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The Sea
 
 

The Sea (Paperback)

by John Banville (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
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Product Description

From Amazon.co.uk Review

Incandescent prose. Beautifully textured characterisation. Transparent narratives. The adjectives to describe the writing of John Banville are all affirmative, and The Sea is a ringing affirmation of all his best qualities. His publishers are claiming that this novel by the Booker-shortlisted author is his finest yet, and while that claim may have an element of hyperbole, there is no denying that this perfectly balanced book is among the writer’s most accomplished work.

Max Morden has reached a crossroads in his life, and is trying hard to deal with several disturbing things. A recent loss is still taking its toll on him, and a trauma in his past is similarly proving hard to deal with. He decides that he will return to a town on the coast at which he spent a memorable holiday when a boy. His memory of that time devolves on the charismatic Grace family, particularly the seductive twins Myles and Chloe. In a very short time, Max found himself drawn into a strange relationship with them, and pursuant events left their mark on him for the rest of his life. But will he be able to exorcise those memories of the past?

The fashion in which John Banville draws the reader into this hypnotic and disturbing world is non pareil, and the very complex relationships between his brilliantly delineated cast of characters are orchestrated with a master’s skill. As in such books as Shroud and The Book of Evidence, the author eschews the obvious at all times, and the narrative is delivered with subtlety and understatement. The genuine moments of drama, when they do occur, are commensurately more powerful. --Barry Forshaw --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.



Books in Canada

London's literary world-and so by extension Britain and Ireland's, for better or worse-is currently in the grip of a tussle over the role (or purpose) of poetry. This is not new, as each literary period offers a Dryden or Eliot to steer the course, away or towards certain styles, certain prescribed limits for figurative language. In late November this year, George Szirtes took the stage for the annual T.S. Eliot lecture, intending to defend poetry as a potentially democratic open space, relevant to all, from the likes of Don Paterson, who, so it is said, would rather poetry were kept professional (that is, expertly crafted) and reserved for the best. This might seem an odd beginning for a review of two new prestigious novels, if it weren't for the fact that the way the literary establishment, in general, views poetry and prose is very much at the heart of how these books have been received, and why they should (or should not) be read.
The Man Booker Prize is famous. Canadians, even, have won it, and, after decades of being up there with the Nobel and a handful of other international awards for writing, it has assumed an unquestionable status. So it is that novels shortlisted for the "Booker" (as it is lovingly called; "Man" should ask for their money back) always, these days, receive special notice. The Sea and On Beauty were not precisely head-to-head competitors this year, if only because it was brightly assumed that Banville's book was not in serious contention. Indeed, The Sea won by the slimmest of margins, with the head of the jury casting the deciding vote to break a tie. Immediately there was disharmony and uproar, and it was widely put about that Banville's prose was "too poetic", "complex" and "difficult"-but, unlike the other books, it had something Joycean in it that would make it "last".
I wish to stop here a moment to observe that a sad day is dawning when, having essentially moved away from any authentic engagement with poetry qua poetry in their intellectual lives, critics and pundits from that most literary of places, London, now generally recoil from having any of it (poetry that is) creep in to their fiction. This is borderline idiocy, and a sure sign of the decline of literate British society, which is a victim of an interminable media-orouboros, swallowing its own self-reflecting tail far too often.
The truth is that prose also partakes of poetic language, and that the finest prose stylists employ symbol, rhythm, simile, personification, and almost every other rhetorical device in the book. However, the truly "literary novel"-in short, the novel that knows as much about poetry's traditions as fiction's-is less welcome each month, perhaps because it eludes the marketer's canny grasp, and furrows the brows of those who prefer J.K. to T.S. Books lucidly written with "gripping stories" are still the ones that publishers and the public mainly seem to want, as prototypes for scripts Hollywood will eventually transubstantiate into that curious admixture of dross, sweat and filthy lucre that is the average screen adaptation.
Having read both The Sea and On Beauty, I am presented with what all reviewers dream of, the clear dichotomy. These books are not simply worlds apart, in terms of theme, tone, emphasis; they actually offer utterly different ways of thinking about how the world should be engaged with, morally and aesthetically, in language. This is perhaps the single most important element of writing-and precisely why polite men and women still get up on stages to argue for what the limits of poetic language should be.
Don't get me wrong. Zadie Smith is a talented, witty writer, and her book is rather amiable; indeed, it fairly glows with a sort of humane appreciation for people, places and things. Her imagination, like some latter-day Crusoe, is forever up to the task of finding just the apt phrase for describing an academic's fat wife, nimble shoulder blades, Mozart's Requiem, or a mottled green-glass window. She tosses in aphorisms with the vim of Oscar Wilde, and they often hit home. For example: "each couple is its own vaudeville act".
She is good at plot and characterization, and, as has been said elsewhere, the book's loving homage to E.M. Forster represents something of a happy milestone for the mainstream novel in Britain. But, dear me, is it dull. Not dull in the conventional sense, since the book is engaging, but in the sense, hinted at above, and to be teased out below: dull because, unlike Banville, the language does not dive into the deep end of either the human condition, or the full seriousness (however aesthetically playful) of what is at stake when writing is essayed. To make myself plainer here, On Beauty, with all its coy references to the author's husband and his (lacklustre) poetry, its cod-erudite involvement with the world of art history (she is no E.H. Gombrich, yet), and engagement with American university life, is about as genuine as a revival meeting in some prairie town circa 1932. The enthusiasm, energy and will to be wonderful are all in place, but the ultimate result is as deep as a magazine article on a war zone written by a celebrity.
Arguably, what is most grating is its time-out quality, the breezy whirlwind attempts to do a 21st century de Tocqueville in a sound-byte. Brits are famously torn in their appreciation and condemnation of the American sublime (they won't let Roth compete in the Booker because they think he'd always win). They are forever jetting to New York to find something gritty and big to write about, something with real weather and religion in it, and bingo, this is Zadie's version. You want to say, as Eliot in Waste Land, "She does the Yanks in different voices".
Smith is tremendously famous and respected for her age (she is in her early 30s), and bears some sort of resemblance to her generation in Britain, as F. Scott Fitzgerald did to his in America. The precise difference is that no one recognized it then. Not only was Fitzgerald the glitteringly brilliant chronicler of the superficial aspects of his moment, he was a stylistic genius, and, as if that wasn't enough, a tragic visionary. Smith is, no less than Banville, interested in style. She is a satirist as well-or, at the least, a hugely successful humorist, with laugh-out-loud set pieces calibrated expertly. However, she is not willing to allow either her style or her satire to bare its fangs to the degree needed to exceed the average reader's speed limit (to yoke a few images violently together). She doesn't have an expert, luscious command of language at this stage of her career, and too often her stock phrases, her constructions, verge on the sort of first-thing-to-hand flatness one sees in every novice's creative writing portfolio.
How else to explain "she stood like a zombie", or "her lips pulling away from her rosy gums to reveal her expensive American teeth"? The title of White Teeth, Smith's breakthrough debut notwithstanding (cheeky postmodernism perhaps), it is a lazy observation, and the zombie trope is sub-sub-Buffy. When Smith tries to catch the hyper-hip argot that is so-last-minute America, always just-fled, on the fly, Google-made, TV-led, water-cooler-now, she falls face forward, fighting with her countervailing Oxbridge tendency to pull back when all should be zip and flow.
Damning with faint praise though this may be, On Beauty is nevertheless that coveted thing, "a good read". It resists the thoroughly demonic possibilities of the greatest books in favour of being merely well-received, much-liked, and soon, no doubt, oft-imitated. On the other hand, The Sea is a misanthropic work of genius, and takes its place, consciously, and at times infuriatingly, in the elegant, eloquent pantheon of truly great masterworks of style of the modern period, often consciously referencing them in the process: The Great Gatsby, Black List: Section H, The Big Sleep, Lolita, Waiting For Godot, etc.
What The Sea is not-at all-is a "good read". In truth, reading groups across Ireland and the UK (and soon the world) will no doubt be slitting their wrists as they slog through it. Banville has actually constructed the work to resist easy consumption, while knowingly including key tropes of all popular literary fiction (nostalgia, a shattering and slowly revealed childhood trauma, reflections on mortality, love).
Banville has done this, I believe, primarily through deployment of annoying, offensive, and disturbing language, images, and a character (the book is narrated by its language) that embodies the 20th century's resistance to a classical past-a resistance which is nearly a full-scale rejection. In addition, there are moments of exquisite writing that would make Nabokov furious with envy (particularly the scene of a childhood first-kiss in the cinema). In short, The Sea is as ugly-lovely as history and death; it is very much a Petrarchan conceit of a book, with its terrible-beauty spots.
But in essence, its style is its essence; it is sheer words unleashed, flowing over a mythic skeleton as bare-boned as a bleached whale carcass. This is why so many readers hate the book: reading it is like having to ingest nothing but goose liver and blancmange for Lent. Indeed, Banville exhausts the possible manners and mannerisms of one kind of elegant, hyper-cultured, fussy, fastidious prose here-as if George Steiner and Stevens, the butler in Remains of the Day, cohabited one psyche; or, more accurately, as if Hannibal Lecter and Blanche DuBois had produced a love-child and set it loose to write ultra-arch things like: "canine's canines", "transparent parents", "unsuitable suitors", or "unPushkinian".
The gigantic (he is in fact a Titan) narrator, who slowly reveals himself to be a self-obsessed animal-torturer and potential child-killer (his "ironic" hero being Satanic mass paedophile Gilles de Rai), unfolds a finicky fiction, which unspools like a supreme spoof-Wallace Stevens's exotic preciousness fused with the hostility of Swift of A Modest Proposal.
As the book proceeds, Banville's revelations about the narrator force the reader to become accepting of unexpected horrors; suitably, for an Irish writer, these horrors are embedded in the past, and come wrapped in reference upon reference to poems, plays and speeches, too numerous to name. One simple example can be given here of the novel's extraordinary richness, its multilayered spectacle-the title itself.
The Sea is, in fact, a giant pun on the letter "C". Once one "sees" this, things fall into place. Consider the key words in the novel, including the major characters, that are all "c" words: cunt (one of the major ones); cancer (which the narrator's wife is dying of); Connie; Claire; Carlo; Chloe; (The) Cedars (the house where all is set); (the) classical period (which he yearns for); confessions (which he's engaging in); cock (which he admits drives him); crystallization (of love); critic (which he is) of consciousness, which is the ultimate sea. Ultimately, The Sea is about a writer wanting to become prose itself. As Banville writes:
"Yet I anticipate an apotheosis of some kind, some grand climacteric. I am not speaking here of a posthumous transfiguration. I do not entertain the possibility of an afterlife, or any deity capable of it. Given the world he created, it would be an impiety against God to believe in him. No, what I am looking forward to is a moment of earthly expression. That is it, that is it exactly: I shall be expressed, totally. I shall be delivered, like a noble closing speech. I shall be, in a word, said."

It is in the very last pages, when we realize that these are the memoirs of a black-humoured, drunken, many-times-bereaved madman, that the book's rich, rancid multi-voiced playfulness gives up the ghost, but releases a movingly human and singular self, like some well-rubbed trinket-thing from a long-sunken vessel, rendered unto the shore by the sea. Language has seldom been so impressively marshalled to state the case against mortality.
Todd Swift (Books in Canada)
--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars love and language, Aug 24 2006
By Ross Hart "all lower case" (boston, ma usa) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This is a tale of two love stories one of men and women the other of language. It is not often that I've found words crafted into such thought provoking sentences and they, in turn, into paragraphs pregnant with the emotions of memory. The structure of the work, for me, is akin to the folds of the brain. Bannville moving through time and character without preference seemingly as they unfold to mind without apparent bias for the loose ends before tying them neatly together in the end. What an unbelievably tour de force the finish is...
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5.0 out of 5 stars Lasting book to relish, Aug 13 2006
Ce commentaire est de: The Sea (Hardcover)
THE SEA is an absolutely fantastic book, a tragic but beautiful short novel.Written in a rich but clear language, it takes the reader through a breath-taking journey that climaxes to a satisfying and surprising conclusion.Like all true great books, THE SEA is a novel you enjoy all the more as you read it again and again a couple of times.As gripping as NIGHT, far-reaching as USURPER AND OTHER STORIES,sobering as KITE RUNNER and deaspairingly hopeful as THE UNION MOUJIK, the story of THE SEA will stick in your mind long after you read it.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Drifting among Dimensions of Reality and Thought,, Jul 15 2006
Ce commentaire est de: The Sea (Hardcover)
The Sea will either delight or aggravate you. Some may experience both reactions.

The delight will come from finding a surprising word choice or unexpected detail on almost every page, the unusual development of the plot and the rapid shifts between thought, memory, perception, desire, musing and reflection. For some, the fresh descriptions of male sexual awakening will also be sweet.

The aggravation will come from realizing that the story could have been told more directly. You will also feel yourself being manipulated quite often. The word choices could have been more direct. The surprises on each page become almost mechanical after awhile. Deal with the aggravation is my advice. Otherwise, you'll miss the chance to see how often you jump to unwarranted conclusions. Reading this novel is like holding up a mirror to see your mind's perceptions and prejudices.

You won't realize much of the book's power until you're done. If you are like me, you'll immediately want to read it again.

The story takes place while Max Morden recovers emotionally from his wife's untimely death from a wasting illness. Uncharacteristically, Morden avoids family and friends to be quite alone most of the day while staying in a run-down rooming house where he experienced many delights as a youngster. Being there brings up many memories of the Grace family . . . surely a metaphor for inspiration in this lover of Bonnard. You'll find yourself drawn into those long-ago memories as well as Morden's unhappy reaction to his wife's loss. But you'll also know that there's an enigma wrapped in a mystery. Gradually, all will become clear through the mental peregrinations of Morden.

I don't remember stream of consciousness done in sentences in quite as interesting a way as Mr. Banville achieves. All aspiring novelists must read this book!

Here's an example of Mr. Banville's power to evoke irony:

"There are other things I can do. . . . Or I might retire into a monastery to pass my days in quiet contemplation of the infinite, or write a great treatise there, a vulgate of the dead. I can see myself in my cell, long-bearded, with quill-pen and hat and docile lion, through a window beside me minuscule peasants in the distance making hay, and hovering above my brow the dove refulgent. Oh yes, life is pregnant with possibilities."

Enjoy this original and provocative work.
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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars one for the ages
The Sea is the only (as yet) book by Banville that I've read. Can't even remember where I picked up the recommendation, but this is a tremendous book. Lisez davantage
Published on May 30 2006 by Mr. PG

5.0 out of 5 stars Lasting book to relish
THE SEA is an absolutely fantastic book, a tragic but beautiful short novel.Written in a rich but clear language, it takes the reader through a breath-taking journey that climaxes... Lisez davantage
Published on Mar 17 2006 by Sancho Mahle

1.0 out of 5 stars The Sea
I am also a reader from Nova Scotia who read the book for a book club, although I would have read it on my own. However, I was very disappointed in the book. Lisez davantage
Published on Mar 16 2006

4.0 out of 5 stars Complicated beauty
I just read this book for my book club and I was one of the only ones who enjoyed this book! Most of the people in my club found the book too difficult to understand with its... Lisez davantage
Published on Mar 12 2006

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