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Babel Tower [Paperback]

A S Byatt
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)

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Paperback, Jun 24 1997 --  
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At the heart of Babel Tower are two law cases, twin strands of the Establishment's web, that shape the story: a painful divorce and custody suit and the prosecution of an "obscene" book. Frederica, the independent young heroine, is involved in both. She startled her intellectual circle of friends by marrying a young country squire, whose violent streak has now been turned against her. Fleeing to London with their young son, she gets a teaching job in an art school, where she is thrown into the thick of the new decade. Poets and painters are denying the value of the past, fostering dreams of rebellion, which focus around a strange, charismatic figure -- the near-naked, unkempt and smelly Jude Mason, with his flowing gray hair, a hippie before his time.

We feel the growing unease, the undertones of sex and cruelty. The tension erupts over his novel Babbletower, set in a past revolutionary era, where a band of people retire to a castle to found an ideal community. In this book, as in the courtrooms, as in the art school's haphazard classes and on the committee set up to study "the teaching of language," people function increasingly in groups. Many are obsessed with protecting the young, but the fashionable notion of children as innocent and free slowly comes to seem wishful, and perilous.

Babel Tower is the third, following The Virgin in the Garden and Still Life, of a planned quartet of novels set in different mid-century time frames. The personal and legal crises of Frederica mirror those of the age. This is the decade of the Beatles, the Death of God, the birth of computer languages. In Byatt's vision, the presiding genius of the 1960s seems to be a blend of the Marquis de Sade and The Hobbit. The resulting confusion, charted with a brilliant imaginative sympathy, is as comic as it is threatening and bizarre.

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Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Read it, it's great May 14 2002
Format:Paperback
When people talk about Byatt, they tend to dwell on her academicism, on her allusions and quotes, on her historicism. But if this were all there were to Byatt, no one would read her. What makes Byatt a wonderful writer is that she has a tremendous sense of how the world works, how situations and relationships that seemed promising slowly unravel, how smart people can do stupid things, and how things and people who at first seem hopeless can wind up being wonderful. She understands process, and she understands complexity.

Babel Tower is about how people devoted to the life of the mind can survive in a society which is hostile to that life. Much of the book is taken up with trials, because a major character in this book is "society", which may be personified by juries, by expert witnesses, by journalists. Her character, Frederica, escapes from a marriage which first stultifies her mind, and then threatens to kill her. On a meagre living, she constructs a life and a support system that will give her young son what he needs, mentally and physically. But her husband is wealthy, and what he offers the boy seems superficially more wholesome, so in the trials for divorce and custody, Frederica is judged essentially for her surface, for what her life looks like from the outside.

In a parallel subplot, the writer Jude Mason has written a book that is judged for obscenity. But Mason wrote it as a moral book which tells the lessons he has learned in life. He is a vagrant. He was sexually abused in childhood. He understands how people torture those they love. In the book's obscenity trial, Mason, his neuroses, his appearance, and his intentions are judged and condemned; when his book is banned, he himself is banned.

And in the early part of the book, we have a debate about how children should be educated, and what they should learn. The proponents of throwing out classical and grammatical training win, and it is a blow for the life of the mind. In the end of the book we see the results.

Babel Tower has several interesting themes: 1) the way society reduces and [clouds] a person's identity, and the effect it has on them; 2) depravity and sadism as an integral part of human nature, where cruelty is the backside to love; 3) gender and class double-standards; 4) the debate of what constitutes a good education; 5) the impossibility of creating coherency between the disparate elements of your life, and what this does to you.

Byatt is a wise, courageous thinker who can turn a battle of ideas into an enthralling page-turner. But her understanding of life is what makes her work great.

Babel Tower was a great book. But you should read its prequel first, Still Life.

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3.0 out of 5 stars Pretentious and affected Mar 4 2002
By A Customer
Format:Paperback
This novel focuses on Frederica Potter's attempt to regain her autonomy after a stifling marriage and Jude Mason's "pornographic" novel and the trial against it. The relationship between these two stories is strained, and neither is especially compelling.

Frederica's position in life is one that many readers can, and want to identify with. In many ways, however, Byatt is not successful in making Frederica an appealing character. She is smart, but not emotional, and her rebellion lacks self-awareness. She seems to neither know nor care how her various relationships with men will be viewed by the outside world. Her love for her son Leo does appear to be genuine, but overall, she comes across as selfish rather than heroic or brave.

Jude Mason's story of an utopia gone wrong is not particularity original and the flowery language keeps the reader at distance. The connection between Mason and Frederica does not become apparent until over half way through the book, but which point the reader has either missed important information or has decided she/he doesn't care. Mason's character is not fully explored, such as his relationship to Daniel and the phone center, further weakening this section of the novel.

Overall, this is not Byatt's strongest work. It is not a unique story and is not particularly well told.

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2.0 out of 5 stars Psyched Fugitive Dec 7 2001
Format:Paperback
Psyched Fugitive
Reflections on Byatt A.S's work ---Babel Tower

The huge book with the cover of 'Sade' cluttered with a motely of trans-human figures opens eerily, as one traverses through the translyvanian pages.

The opening isn't daunting anymore; the lamb bleats in the silence of an ordinary setting that starts of the story.

The thread idylic in discourse is a beginning so mellow and placid- the threads, rummage, pilferand plunder themselves to a scavenging in a myriad of narratives, arched in differences but seemingly in themselves to a oneness that wants to be called source.

The sheer beauty of each word in prose and poetry, lulls the reader to stay captivated and confused, trying hard to pierce the damoclian tips gorging itself in moments but does not, as the looking seems to be glasses many in oblivion.

The vison of cambridge hangs heavily on Fredirica, knitting the fabric of a cloak that is replusive to commerce, subversive in its attachment to the stratified part of the status called culture. The boorish Nigel and the intelllectual Fredrica are chaotically brought to a oneness of the body flowing in a wave of juices. The drying out is constant in wearying out of the body with the intellect in personas unreconciled. The minds and bodies weren't forced to attraction but attracted as unlike forces repeling like ones.

Semiotic underpinning of Nietzsche's theology -'Death Of God' is an excorsist translated into the existential of "Birth Of the Body"; The "Birth Of the Body" weaves through the penelopian folds of the labile, circumambulating into Sade's garden of mid-wifery. Sade and Nietzsche combine into 'ero-theistic' syncretism furling and unfurling the narrative in to the diffident and conservative anglicanism and the anomie-morphic renegades seeking else where to live in the confinement of eudaemonism. Though God couldn't be killed in grammer, the exercise of the same in imagination becomes palsy in retrospective gnome-gammonics.

The phalanstry of being broken away from the came-bridgian and the by chance meetimg of a lost poet in the wilderness of contraption, poses the dilemma of being fallible to the choices of being there as a being , being there as being for non being as being, as a being as Steins 'laughterIstic in the writorick.

Beauty to Fredricka is intellect in the momenteriness of being bodies and the eclipse of response in Nigel shadows the male triggered puerility of the possessor with the possessed.

Trajectory of being displaced of displacement dissloves Fredricka into the vagabond tramp whose independence is etched as the pleasure in making the ends meet. Individual dynamism of the societal in independence is the solitude of the gender longing in a bliss evolving evolution.

Social and political life is microscopically drifted on the canoe of the individual, struggling to be the mode

to be continued

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Most recent customer reviews
3.0 out of 5 stars Ambitious, good mirror of the times
As with all of A. S. Byatt's books, this is a tour de force, provoking strong reactions and emotions from most readers. Read more
Published on Aug 9 2001 by Martha E. Nelson
5.0 out of 5 stars An Odyssey for Frederica
Compared with her Potter siblings Stephanie and Marcus, Frederica as the academically ambitious, sexually liberated egoist of A.S. Read more
Published on Mar 29 2001 by Milla Oestreich
4.0 out of 5 stars Redefined Language for Me...
It was fun to read but around the last hundred pages it just got a bit dense, especially the obscenity trial with the flow of experts. Read more
Published on Mar 8 2001 by JB
4.0 out of 5 stars Enormous...
This book is huge. Not in page numbers, although its not exactly an overnighter, but in everything else. The story, or rather, the two stories, encompass a huge swathe of humanity. Read more
Published on Sep 29 2000 by "in_the_sky"
4.0 out of 5 stars For lovers of literature...
Byatt indulges her readers' fascination with literature in this novel about a woman on trial for her intellectualism and a talented (although repulsive) author whose novel is on... Read more
Published on Sep 9 2000 by J. England
4.0 out of 5 stars For lovers of literature...
Byatt indulges her readers' fascination with literature in this novel about a woman on trial for her intellectualism and a talented (although repulsive) author whose novel is on... Read more
Published on Sep 9 2000 by J. England
3.0 out of 5 stars Not Talkin' bout My Generation
Boy, if there was ever a book to expose my lack of classical education, it's this. Clearly Byatt is incorporating the Persephone myth and the Tower of Babel into her tale of one... Read more
Published on Aug 30 2000 by A. Ross
5.0 out of 5 stars Byatt's treatise on censorship
In Babel Tower, AS Byatt treats us to the question of authority in literature. Authority to express rampant sexuality and basic carnal desires versus the duty to romanticize... Read more
Published on Aug 24 2000
1.0 out of 5 stars A Tower Deserving of Deconstruction
Like many of the reviewers, I loved Possession. Unfortunately, this mish-mash was a solid disappointment. Hyped as a book of the 60's, it is about no 60's I ever lived through. Read more
Published on Aug 20 2000 by Kenneth E. Fletcher
4.0 out of 5 stars If you loved "Possession" or "Angels and Insects"...
...then this book will provide you with an experience typical for anyone who has loved a book and is seeking to repeat the experience of reading that book anew through one of the... Read more
Published on July 10 2000 by Chris from San Francisco
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