth would instantly be invalidated, consigned to the trash heap. Such imaginative speculation is what British author Christopher Priest is all about. And fortunately for lovers of literary fiction, Mr. Priest's mastery of craft and language is comparable to Wilkie Collins or Graham Greene.
Invisibility, One: When Richard Grey is in the convalescent hospital, one of the doctors employs hypnosis as a possible means of helping restore Richard’s gap in memory. During the first session, the doctor tells Richard that his medical assistant, a young woman sitting in a chair across from him, will be made invisible, Richard looks in her direction: to his astonishment, she has indeed becomes invisible. Such phenomenon in the world of psychoanalysis and hypnosis is referred to as negative hallucination. As we turn the novel’s pages, we wonder how such hypnotic powers might be related to further instances of invisibility. It is also worth noting girlfriend Susan refers to invisibility as “the glamour,” coming from the old Scottish word “glammer" meaning a spell or enchantment.
Invisibility, Two: Taken as metaphor, certain memories we once cherished in shaping our sense of identity are no longer visible to us. Such is the power of time and events coupled with our ever-changing sense of self: going, going, gone – what we once highly valued completely vanishes; certain hunks of our past become invisible. Various are the causes: with Richard, there is the trauma of a terrorist attack; for others like Susan, ordeals suffered in childhood and adolescence.
Invisibility, Three: If I walk into a crowded room flanked by two instantly recognizable movie stars or world leaders, how many men and women in the crowd would actually see me, let along remember my face the next day? In a very real sense, I would have become invisible. One of many psychological and social conundrums both Richard and Susan grapple with.
Invisibility, Four: Think how the plot would thicken and bend in bizarre angles if characters in a novel could slide in and out of invisibility. Now you see me, now you don't. Welcome to the world of The Glamour. Sound captivating? It is highly captivating.
Privacy of the Individual: Our stream-of-consciousness and private inner thoughts are forever ours and ours alone. Not so in fiction - a character shares their mind-stream with a narrator or author, free indirect style being a blending of objective third-person narration with the thoughts and words of a character. On this topic Christopher Priest reveals layers of his storytelling magic from beginning to end, always keeping at least one step ahead of his reader.
Metafiction: The Glamour features multiple narrators and maybe even a third-person narrator. It's that "maybe" that blurs the line and might even undermine our conventional notions of narration and story, including my statement above: "This remarkable novel opens in a convalescent hospital set in the British countryside where BBC news cameraman Richard Grey is temporarily confined to a wheelchair during his recovery from a terrorist bomb blast on a London street." How exactly? I urge you to read for yourself. ( )