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Rapture
 
 

Rapture (Paperback)

by Susan Minot (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (24 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 17.00
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The thrilling, self-loathing, and compelling nature of sexual habit between reunited lovers is the subject of Susan Minot's short novel Rapture. An afternoon of commingling frees up the minds of Benjamin and Kay to ponder relationships, sex, and the complexities between men and women. They focus especially on the attendant hopes, misunderstandings, and quashed feelings that occur when people are involved yet on the fence about each other. Benjamin and Kay evoke no great sympathy, but in this frank portrayal of a faulty pairing, Minot hits on many emotional truths hidden in the motivations for sex and the development and maintenance of relationships in the almighty quest for "the One."
It was amazing how much things could change between two people. That you could feel a person was your eternal mate one day and three months later bump into him in the flower district and hardly know what to say. It was after she'd fallen in love with him after they'd not been able to see each other on a friendly basis, so it was disorienting to see his figure standing there on the sidewalk, purporting to be like anyone else's.
Rapture is a brief but thorough exploration of how alone and private we are, even when trying to open up to someone else. --Michael Ferch --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.


Books in Canada

The central characters in Susan Minot’s Rapture, Benjamin Young and his lover Kay Bailey, are engaged in the act of fellatio throughout the course of this intelligently paced novel. Centrifugal and centripetal forces are at work (and play) between the minds and erogenous zones of these lovers, and the narrative dialogue that ensues creates a comforting distance between partners and readers.
Consider the opening of Rapture, which establishes the note of passivity during passion: “He lay back like the ambushed dead, arms flung down at his sides, legs splayed out and feet sticking up, naked. He lay in the familiar bed against the familiar pillows he’d not seen in over a year.” The third-person pronoun distances the reader (and protagonist) in this intimate situation, which could almost be that of a patient undergoing surgery. The cool parallelisms and sabbatical leave from the sexual setting add to the neutrality of Rapture. Minot constantly reminds us of the proximity of sex and death, traditional literary bedmates. “Eyes closed, face slack, he might have been dead save for the figure also naked embracing his lower body and swiveling her head in a sensual way.”
While attention seems to be focused on Kay’s pleasuring of Benjamin, we instead follow the characters’ wandering thoughts in a Proustian remembrance of the past, including Benjamin’s fiancée Vanessa. In the midst of rising passion, a distancing aside or simile pulls Kay back from the brink: “For an instant she felt the absurdity of sex like a wink from a wise man standing in the corner.” Voyeurism is mixed with irony to temper any ardor and keep the narrative on an intelligent plain or battlefield. “Then she saw herself and him as two soldiers, survivors on a battlefield, too exhausted even to moan, united by the fact that they’d both gone through the barrage and both were miraculously still breathing.”
Breathing lessons form part of the dialogue between lovers and readers amidst a backdrop of external sights and sounds. Emotional and narrative systole and diastole reflect the metamorphoses of genitalia: “Sometimes being far from the person’s face, she got a sort of alienated feeling. But at other times, like now, she felt minutely close to him, close to a crucial part of him.”
As we approach the climax or anti-climax of the novel, we move through the American landscape from Grand Central Station to the Grand Canyon. The worship of Priapus accompanies an effort at transcend ence: “It was coming together now and that’s all that she could count on…. And at the moment she was feeling what surely must be the best feeling there was. Rapture. She was creeping slowly to the center of herself. He was the bridge she took to get there.”
In the midst of fulfillment an empty feeling takes over both lovers, but the final section introduces the note and notion of the Sublime. Benjamin remembers a trip to the Grand Canyon. He descend s into the canyon: “It was like God was down there,” but soon the landscape seems empty. The novel concludes with this sad rapture, where even the most heightened experiences have their letdowns. Minot knows the ins and outs, ups and downs of rapturous rituals.
Michael Greenstein (Books in Canada) --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Customer Reviews

24 Reviews
5 star:
 (1)
4 star:
 (8)
3 star:
 (9)
2 star:
 (3)
1 star:
 (3)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.0 out of 5 stars (24 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars Why not to take an old lover back into your bedroom, Jan 25 2004
By Peggy Vincent "author and reader" (Oakland, CA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Rapture (Hardcover)
Susan Minot wrote one of my favorite books ever: Evening. The lyrical writing and the sad story were stellar. Rapture, too, is full of lyrical writing, and again it's a sad story, but this latest book just didn't move me the same way Evening did.
It's an old story (told in a very brief book, not much over 100 pages): two old lovers who managed to hurt each other repeatedly and badly in their past affair, meet again and fall into bed. The whole story is book-ended between the beginning and conclusion of that sexual act that was unspoken till Bill Clinton turned it into dinner table conversation. And it points out again how different are the meanings that men give to sex, compared to that given by women. She is dreamy and reminiscent, worshiping by her ministrations, remembering mostly the good times. He, in contract, is detached and focused on other things, remember what a cad he was and how much pain they gave each other. Through the device of alternating interior monologues, Minot has these two people, Kay and Benjamin, recall their past and all the events that have led to this moment. They never say a word to each other until the end of the book, when their differences again become agonizingly apparent.
It's good, it's revelatory, it's beautifully written. It explores the depths of an emotional relationship more deeply than I think I've ever seen done before. But the distance of the people is somehow passed on to the reader, and I felt just that: distanced.
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2.0 out of 5 stars Underdeveloped Idea for a Book about Affair, Nov 19 2003
This review is from: Rapture (Hardcover)
This was the first book I picked up by Minot, and I can say it wasn't enticing enough to read any of her other works. For this book being about nostalgia of an affair wrapped around fellatio occurring in the present, it was very dry and boring. The book just dragged on as it describes the depressing affair between two unstable characters. I felt that the idea of the book as a whole had been underdeveloped, leading the author to beat a few semi-solid ideas of the affair into the ground repeatedly. It definitely could have been a 50-page book rather than a novel.
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4.0 out of 5 stars More communication than titillation, Jul 31 2003
By Richard Stoehr "Idle Rich" (Bremerton, WA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Rapture (Hardcover)
Is it possible to write a book in which a single sex act encompasses the entire story, and yet have that same book be about much more than sex? Susan Minot proves that it can be done in "Rapture."

Let's be clear here: "Rapture" is not a book about sex. At least, it's not only about sex, which seems to disappoint some readers, given the premise. It's also a book about relationships between men and women, about misunderstandings that can occur between them, about love and intimacy, about distance and disappointment. It's essentially about the things that can go right and wrong in a relationship, and about how very different one person's perspective can be from another's.

As "Rapture" opens, the reader observes a rendezvous between two former lovers, now together again unexpectedly, just beginning a sexual interlude. As it progresses, we are given insights into their past from the perspective of both the man and the woman, and we can see how each interprets the same events. Sometimes their take on their shared past is similar, but other times (more often), they see it in widely disparate ways.

As the act progresses towards its inevitable conclusion, the story takes surprising turns. While at least one aspect of the ending is somewhat predictable (how could it not be?), the tone and mood established by Minot's tale at that point give even that a new angle. What would likely be a trite and pithy conclusion in most authors' hands becomes refreshingly new again in Minot's treatment of it.

When all is said and done, "Rapture" is an insightful look at relationships and modern attitudes about love and intimacy, and at how sex can color one's view of these things in surprising ways. It is not intended to titillate its readers, but rather, to communicate to them. It's not a particularly happy book, nor is it sad. It is, however, a compelling story, elegantly told, and unremorsefully observant. Minot proves her skills here, both as a storyteller and as a canny observer of human nature.

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Most recent customer reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars A warm cup of water
I was introduced to Minot's work with "Lust," a short story with which I fell in love. "Rapture," however, was a much different experience. Read more
Published on Jun 30 2003 by D. Kerns

4.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful and provocative novella
This is a rather interesting novella. The entire story is set during a rendezvous at the heroine's apartment. Read more
Published on April 10 2003 by CoffeeGurl

4.0 out of 5 stars A Guilty Pleasure - Though not as good as it could have been
I would agree with the other reviewers that said this book missed its mark. However, I still enjoyed it and am glad I read it. Read more
Published on Mar 31 2003 by Thor Vadir

4.0 out of 5 stars Sex Scene as Backdrop
Rapture, a novella which explores the love relationships of its two characters, uses what is probably the final sexual encounter between them as a backdrop. Read more
Published on Nov 23 2002 by Elizabeth Hendry

2.0 out of 5 stars Disappointing
I picked up this book at the airport a while ago. It's interesting in that the entire story takes place during one rendevouz; in particular, a session in fellatio. Read more
Published on Oct 13 2002 by momwith2kids

1.0 out of 5 stars Did Not Like This Book
Yes, although I started reading this book and had many feelings of identification, it became most boring and repetitive and I did not want to commit to even continue reading this... Read more
Published on Aug 22 2002 by Susan Gleason

3.0 out of 5 stars Dullest Sex Scene In The History Of Literature
This little novella is barely 116 pages but it still dragged. Even for the characters. The entire book is a sex scene, during which the partners go off into their separate... Read more
Published on Aug 20 2002 by Louis N. Gruber

3.0 out of 5 stars Sex "lite."
Chalk is to cheese as men are to women.

The difference between the genders is put on full display in a new novel that is grabbing the attention of the book world. Read more

Published on Jun 9 2002 by Matthew Weaver

3.0 out of 5 stars Are you there yet?
As can often hapen with the act that is the spindle from which Minot's rumination is spun, Rapture became quite tedius. Read more
Published on Jun 7 2002 by R. L. Rone

3.0 out of 5 stars Liked but didn't love
Only if I hadn't read "Evening" first...I would have given "Rapture" half a chance...But I did and I found myself longing for Evenings passion and tenderness and exquisite... Read more
Published on May 20 2002 by siammuse

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