Book Description
When Kitty Crozier awakens in a hospital one morning, she looks into the face of a stranger with "a glint of something like silver in his smile." Months later, she encounters him again in a London park. This time Virgil Florescu, a dissident poet who fled Romania by swimming across the Danube, doesn't disappear. Virgil's delicate courtship of the shy Kitty blossoms into a captivating romance that shines through even the darkest Eastern European past.
Moving fluidly between contemporary times, 1930s Romania, and England during the 1950s, Kitty & Virgil tells an epic and bittersweet story of two unlikely lovers and their extraordinary families. Paul Bailey writes a humorous and heartbreaking tale that expertly combines a classic English comedy of manners with a haunting meditation on the burdens of the past.
Synopsis:
Kitty Crozier wakes up in the hospital and sees the fleeting image of Virgil Florescu, a dissident poet who swam across the Danube to escape Ceausescu's Romania. A subsequent vision of Virgil signals the beginning of the most important relationship of Kitty's life---one in which previous lives will be oddly connected.
Amazon.co.uk Review
Paul Bailey's latest novel is a homage to Romania, past and present, and took him four years to write as he travelled around Romania and Eastern Europe, gathering stories and learning Romanian in the process. The result is an eccentric tale of eccentric characters determined to hold onto their integrity in the face of a ruthless world. Taking place primarily amongst the more Bohemian elements of English upper-class society, the story revolves around Kitty and Virgil, two people who fall passionately in love with each other after a chance meeting in a hospital. Kitty is a well-off, middle-aged editor, Virgil a Romanian exile working as a refuse collector, tortured by the plight of his country but, more potently, by the murderous acts committed by his father years before Virgil was even conceived.
This is as much a dark, anarchic comedy as a love story: Virgil, a gentle, intense, intellectual character with a madman's laugh and a puny body, is sent up along with Kitty's practicality and self-obsessed, privileged family. But Virgil is literally haunted by his past, both personal and cultural. Bailey is clearly at ease with Romania's fragmented, deeply-romantic culture and takes the reader on a fascinating journey through Virgil's poetic version of it. The novel is set against the collapse of Romania's Communist regime in the late eighties, an event which indirectly causes Virgil's quest for truth to end in tragedy. Kitty and Virgil can be exasperating, with its cast of florid caricatures and the overblown, self-satisfied idiom they communicate in, but above all, it is funny, intelligent and moving.
--Emily Ormond
From Publishers Weekly
Bailey, whose first novel, At the Jerusalem, won several British awards and who has been twice shortlisted for the Booker since, is too little known here, as the arrival of the luminous book, his first in seven years, reminds us. It is at once a wistful and tender love story and a harrowing account of how people from two utterly different cultures and ways of looking at the world can find, then lose, each other. Kitty Crozier is a sweet 30-something Londoner who works as an indexer for publishers. Into her life one day comes Virgil Florescu, a refugee from the Romanian regime of Nicolae Ceausescu who had escaped his unhappy country by swimming the Danube at night, and later found work as an attendant in Green Park. Virgil is a superb creation, a poet who is at once funny and self-knowing, has a sly wit and an abiding gift for happiness. The problem in his life is the continuing existence of his father, who under the sway of bestial wartime nationalism has committed unspeakable acts-acts for which gentle Virgil feels he must atone. A cast of scintillating characters is mostly revealed in brilliant dialogue set pieces: Kitty's father, a vain, foppish man who had been a male model in America and has taken up with a mordantly witty butler in his dotage; Kitty's sister, Daisy, a terror in her youth, now unhappily waspish in middle age; even Virgil's landlady, a former opera singer succored by her unforgettable memories about life on the lower rungs of that art. Bailey's fertile invention and kindly humor spark them all to life, and the ultimate tribute to his book is that it manages to be unutterably sad without being in any way mawkish, and that it reminds one again and again of the sheer pleasures of a story told with empathy, elegance and an unfailing delight in the language. (Mar.)
From Library Journal
When Kitty Crozier meets dissident Romanian poet and compulsive storyteller Virgil Florescu in the hospital, love blooms immediately. Their tale is played out against a backdrop of repression and suffering during the Ceausescu regime, Kitty's reunion with her much-married father, and the crumbling marriage of Kitty's twin, Daisy. Virgil's is the sensitive and charming voice in which most of the story is told, and it is the unspeakable family secret that he carries that propels much of the narrative. Fittingly, this memorable and moving novel ends with five poems from Virgil to Kitty, which encapsulate much of what he has told her. Very funny yet deeply tragic, this is a good bet for all libraries, especially where Bailey's prize-winning earlier novels (At the Jerusalem) are known.
-Judith Kicinski, Sarah Lawrence Coll. Lib., Bronxville, NY
About Author
Paul Bailey's first novel, At the Jerusalem (1967), won three prizes including the Somerset Maugham Award. This was followed by Trespasses (1970) and A Distant Likeness (1973). In 1974 he received the E. M. Forster Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and in 1977 the George Orwell Memorial Prize. Peter Smart's Confessions (1977) was shortlised for the Booker Prize. Old Soldiers appeared in 1980, and Gabriel's Lament (also shortlisted for the Booker Prize) in 1986. His other books include the memoir An Immaculate Mistake (1990), Sugar Cane (1993) and his latest novel, Kitty and Virgil (1998). He edited the Oxford Book of London, published in 1995.
Book Dimension:
length: (cm)20.4 width:(cm)13.6
评分
评分
评分
评分
这本书的叙事结构就像一个结构复杂的古典乐章,有着错综复杂的变奏和反复出现的主题动机。它不采用线性叙事,而是巧妙地在不同时间线之间进行穿插、回溯和预示,每一次的切换都像是指挥棒的有力一挥,将原本看似松散的线索重新聚焦。起初,这种跳跃性让人有些捉摸不透,我甚至需要偶尔回头翻看前文,以确认自己是否遗漏了什么关键信息。但随着阅读的深入,我开始沉醉于这种非线性的魅力之中——作者仿佛在向我们展示,生活本身就是由无数个碎片化的瞬间构成的,而真正的意义,恰恰是在这些碎片被重新排列组合后才浮现出来的。最令人称道的是,尽管结构复杂,但整体的逻辑框架却是极其稳固的,所有看似不相关的支线最终都汇集成了一条强大的河流,带着读者奔向最终的释然或震撼。对于那些偏爱结构主义文学的读者来说,这无疑是一场视觉和思维的盛宴,它挑战了你对传统故事讲述方式的既有认知。
评分我必须承认,这本书中对“记忆”和“时间流逝”的探讨,达到了令人不安的哲学深度。它没有直接用晦涩的理论去说教,而是通过一个个极具象征意义的意象和场景来构建这种氛围。比如,某个长期被遗忘的物件突然出现,或是某段模糊的童年片段以极其清晰的感官细节重现,都让人深思:我们究竟是谁?我们所拥有的“自我”是否仅仅是时间筛选后留下的一堆不完整片段的集合?作者对这种存在主义式的焦虑捕捉得非常到位,但处理得却非常克制,没有走向虚无主义的深渊,反而是在这种迷茫中,找到了一种近乎诗意的、对当下瞬间的珍视。读到后半段,我感觉自己仿佛在进行一场心理治疗,那些自己长期回避的、关于成长的阵痛和错失的遗憾,都被这本书温柔而坚定地呈现在眼前,迫使你去正视它们。这不是一本轻松读物,它会要求你投入情感和智力,但它给予的回报,远超你的付出。
评分这本书的色彩运用和光影描绘,简直可以拿到摄影或绘画界去展览。我常常在脑海中将文字转化为画面,发现那种对比度和饱和度是如此鲜明。当描述人物处于绝望境地时,文字的底色是阴郁而厚重的,仿佛铅云密布的天空;而当出现转机时,即便是微弱的光亮,也被作者描绘得具有穿透一切的力量,带着一种近乎神启的温暖。这种视觉上的冲击力,极大地增强了叙事的感染力。尤其是对一些特定环境——比如一座废弃的工厂、一个拥挤的集市——的描写,那种细节的堆砌不是为了炫技,而是为了构建一个活生生的、可以呼吸的背景,让人物的命运与环境紧密地交织在一起,形成一种宿命般的关联。总而言之,这本书的文学性体现在方方面面,从最细微的词汇选择到宏大的叙事布局,都显示出创作者极高的艺术自觉和不懈的打磨,绝对值得反复咀嚼。
评分这本书的开篇简直是神来之笔,那种带着微醺的、雨后清晨的潮湿感,一下子就把你拽进了那个设定精妙的世界观里。我得说,作者在环境氛围的营造上展现出了大师级的功力,每一个场景的描摹都精准而富有层次感,让你仿佛能闻到空气中混杂着旧书页的霉味和街角咖啡馆里浓郁的烘焙香气。故事的主线推进得不紧不慢,留足了思考的空间,它不像某些商业小说那样急于抛出冲突,而是更倾向于细腻地铺陈人物的情绪波动和内心挣扎。主角的每一次选择,都像是经过了无数次内心辩论后的结果,真实得令人心疼。特别欣赏作者对细节的把握,那些不经意间流露出的时代印记和文化符号,都处理得非常自然,丝毫没有刻意灌输的痕迹。读完第一部分,我合上书,愣了好几分钟,脑海里全是那些挥之不去的画面,那种沉浸感,很久没有在阅读中体验到了。这绝对是一部需要你放慢脚步、细细品味的佳作,它不提供廉价的刺激,而是给你一个可以安放灵魂的角落。
评分我简直要为作者那如同手术刀般精准的对话设计鼓掌叫好!那些角色的交锋,充满了张力与暗流涌动,表面上是风平浪静的寒暄,底下却暗藏着刀光剑影。读起来非常过瘾,尤其是几场关键性的谈判场景,每一个词语的选择都像是经过了精确计算,既符合人物的身份背景,又推动了情节的发展,让人不禁去揣摩“话里有话”的真正含义。这种高密度的信息交流,使得阅读过程变成了一种智力上的探索,你得像个侦探一样,去拼凑那些未被言明的动机和隐藏的议程。而且,作者很擅长运用留白,很多重要的转折点都是在对话的间隙发生的,那种“此时无声胜有声”的效果被拿捏得炉火纯青。这本书的对话部分,完全可以单独拿出来做文学分析,它超越了单纯的叙事工具,上升到了对人性复杂性的深刻揭示层面。我敢断言,那些读起来“一板一眼”的读者可能会错过很多精彩的弦外之音,需要带着一点点警觉心去阅读,才能真正体会到其精妙之处。
评分 评分 评分 评分 评分本站所有内容均为互联网搜索引擎提供的公开搜索信息,本站不存储任何数据与内容,任何内容与数据均与本站无关,如有需要请联系相关搜索引擎包括但不限于百度,google,bing,sogou 等
© 2026 qciss.net All Rights Reserved. 小哈图书下载中心 版权所有