One Hour of Fervor
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
From the best-selling author of The Elegance of the Hedgehog comes a family story with a difference, a novel about the decisions one makes and the destiny they determine by one of Europe’s most brilliant and stylistically subtle authors.
Haru, a successful Japanese art dealer, loves beauty, harmony, art, balance, intriguing women, sophisticated conversation, and elegance. Months after a brief affair in Japan with a French woman, Maud, he discovers she is pregnant with his child. She warns him, however, that if he ever tries to see her or the child, she will kill herself. Quietly devastated at the thought of never knowing his daughter, who will become a dark presence in an otherwise elegantly orchestrated life, Haru decides he will respect Maud’s wishes. His daughter grows to adulthood without ever knowing him. Is it too late to change things?
This is Haru’s story. In her poetically precise prose, Muriel Barbery explores the deep love of a father, and what is gained and what is lost when one chooses a “family” of friends over one’s biological family. In doing so, she captures the darkness that pushes people apart and the circumstances that can draw them together again.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Barbery (The Elegance of the Hedgehog) focuses her exquisite latest on Haru Ueno, a successful Kyoto art dealer whose life is disrupted when, after a brief affair in 1970, his French lover, Maud, informs him in a letter she is pregnant and that she will kill herself if he attempts to get in touch with her or their child. After their daughter, Rose, is born in France, Haru hires a detective to keep tabs on mother and child. He occasionally returns to his mountain homeland in Takayama to see his parents and brother but has deeper relationships with his closest friends in Kyoto, artist and poet Keisuke Shibata, and Tomoo Hasegawa, the woman who introduced him to Maud. Haru eventually works up the courage to visit Rose in Paris when she's a young adult, a pivotal and poignant scene that Barbery handles with dexterity. Throughout, the author perfectly captures Haru's ambivalence about family and the twin poles of his life, which he calls "opposing riverbanks": "On one, there were women, sake, business dinners and parties. On the other, there were the works of art, Keisuke, and Tomoo. In the center, in a zone of mystery washed with flowing water, floated Rose, enigmatic and ethereal." Readers will be rapt.