The Magician's Wife
-
- 8,49 €
-
- 8,49 €
Publisher Description
A mesmerising novel from three-time Booker Prize nominee Brian Moore
_________________
'A spellbinding storyteller' - Independent
'A tour de force' - New York Times
'Moore is a magician' - LA Times
_________________
France, 1856.
Emmeline Lambert is married to an illusionist sent by Napoleon III to persuade the Arabs - poised for holy war and in thrall to charismatic leaders - that France's might and magic are the greater. Emmeline begins to feel like an illusionist herself, when she dazzles the Emperor and then sheds her inhibitions along with flimsy notions of patriotism and propriety in the hot glare of the Algerian sun.
Power, politics, religion and love, the court of Napoleon III and the deserts of Algeria combine in this mesmerising novel from a master storyteller.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Few contemporary writers are both as versatile and as unfailingly provocative as Moore, whose forte is exposing the wellsprings of character and the motivations of behavior in particular moral and political environments. Here, he moves from his preoccupation with recent European history (The Statement, etc.) to a historical novel set in 1850s France and Algeria. Emmeline Lambert is the wife of Henri Lambert, the most celebrated magician in France. Emperor Napoleon III, concerned about a possible uprising in Algiers, asks Lambert to put on a performance there that will convince the Arab sheikhs of the superiority of European magic to the powers of a charismatic marabout, Bou-Aziz, who is urging his followers to oust the French in a holy war. Beautiful but unsophisticated Emmeline, neglected by her ambitious husband, is manipulated by handsome, mysterious Colonel Deniau, chief of the Bureau Arabe, whose seductive behavior may be a ploy to ensure her cooperation with his schemes. When a crisis ensues, Emmeline experiences an epiphany that opens her eyes to her husband's failings and her nation's perfidy. Her actions at this point are more dramatic than credible, however, momentarily betraying Moore's usual finesse. But Moore is masterful in depicting how the decadent pomp and ceremony of Napoleon's court is echoed even in French provincial outposts, and how the simplicity of remote Arab villages and the vast Sahara desert reinforce Emmeline's cultural dislocation. The heart of the novel, however, lies in Emmeline's recognition of the Arabs' faith in God, a stark contrast to the formal piety, trickery and duplicity of the French. It is for this moral vision that one reads Moore, with admiration. Literary Guild selection.