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Loading... The Sandcastle (Vintage classics)by Iris Murdoch
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. I can understand how some people don't take to Murdoch at all. There is a lot of naval-gazing going on in most of her books and not a great deal of action, but I just love her voice and the calm, poised way she writes and as far as I'm concerned she can (or I suppose I should say 'could') do no wrong. The Sandcastle is a fairly simple story about a forbidden love and a man tackling his mid-life crisis. As always in Murdoch's books, the real 'action' isn't in the events that take place, but in the emotions of the innocent people caught up in a tide of events over which they have no control. I'm not sure I will ever discover another Murdoch book quite as perfect as The Bell and The Sea, The Sea, my personal favourites, but this one comes close. Excellent novel, this Iris Murdoch's third novel to be published, is more domestic, and a much maturer work than her first two novels. School master William Mor, married to Nan, with two teenage children, a man with political ambitions, finds himself enchanted by Rain Carter the young woman who comes to paint the retired headmaster's portrait. It is interesting how as their relationship develops, Rain and Bill reamin totally sympathetic as characters, it is Nan - the wronged wife who it is impossible to like. Vivid portrayal of an era when marriage breakdown was still viewed with disapproval. Brilliant character portrayal of the manipulative and vile wife. The 'other woman' was clearly Iris. no reviews | add a review
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(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:09 -0400)
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While it seems likely that the "other woman" was modelled on herself, Murdoch perversely tells the story mostly from the husband's POV, and even more oddly chooses the very masculine world of a boys' boarding school as the setting for her story. There's even a cricket match scene: whilst her young heroine may feel obliged to apologise for turning up for a tour of the school in trousers, Murdoch is making no apologies here for trampling all over the privileged territory of British male writers. Perhaps not exactly the first blast of the trumpet against the monstrous regiment of Angry Young Men, but certainly a bit of bucket and spade work to assist the action of the incoming tide... (