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Kitty and Virgil [Hardcover]

Paul Bailey (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

April 3, 2000
Kitty Crozier first laid eyes on Virgil Florescu, a dissident poet who swam across the Danube to escape Ceausescu's Romania, in the hospital. She woke up after surgery to find a stranger sitting beside her bed gazing at her. He just smiled at her, stood and left the room. She next saw him in London's Green Park picking up litter from the grass with a long spike. So begins the most important, most demanding, most exhilarating relationship of Kitty's life. As their love for each other deepens, their previous lives and very different families reveal themselves to be oddly connected.

Paul Bailey's most ambitious and highly praised novel to date, Kitty and Virgil is fiendishly funny in its presentation of a love affair between two very distinct people who are yet alike.

"A book the depth and beauty of which it is hard to do justice to in the language of criticism and dissection. To write a novel which lays bare tragedy alongside farce, which describes the inanity of evil, which laments the poverty of poetry just as it demonstrates its power, and which encompasses history, politics, family and love, is no small achievement."--Times Literary Supplement

"It was extraordinarily brave of Paul Bailey to put these two worlds in one book...the portraits here--perhaps above all the voices here--are glorious"--The Independent

"A quietly poignant, moving and, in some ways, redemptive novel, as fine as any [Bailey] has written to date."--Scotsman

Editorial Reviews

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.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 18 and up
  • Hardcover: 280 pages
  • Publisher: Overlook Hardcover (April 3, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1585670103
  • ISBN-13: 978-1585670109
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.3 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,155,965 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A love story, and much more., December 14, 2004
By 
algo41 "algo41" (philadelphia, pa United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Kitty and Virgil (Paperback)
This is a love story, and much more. Kitty leads a quiet life, yet is still something of a free spirit. Virgil has escaped from Communist Romania, and despite his fame in Romania as a poet, does manual work in England. For the first several chapters, I found the protagonists very likeable, but the novel amusing at best. As the story unfolds, the love story deepens and becomes more emotionally compelling. Bailey frequently switches between scenes from Virgil's childhood, Kitty's childhood, their time together, visits with Kitty's family, and Virgil's Romanian past as a persecuted poet. Bailey demonstrates technical brilliance in his handling of these changes of scene. The secondary characters are all well drawn and interesting in their own right, as is the depiction of Romanian political life under the deranged dictator Ceausescu. The novel is suffused with warm and quirky humor as well as deep sadness. I did have some problem with the ending (stop here if you have not read the book). The extended epilogue wherein Kitty tries to learn more of Virgil and meets his friends and family, balancing this against his long farewell letter, was moving and engrossing. What bothers me is that Virgil ascribes his setback in the battle against guilt and depression to the time he had the flu. It makes more sense to me to ascribe it to the release of the dictator's overthrow, which may be logically paradoxical, but makes psychological sense to me, squares better with the timeline of events, and better balances cause and effect.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars ELOQUENT, MOVING, SIMPLY SUPERB, May 4, 2005
This review is from: Kitty and Virgil (Hardcover)
Readers not familiar with the works of English author PaulBailey should treat themselves to a few hours with this perspicaciousand highly original writer. His first novel, At The Jerusalem,captured three British awards; he has been cited by the American Academy of Arts and Letters; and was shortlisted for the Booker Prize in 1980 and 1986. Mr. Bailey's initial United States publication, Gabriel's Lament (1987), traces the life of a young man who is systematically abused by his father and winds up eventually exposing his father's misdeeds in a book.

Kitty And Virgil, the author's first novel in seven years, deals with misdeeds of another sort - those perpetrated under the Romanian regime of Nicolae Ceausescu. Kitty Crozier is an identical twin whose sister, Daisy, was a bit of a hellion as a child but has now morphed into complaining adulthood. An employee of London publishers, Kitty first sees Virgil Florescu through sedative drowsed eyes from her hospital bed. She notices there is "a glint of something like silver in his smile."

They meet again in Green Park where Virgil is employed as a grounds keeper "picking up litter from the grass with a long spike." Eventually, she invites him to her home, and thus begins one of the most unique love affairs in literature. A tragicomic figure, a refugee and poet from Romania, Virgil escaped the tyranny of his home country by swimming the Danube, first to the border, then to Italy, where "he had slept in fields, washed in streams.

Virgil is surely one of the author's finest creations, imbued with self-knowledge, a splendid, effervescent joy, and brio. However, Virgil is plagued by thoughts of his father who committed heinous crimes during wartime - the barbarous slaying of Romanian Jews during World War II. Somehow Virgil feels he must make reparation for these acts.

On the other hand, Kitty's father is an aging, ridiculous dandy who once worked as a male model, married well several times, and now shares lodgings with an acerbic butler. Dialogue in the hands of Paul Bailey takes effervescent life, especially in the scenes during which Kitty takes Virgil to meet her father.

The comparison between Kitty's father and Virgil's is eloquence itself. Presenting pathos, parody and humor in one slim volume could not have been accomplished save by an author with Mr. Bailey's gifts. Kitty And Virgil heightens awareness, disturbs, and entertains. It is one more star in Paul Bailey's crown.

- Gail Cooke
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Past Casts a Mighty Shadow, August 3, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Kitty and Virgil (Hardcover)
Have you ever met someone and felt that you've known each other for a long time? That's how I felt about Kitty (this book's heroine). And like Kitty, I fell in love with Virgil and her quirky father. Just like Kitty, there is something mysterious about Virgil that I can't put my finger on. He's got a looming past in Romania, and Kitty has her dysfuntional family to deal with.

Anyway, at times this book will jerk a tear, or erupt a laugh. I enjoyed my time with Virgil and wish it could have gone on another 200 pages!

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Early one summer evening, nine months after the operation she had begun to fear would leave her permanently listless, Kitty Crozier was overcome by the sweet scent of angels' trumpets. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
mystical occasion, silly car, dearest darling
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Kitty Crozier, Virgil Florescu, Felix Crozier, Derek Harville, Constantin Florescu, Freda Whiteside, Miss Beryl, Muriel Crozier, Radu Sava, Miss Eunice, Miss Daisy, Alder Court, Dinu Psatta, Miss Kitty, Uncle Mircea, Baby Cordelia, Green Park, Daisy Hopkins, Harap Alb, Laura Clifford, Nicos Razelos, Emily Dickinson, Enrico Vitale, Hotel Aphrodite, Christmas Day
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