Book Review: Loitering with Intent by Muriel Spark , narrated by Nadia May
on Sheila Ash (India), Unknown, 34 days ago
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Loitering with IntentbyMuriel SparkMy rating:4 of 5 starsMy in person book group mentioned that they had never read any Muriel Spark, not evenThe Prime of Miss Jean Brodie!
So we, of course, had to rectify this. As a fellow Scot I recall she
was on my secondary school reading list over 50 years ago (TPMJB andThe Ballad of Peckham Rye)
and the movie version with the marvelous Maggie Smith came out around
then as well. I suppose the success of the movie may have been the
reason why many people had not read the book. Over the years I have at
least readThe Abbess of Crewe,The Girls of Slender Means,The Driver's Seatbut none of her later ones . I also recall watching a documentary in praise of her byIan Rankin, sadly I've not found this available in full online. But there is aBBC Interviewwith her available of Youtube ; anotherBBC celebrationof her by Kirsty Wark and the National Library of Scotland has herArchives.Loitering
with intent was a fast and very enjoyable read. A retrospective first
person narrative of a writer, Fleur Talbot recalls the time she spent of
her first novel and her job with the mysterious Autobiographical
Association and its founder and leader Sir Quentin Oliver in the period
1949-50. This is a self help group therapy club for upper class misfits
led by a power maniac. When does live and literature become one? Fleur
notices that her novel seems to be foretelling what is happening in real
life. Then the only typescript of her novel is stolen.The
novel is high melodrama. It is also a farce worthy of Brian Rix,
Alistair Sim and Alec Guinness. I loved the character of aging Lady Edwina, Sir Quentin's 'mummy', whose 'fluvative percipitations' disrupts everything, everywhere. If you read it will sound so outdated
nowadays, but go with the flow and I do not think you will be
disappointed. The writing will sweep you along. Not surprisingly it was
shortlisted in for the Booker in 1981, along withIan McEwan'sThe Comfort of Strangers(one of my 5* for both movie and reads) the yearSalman Rushdiewon withMidnight's Children. The Audio verison is narrated byNadia May. A thoroughly enjoyable readashramblings