Orlanda
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- $14.99
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
One afternoon in a Paris train station, as 35-year-old literature professor Aline Berger struggles to re-read Virginia Woolf's Orlando, a novel she has never enjoyed, an odd feeling comes over her when a handsome but strange young man asks her for aspirin. Haunted by the harsh words of her domineering mother, who demanded that she suppress her tomboyish tendencies during her childhood, Aline has become a demure, passive, conventional woman. She fails to recognize the man standing before her, who the author names Orlanda. The body belongs to that of Lucien Lèfrene, a lithe 20-year-old rock journalist, but it is inhabited by her once silenced spirit, and possesses her knowledge, memories, and desires, including her love of men.
When the two meet again in Belgium, Aline subconsciously sheds her prim tendencies for more assertive behavior, as she begins to understand that the audacious and lively Orlanda was born from her psyche. The more time the two spend together, the less time they can stand to be apart.
Winner of the Prix Meacutedicis, this lyrical novel, which recalls the erudition and imagination of Michael Cunningham's The Hours, and Patricia Duncker's Hallucinating Foucault, is a stunning evocation of a woman who is forced to confront every part of her soul, and embrace herself whole.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
A twisting, teasing exploration of sexuality, inner motives and desires, this new work by Belgian novelist and psychoanalyst Harpman (I Who Have Never Known Men), winner of the Prix M dicis, fugues on a body-switching theme in limpid, postmodern prose. On a springtime Friday afternoon in Paris, Aline Berger, a 35-year-old professor of literature, waits for her train home to Brussels, thumbing impatiently through Virginia Woolf's Orlando. Then, abruptly, Orlanda materializes. Called forth by some literary magic, she is Aline's exuberant and adventurous alter ego, born of Aline's 12-year-old tomboy spirit. Fettered far too long by the adult Aline's demure propriety, Orlanda spots a receptive external host in Lucien Lefr ne, a luscious, faintly unsavory, blond 20-year-old youth sitting quietly nearby. Thus begins a labyrinthine ride along converging and diverging paths of sexual and personal identity. Aline and Lucien return to their respective homes and partners in Brussels, but with Orlanda on the loose, life cannot continue as usual. Embodying Orlanda's unleashed appetite for freedom and sex, Lucien sheds responsibilities to family and friends and seeks new excitement with older, wealthy male lovers. While Orlanda gleefully cavorts in Lucien's body, Aline subconsciously senses that something is amiss. It is only when Orlanda/Lucien comes to find her that she understands what has been expunged from her personality. Like lost lovers, Orlanda and Aline are physically separated but emotionally intertwined, each needing the other to survive. Their fumbling progress back toward each other culminates in a disappointingly predictable clash between the double personalities. Still, drawing on wide-ranging literary references from Tristan und Isolde to Proust, Harpman cleverly manipulates an elusive narrative "I" and shifting perspectives in cool, insouciant, yet seductive style, to attack the well-worn existentialist query, "Who am I?"