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The Bird of Night [Hardcover]

Susan Hill (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Product Details

  • Hardcover
  • Publisher: Saturday Review; First American Edition edition (1973)
  • ASIN: B001T4VOV0
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Average Customer Review
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating portrait of a descent into madness, June 26, 2006
This review is from: The Bird of Night (Hardcover)
I went through a Susan Hill mini-phase last year, reading her _The Woman in Black_ and _I'm the King of the Castle_ within a very short space of time. During my mania I also ordered two or three used copies of her other titles, including the book I read today, _The Bird of Night_.

In this novel a man named Harvey Lawson meets the poet Francis Croft at a house party. Soon the two begin hanging out together, as the saying goes, and it's not long before they develop a sort of friendship. Lawson finds himself drawn to the mysterious, oddly eccentric Croft. After a while it becomes apparent all isn't well with Croft's mental condition, but rather than being run off Lawson feels the urgent need to care for the poet. Despite the fact Francis is constantly paranoid he will leave, Harvey finds himself more and more drawn in. He believes Francis is a poetic genius, and in fact Francis does produce a poem to great acclaim, titled "Janus."

The years go by and Francis slides further and further into insanity. Eventually he attempts suicide, though unsucessfully. Even relatively early on it's obvious Harvey loves Francis, though the very nature of Francis' madness makes any sort of real relationship impossible. Still, he's content to care for him, hoping for even a glimpse of sanity. These moments of rationality, though, become further and further apart.

The book is framed by the years following the death of Francis, when Harvey is a very old man being cared for in the same manner he cared for Francis. Literary worshippers assail him constantly, looking in vain for any papers Francis may have left behind him. Harvey tells them "there are no papers," when in fact there actually are, but he doesn't want to encourage any more attention than he's already getting. The intrusions are a nuisance. He would prefer to be alone with his memories,

_The Bird of Night_ is a book I read in one day. It was compelling enough, and likewise short enough, I didn't want to put it down unfinished. Though not as masterful as Hill's _I'm the King of the Castle_, it is nevertheless a fascinating portrait of a descent into madness.
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