From Publishers Weekly
Goldstein ( The Mind-Body Problem ; The Late-Summer Passion of a Woman of Mind ) has cleverly constructed a highly imaginative tale that commands close analysis. Hedda, a grotesque, tormented author of angry feminist novels, has exiled herself to a gloomy New England house, where her grim solitude is interrupted only by phone calls from her silly but dangerous sister, Stella. Hedda is writing a Victorian novel, in Henry Jamesian style, about Henry's brother William, the 19th-century psychologist. In the work, William is sent to study two sisters--one a brilliant recluse, the other possibly murderous--with pasts as murky as Hedda's. Characters are mirrored, parallel plots overlap and several dark sisters--gifted with imaginative intellects but viewed as morbidly deviant--are doomed to destruction. Although this book may at times seem an unstructured melange of repeated themes, images and phrases inspired by 19th-century literature, psychology, metaphysics and feminist history, its disjointedness is purposeful and provocative. Readers who persevere will be rewarded by this witty, literary tour de force.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
A novel within a novel, this story of psychic misunderstandings and demonic possession occurs in two different centuries to two different characters. Hedda, an eccentric feminist author and creator of AJW (angry Jewish women) heroines, is blocked in her attempt to write a novel about an incident in the life of 19th-century New England psychologist William James. Finally, she allows the novel to write itself in the style of William's famed brother Henry. William fails to understand both his neurasthenic sister and his latest client, who fears her sister is possessed by the spirit of an astronomer. As the bizarre tale reaches its tragic climax, Hedda herself verges on mental collapse. Although knowledge of the life and works of Henry James would enhance the reader's enjoyment of this clever novel, this book can be savored on its own for its excellent characterization, wit, and compelling plot. Recommended.
- Judith F. Bradley, Acad. of Holy Cross Lib., Kensington, Md.Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.