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A Compass Error by Sybille Bedford
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A Compass Error (original 1968; edition 2011)

by Sybille Bedford (Author)

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
2436110,124 (3.73)49
Set in a two month period during the late 1920s, A Compass Error suggests that at some key juncture the book's main character, Flavia, made a mistake that somehow blew her life off course, perhaps into a new sexual orientation.
Member:katyafw
Title:A Compass Error
Authors:Sybille Bedford (Author)
Info:Daunt Books (2011), 240 pages
Collections:Your library
Rating:***
Tags:2015, kindle

Work Information

A Compass Error by Sybille Bedford (1968)

  1. 00
    Pillion Riders by Elisabeth Russell Taylor (starbox)
  2. 00
    Bonjour Tristesse by Françoise Sagan (shaunie)
    shaunie: Both books capture the hedonism and sensuality of Southern France between the wars.
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Showing 5 of 5
An unpleasant book which consists of characters speaking to each other in an affected way, a fifty page info dump about the main character's grandmother and mother, and tedious monologues from a narcissist. ( )
  amanda4242 | Mar 20, 2017 |
'I made a wrong start...it got me off course'
By sally tarbox on 23 Jun. 2012
Format: Paperback
It's the 1930s and 17 year old Flavia is living alone in the south of France while her mother and her married lover are travelling; a charmed existence, her days devoted to studying for Oxford punctuated by swimming and eating out. She has grand plans for an academic future.
Then she is taken up by various local people and falls in love with the duplicitous Andree... Flavia's subsequent lifestyle traced back to these early events.
She observes, as an adult, "When one's young one doesn't feel part of it yet...everything is a rehearsal...to be put right when the curtain goes up in earnest. One day you know that the curtain was up all the time. That was the performance". ( )
  starbox | Jul 10, 2016 |
very DRAMATIC!
  LizaHa | Mar 30, 2013 |
I am rather glad that I had a little break after reading A Favourite of the Gods before reading this, as in the first third of the novel there is a fairly lengthy re-hashing of the events in the previous novel, as Flavia recounts the events of her mother’s and grandmother’s lives . This serves as a useful explanation to any readers who have not read ‘A Favourite of the Gods’, but which I may have found a bit dull, had I read this novel straight after. As it was, although I had read ‘A favourite of the Gods’ very recently I did quite appreciate the chance to re-engage with the events of that novel, I also rather liked having Flavia’s own spin put upon those events.
“There she went. A foolish girl, a brave girl, a single human creature in first pride of its unique existence. Ignorant, as we are all of us, in youth, in health, untried, taking possession of the world, ignorant of its workings and that of our own natures, ignorant, arrogant, generous, self-enclosed, yet visited, however briefly, by a flash of intellectual passion.”
In ‘A Compass Error’ we again meet Flavia, seventeen and living alone in a costal Provencal village, cramming for her Oxford entrance. Here she lives a seemingly charmed and independent life, relatively wealthy, swimming daily and eating alone in harbour restaurants. Flavia is a sensible, conscientious young lady, remarkably unscathed from her chaotic upbringing by Constanza who we met fully in ‘A Favourite of the Gods’ – but who remains only a background presence in this novel.:
“On the night of the fireworks, as Flavia was about to finish her Coeur-crème, a party of seven or eight swept Chez Auguste : They looked like strangers, indeed strange birds, in the place but they made themselves at home calling for tables to be put together, calling for olives, wine and bread, shouting enquires about the progress of their bouillabaisse. All were sunburnt and the men wore the same kind of clothes that Flavia wore with the northern town- dwellers delight in summer ease; and so with some ornamental touches did the women. They were painters, literary journalists and painters’ wives. Flavia, who thought that she could put a name to one or two of them looked and listened.”
Long hot summer days and a gruelling study timetable don’t prevent Flavia from making new friends, and a chance meeting with Therese the wife of famous painter draws Flavia into a circle of Bohemian characters. Flavia’s attention is distracted from her studies with a heady combination of long dinner parties, drinking and sex. Therese takes an interest in Flavia who is instantly attracted to Therese. Soon after, Flavia meets and is over awed by Andree – a vicious, conniving beauty who takes full advantage of Flavia’s naivety. Drawn into a fully adult and sexually experimental world, Flavia is unprepared for the lessons she will learn. Decisions that Flavia make are destined to impact terribly on both her and her absent mother.
In A Compass Error, Sybille Bedford explores the cost of a terrible mistake. A coming of age novel it charts the dangerous territory that can exist between the teenage world and the dark adult world that seems so enticing.
Sybille Bedford’s writing is really lovely, there is nothing wasted, it is intelligent and enormously evocative. A sublime sense of place which stays with the reader long after the book is laid aside, is no doubt why Daunt Books – known best for their travel books have chosen to re-issue it. Of the two novels, I liked A Favourite of the Gods best, Constanza’s story is just brilliant, and marvellously well told, but A Compass Error is just as memorable, and an absolute must read for anyone who has read and enjoyed the earlier book. ( )
3 vote Heaven-Ali | Mar 22, 2013 |
Sequel to Bedford's Favorite of the Gods. A young woman is drawn into a lesbian relationship by an older woman who uses the situation to harm both the girl and her mother. ( )
  Bjace | Sep 24, 2011 |
Showing 5 of 5
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Epigraph
1st GENT. Our deeds are fetters that we forge ourselves.
2nd GENT. Ay, truly, but I think it is the world
That brings the iron.
Middlemarch Chapter IV
Le passé est une partie de nous-meme, la plus essentielle peut-etre.
Victor Hugo
'You are young, sir,' he said, 'you are young; you are very very young sir.'
David Copperfield
Dedication
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A Favourite of the Gods introduced Flavia, daughter of Constanza, 'the favourite': granddaughter of Anna, the Principessa. (Introduction)
The relevant questions, as it happened, came by chance. (Prologues)
The clarity of the these mornings of spring and early summer, the second year at St.-Jean, the sense of peace, slow time, the long day to come, the summer, the year; the years.
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Set in a two month period during the late 1920s, A Compass Error suggests that at some key juncture the book's main character, Flavia, made a mistake that somehow blew her life off course, perhaps into a new sexual orientation.

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Book description
Flavia, daughter of the mondaine Constanza, is now seventeen. While her mother travels with a new lover to a secret destination, she lives alone in a Provencal villa, studying for Oxford entrance and dreaming of a life spent among books. But she is taken up and seduced by the wife of a fashionable painter, then moves into the arms of a fascinating, dangerous woman whose true identity she fails to comprehend. Doomed to betrayal, the idealistic Flavia discovers her true inheritance: she must bear the results of mistakes from the past, and face a future forever changed by the consequences of her own innocence.
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