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8 Reviews
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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Sprawling, intense, with lots of great character interaction,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Book and the Brotherhood: A Story about Love and Friendship and Marxism (Penguin Fiction) (Mass Market Paperback)
Murdoch establishes a tone entirely different from those of her other novels. The characters seem more disturbed and more strained than those of her other works, yet their conclusions become more meaningful. In this novel, Murdoch may come as close as she ever does to the "real" world that we experience. It shows how difficult it is to be good, to throw off the tendencies towards self-delusion that keep us from seeing what is really going on in the world. Jenkin and Gerard are especially interesting characters in the contrast they create, and Crimond is fascinating because Murdoch allows him to remain vague for most of the novel. Also, the complex beginning that hints at A Midsummer Night's Dream is ingenious. Besides The Green Knight, this could be Murdoch's most ambitious work.
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Murdoch's Narrator,
By
This review is from: The Book and the Brotherhood: A Story about Love and Friendship and Marxism (Penguin Fiction) (Mass Market Paperback)
This novel may be Murdoch's finest. It has a wonderful and large cast of memorable characters; their sufferings are both moving and laughable. It has the finest parrot in all literature. The problem I first had with the novel was discovering what it was about. There were so many major characters and so many bizarre incidents that I could not easily find the book's theme--and I had been taught to look for themes. I think that at the heart of the novel, often unnoticed by its readers, is Murdoch's narrator. The narrator is almost never intrusive, but her presence makes the novel hang together.
22 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Chorus-line of Snails,
By A. Hickman (Blagoevgrad, Bulgaria) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Book and the Brotherhood: A Story about Love and Friendship and Marxism (Penguin Fiction) (Mass Market Paperback)
Iris Murdoch's "The Book and the Brotherhood" is a marvelously droll novel of manners that has the audacity to explore the philosophical and moral issues that have effectively paralyzed a group of `60s-era Oxford graduates. The novel opens, appropriately enough, at Oxford, where, in the shadow of their former classmates and professors, the friends have gathered some 25 years later for a Ball. The narrative follows the movements of the group in a Mozartian roundelay, as each is, in turn, humiliated by revenants that appear to mock the potential they have, with one notable exception, so ingloriously squandered. The title refers to a pact the graduates once made to underwrite a philosophical treatise to be written by David Crimond, the most charismatic of their set; to the consternation of each, however, it now appears that the book might actually become a reality, and the prospect of its publication leads the group to an orgy of self-reproach and soul searching. The event of the Ball also inspires one wife to leave her husband and to take up with Crimond, a decision that leads to unexpected complications in all their lives. The novel is full of comic and tragic moments whenever the principals, whom Murdoch likens to a chorus-line of snails, attempt to emerge from their shells. A second generation of thirty-somethings is headed down the same path of dalliance as their elders, or so it seems, until, in the final pages, Murdoch offer an affirmation, of sorts, in the form of a pending marriage. Readers familiar with earlier novels by the late Dame will not be disappointed by this weighty offering from 1987, which can only enhance Murdoch's already-secure reputation as one of the great novelists of her generation.
7 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Oxford graduates commission neo-Marxist book,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Book and the Brotherhood: A Story about Love and Friendship and Marxism (Penguin Fiction) (Mass Market Paperback)
A wonderful blend of politics and Murdochian love-intrigue. It's a portrait of an enigmatic man on whom everybody projects his/her angst. Somehow moral progress emerges in small but meaningful ways.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A very good place to start (on Murdoch),
By James McAuley's Quill (Melbourne, Australia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Book and the Brotherhood: A Story about Love and Friendship and Marxism (Penguin Fiction) (Mass Market Paperback)
Ah, it was a happy day in Beaumaris library in 1993 that I came upon this, my first Iris Murdoch novel. The characters in this book actually live in my head - and many of the set-piece scenes too - the opening Commem Ball with music by the appropriately-named band The Treason of the Clerks (puctuated by Gerard's disturbing interview with his old tutor Professor Levquist), Jenkin Riderhood's London flat with the windows open year-round, the squalor of Violet and Tamar Henshaw's quarters with the television permanently on (the mere presence of a televison is a sign of utter moral depravity in Iris's world!), Gerard's love for his parrot, Duncan Cambus's leonine mane of dark hair, the menacing ideological purity and commitment of David Crimond, half the cast of the novel ice-skating on Rose Curtland's pond, the tower in Ireland where two of the characters take refuge as lovers, and then the dark night that they deliberately drive their cars at each other along a country lane... I have written all of those from memory. If you seek a highbrow soap-opera about the liberal conscience in Englan just before the Wall came down, with some ice-skating thrown in, look no further.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Playing at God,
This review is from: The Book and the Brotherhood: A Story about Love and Friendship and Marxism (Penguin Fiction) (Mass Market Paperback)
Unlike the randomness that is usually at play with Iris Murdoch's novels, The Book and the Brotherhood sees a group of Oxfordians on their quest not only for a better world but to the betterment of each other. What is the Good and how mortals stray into playing at God find unexpected insight and horror to both characters and reader.
1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Dostoevsky could give someone away,
By W. Jamison "William S. Jamison" (Eagle River, Ak United States) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: The Book and the Brotherhood: A Story about Love and Friendship and Marxism (Penguin Fiction) (Mass Market Paperback)
I wonder if this book was the best way to start becoming familiar with IM? As a comparison my favorites are Charles Taylor and Isaiah Berlin (at the moment) and they do not write novels. Wending my way around the frivolous soap opera like manage has me wondering where the philosophy is. Sure it must be reflected in the attentions and characterizations of the book and I must say I loved the constant failures of Duncan - poor Jenkins - this is great British humor. But for all of that it is he that ends up in France. Perhaps had Peter Sellers lived to play the role of Duncan in a film ... but that is an incomplete thought. Love must be the philosophical connection - I hope. But this is not Platonic. Perhaps another will be more interesting? If anything is unusual here it might be the plethora of interesting references. Who would have thought quoting Dostoevsky could give someone away? German and French come in handy occasionally.
0 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
a mix of intrigues,
By T.K.Ganapathy (Coimbatore,INDIA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Book and the Brotherhood: A Story about Love and Friendship and Marxism (Penguin Fiction) (Mass Market Paperback)
As is her practice, Murdoch starts the novel with a dialogue among the characters making the reader to find out the relevant context.Too many characters disturbed in one way or the other compel the reader to go back in the story to find the link. The novelist's description of the chacters'views on God, Good and Reality compels admiration because, the tendency of the human being in this technological era is also not to arrive at a sane conclusion immediately on morals or philosophy.The moral and philosophical concerns of Iris murdoch in this novel are too heavy to grasp initially. As the work progresses, the reader realises the need for some soul searching to understand the relationships.The characterisation of Crimond and the homo-sexual relations of characters like Gerard, Jenkin etc provide much food for thought.The novel set in midsummer ends with the spring time of happiness in the life of Gulliver and Lily.
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The Book and the Brotherhood by Iris Murdoch (Hardcover - 1987)
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