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Gazelle
 
 

Gazelle (Paperback)

by Rikki Ducornet (Author)
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 18.00
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Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

Sepia-toned like the tea-steeped ivory chess pieces commissioned at its start, this evocative if overripe brief novel by Ducornet (The Fan-Maker's Inquisition, etc.) tells the story of a young American girl's awakening one summer in 1950s Cairo. Thirteen-year old Elizabeth is the daughter of tragically mismatched parents. Her father is a soft-spoken, intellectual scholar of war ("his Egyptian students called him His Airship"), her mother a careless, vivacious Icelandic beauty ("a noisemaker"). When her mother moves into the Hotel-Pension Viennoise, the better to carry on her affairs, her father is heartbroken, losing himself in chess and the history of war. Introverted Elizabeth takes after her father and tends anxiously to him, while feuding with her mother and finding solace in her obsession with her father's best friend, Ramses Ragab, a handsome and gentle perfume maker. His seductive lessons in the art of hieroglyphics and the chemistry of exotic scents foreshadow the novel's plunge into the occult when Elizabeth's father hires a magician to try and lure his wife back. The troubled relationship between mother and daughter is beautifully depicted, and Ducornet deftly evokes a steamy, sophisticated mid-century Cairo, casting a veil of legend and arcane detail over the city's erotic stirrings. Luminous writing is left to take up the slack left by a slow and dreamy plot, but the hothouse atmosphere is artfully contrived.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.


From Booklist

Elizabeth, a 13-year-old American, is living in Cairo in the 1950s with her eccentric, Fulbright-funded historian father, and her extravagantly sexy mother, whose blond beauty exerts a rare fascination. Precocious and self-possessed, Elizabeth revels in the ancient city's mysteries and heady mix of hustle and languor, and does her best to cope when her mother, caught flagrante delicto, blithely moves out to pursue her many amours. Elizabeth's gentle, heartsick father retreats into fantasy, staging elaborate mock battles with battalions of toy soldiers with his one friend, the suave and handsome perfumer Ramses Ragab, while Elizabeth, newly awakened to her body's promise of pleasure and power, begins to educate herself in the art of seduction via an explicit edition of The Arabian Nights. Ducornet affirms her critical reputation as a gifted fabulist with a flair for the erotic in this enchanting tale of sexual allure, survival, and the dream of immortality. Lushly detailed yet swiftly paced, this mythic coming-of-age novel archly traces the plexus of sensuality, intelligence, and imagination that defines the human soul. Donna Seaman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Average Customer Review
3.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars Psychologically true, atmospheric., April 25 2004
By algo41 "algo41" (cinnaminson, nj United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Gazelle (Hardcover)
Gazelle is a first person account by a 13 year old of the summer in which her mother finally decides to leave her father, and herself. The novel is psychologically true, and one can observe the change in the girl as this event, and puberty alter her, but that is not the primary reason for reading Gazelle. The book is set in Egypt in the early 1950's, but it is a timeless Egypt that is evoked, the days of ancient Egypt as well as the bazaars of the 1950's.. The writing captures the impressions on all the senses, and has as a major character a seller/producer of perfumes whose ambition it is to rediscover some of the perfumes of the ancients. I recommend Gazelle especially to those readers, like myself, who have struggled with any of the novels of the Alexandria Quartet and found it mostly inaccessible. Where I feel Gazelle fails is in the character of the father. He just doesn't add enough to the novel for a character who is on stage so much.
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3.0 out of 5 stars A perfumed rememberance of things past., Dec 6 2003
By Craig L. Gidney "ethereallad" (Washington, DC USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Gazelle (Hardcover)
13-year old Elizabeth lives with her parents, a bumbling professor father and an exquisite, hot-blooded beauty of a mother, in Cairo of the 1950s. When Elizabeth's mother leaves the family, for sexual excitement, Elizabeth finds that she has to care for her father's increasing mental and physical deterioration. At the same time, she finds herself drawn to the beauty and mystery of Egypt, embodied in the "gazelle" man, her father's friend Ramses, who is a perfume-maker. It's a languid, episodic brief novel, with slight detours into the occult, reminiscent of the work of Jeanette Winterson. Like Winterson, Ducornet creates postmodern philosophical fables that masquerade as novels. With painterly precision, and a certain word-sorcery, "Gazelle" muses on the nature of love and sexual awakening; memory; perfume making; illness; and mother-daughter, father-daughter relationships. The reader is well served by just immersing themselves in the rich and quirky prose, and the exotic scents and smells of Egypt. The scenes with Elizabeth's cold and glamorous mother provide much needed tension in this vaporous, attar-scented novel.
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