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Perlman's Ordeal [Abridged] [Hardcover]

Brooks Hansen (Author)
3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)


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Book Description

January 1, 1999
New York Times Notable Book of the Year

One evening in London in 1906, Dr. August Perlman--classical music lover, hashish devotee, and a scrupulously scientific pioneer of "clinical suggestion" (or hypnotism)--is about to leave for the symphony when a hysterical teenage girl is brought into his office. It seems that another girl's personality is living inside her. Eventually, in a time just before the age of Freud, a charismatic imposter (Madame Barrett, a "spiritualist") and the pioneering doctor must fight a heated battle over this teenager's soul. This novel, as The New York Times Book Review so aptly put it, is "extravagantly, even bewilderingly inventive . . . [and] crammed with the stuff of dreams."
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Dr. August Perlman lives a well-regulated life. His Clinic for Suggestive Therapy is tremendously successful--mainly because he never takes on a patient he isn't sure he can cure. His personal life is remarkably free of muss and fuss, and he likes it that way; in fact, the only passion he truly surrenders to is classical music, particularly the works of the late composer Alexander Barrett. The year is 1906 and the field of psychotherapy is still in its infancy, struggling to establish itself as a real science and not the redheaded stepchild of supernatural bunkum. Indeed, Dr. Perlman is especially sensitive to anything that smacks of the mystical, so when a young girl he has only reluctantly accepted as a patient suddenly starts channeling the spirit of a long-dead divinity named Oona, he is not amused:
Perlman returned to his office. His medical journal was waiting there, opened to the page of notes he'd already begun. He wrote the time--11:30--but then he paused. His pen hesitated above the paper, as if to commit this evening's episode to ink were to lend it a credence it might not merit, and credence was the first step down many a wayward path.
The good doctor shakes off this brush with the supernatural and returns to his ordered ways, which includes a concert of music by Sibelius. While there, he is introduced to Helena Barrett, the sister of his idol, and finds himself simultaneously attracted by her beauty, intelligence, and wit and repelled by her obvious interest in spiritualism. His defenses against the unexpected already cracked, he is completely undone when a chance meeting between Helena and his patient leads him down a very wayward path, indeed. Soon Perlman is up to his neck in Theosophy, theatricals, and myths of the lost city of Atlantis--and battling his own unleashed desires even as he fights for the soul of his patient. Brooks Hansen's second novel is by turns humorous, suspenseful, and profound, a marvelous follow-up to The Chess Garden. --Margaret Prior --This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.

From Publishers Weekly

Hansen (The Chess Garden) has a particular talent for otherworldly effects, and this account of the experiences of an Austrian doctor in Edwardian London offers a dazzling array of them, from hypnotism to possession to table-tapping to mythical visions. The title refers to Dr. August Perlman, a skilled hypnotist who can often "heal" suggestible people at his clinic attached to a London hospital. One day Sylvie Blum, a young girl in a starved, catatonic state, is brought to him; hypnotism instantly brings forth a dominant, healthy secondary personality, Nina. While embarking on her treatment, the music-loving Perlman meets, at a symphony concert, Madame Helena Barrett, a spiritualist whose brother was a young composer, dead much too young, whose music Perlman much admires. He gets to know her somewhat eccentric, half-Russian circle, and when Barrett takes an interest in Sylvie/Nina, Nina insists on being taken to visit her. Much against his better instincts, Perlman agrees, and thus begins his ordeal: a long and harrowing struggle for the spirit of the girl, who is deeply immersed in a previous life apparently lived as a handmaiden in Atlantis. Hansen shows undeniable skill in upending Perlman's self-confident, rational mindset in a welter of play-acting, s?ance shocks and mythic visions. But oddly, despite the dramatic fireworks of the concluding chapters, what lingers is the loving evocation of the period's musical life: London audience hearing Mahler's First Symphony for the first time, a chat with George Bernard Shaw in his capacity as music critic, Perlman's excitement over the new Welte-Mignon mechanical piano. These details bring setting and character to life in a way the rather high-flown plot fails to accomplish. (Aug.)
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Hardcover
  • Publisher: Farrar, Straus & Giroux (January 1, 1999)
  • ISBN-10: 0374964084
  • ISBN-13: 978-0374964085
  • Average Customer Review: 3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)

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Customer Reviews

17 Reviews
5 star:
 (2)
4 star:
 (7)
3 star:
 (5)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:
 (2)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.4 out of 5 stars (17 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars An Intellectual Feast, but Needs some Spark, November 25, 1999
This review is from: Perlman's Ordeal (Hardcover)
Hansen's first novel, The Chess Garden, deserves to be ranked with the best books of the 1990's. All of the dozen or so Amazon reviewers gave it five stars and I would happily write a review adding five more. I keep it conspicuously placed on my bookshelf so I am reminded of the fun of reading it. Perlman's Ordeal is another matter. Although the book is every bit the intellectual feast that the Chess Garden was, it lacks a certain spark that would have kept me interested in the story and in its protagonist, Dr. Perlman. Whereas Dr. Uyterhoeven in The Chess Garden was generously open-minded, Dr. Perlman is every bit the man who can't see beyond his rather educated nose. His ordeal is getting past that limitation - something he never completely seems to do. Hansen seems to have let his own main character attentuate his vision. Also, if there was a flaw in The Chess Garden, it was that its characters were not completely rounded - but somewhow it didn't really matter. It does matter in this book since we see everything through (via a third person narrator), Perlman's rather narrow, fretful, selfish eyes. This left me feeling cold. Still, Hansen's a major writer and I look forward to his next book.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Perlman's Ordeal-- fascinating disappointment, January 17, 2000
By 
India B. (Northern New Jersey) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Perlman's Ordeal (Hardcover)
It was like one of those long, mysterious dreams you have on Sunday mornings, substantial while experiencing it but gossamer upon reflection. The Chess Garden's merits are well known, and Boone (Hansen's first book, with cowriter Nick Davis) was possibly the best book I ever read in my life. Unfortunately, this book did not live up to the previous promise in my mind.

The premise was irresistable to me. In London at the turn of the (previous) century, a psychiatrist who uses hypnotism to cure patients of various phobias is presented with a teenage girl who has such a sudden and severe fear of water that she has refused to drink for 11 days and almost dies. When he begins to treat her an alternate personality takes over her body, presenting a story akin to the Atlantean myth. This myth enchants a new friend of his, the sister of a dead composer revered by the doctor, and she begins to hold a salon around the girl, playacting the events retold, and threatening the doctor with her spiritualism.

The atmosphere was perfect, and the tension caused by hindsight (Freud is just on the horizon, as is Russian communism and the Holocaust) was superb. Hansen is a writer obsessed with the ideas behind art forms, and he goes into great detail to present philosophical arguments about music here (melody vs. structure) that totally engaged me. Unfortunately, I didn't feel the substance here that I felt in the two previous books. Conflicts were neatly wrapped up but it seemed too pat, and explanations were wholly devoid. (Considering the theme of the novel the author intended to leave one guessing, but I could have used a few more hints than this.) The book is more accessible than Chess Garden (the narrative is more straightforward and less symbolic) and presents many interesting questions, but in the end the protagonists are left unchanged, which to me is the failure of the novel. This would make a great book club book, though, lots to argue about. If it sounds interesting, go ahead and try it, I definitely enjoyed reading it, just got frustrated when I was done. Boone figuratively sliced the top of my head off to let in a cold breeze, and Chess Garden was an intellectual challenge, but this was, IMO, a failed but valiant attempt.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Art or Science, July 6, 2000
This review is from: Perlman's Ordeal (Hardcover)
Sometimes I sympathize with those authors whose first novel is brilliantly original and alive. After all, they have expectations to fulfill that must be daunting. They must fret whether the second book will be thought as good, fret that readers will find it too similar and say they are formulaic or too dissimilar and feel betrayed They must fret that they will become a one-book-wonder.

Brooks Hansen's first novel, The Chess Garden, was such an original and inventive book, that he must have been a real fretnik. Judging by his second book, Perlman's Ordeal, he needn't fret anymore.

This book has its similarities to the Chess Garden. It is fantastic in the original sense of the word. It is saturated with myth and fable. It is delightfully original. It is also very different. Perlman, the protagonist in this book, is a crabbed and limited in his personal life as Dr. Uyterhoven was generous and open. Perlman finds his security in routine and in not taking risks. Dr. Uyterhoven would have smothered in the small life Perlman carved out for himself. However, Perlman is forced out of his routine and cast bewilderingly adrift in Atlantis, of all places. This Atlantis, however, is not the real Atlantis as Dr. Uyterhoven's Antipodes are The Antipodes. This Atlantis is in the mind of his patient, Sylvie Blum -- or more accurately, in Nina the "shard" personality that has taken over Sylvie Blum.

Dr. Perlman is an eminent practitioner of "clinical suggestion," the science of curing people through suggestion during a hypnogogic state. He is most definitely NOT a mere hypnotist nor something so bizarre as a mesmerist. Sylvie Blum is brought to him, completely out of protocol, since he prefers patients to ask for his services themselves...meaning patients who are ready for suggestion and success. She is dehydrated, refusing water and positively phobic in her fear of water. She is brought to him, sedated and is being forcefully hydrated. He is upset and expects failure since this patient was brought to him in such a disorderly way.

However, he is intrigued when he brings Sylvie to consciousness (he thinks) and discovers that there is a healthy young girl inside there who not only doesn't fear water but practically craves it. Unfortunately, that healthy young girl says her name is Nina. There begins the tale and what a tale it is, taking you from late 19th century London to the days when gods and goddesses walked the earth with humanity.

The ordeal is Perlman's struggle within himself, for he must break free of his routines and his regimens of treatment in order to successfully treat his patient. For once in his life, he must let events take their course and go along for the ride. And when it all comes back to him, when he must finish the tale, what will he do? Will he follow his regimen and his protocols, his science, or will he let himself fall into the story and be carried by it? Who will win Dr Perlman, art or science?

Dr. Perlman may not agree with me, but I think he did the right thing.

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First Sentence:
Perlman's ordeal began at 6:50 p.m., September 24, 1906, a Monday. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
suggestive therapy, bathing spring
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Sister Margaret, Fraulein Bauer, Madame Helena, Herr Blum, Lord Stanley, Alexander Barrett, Sylvie Blum, Miss Ronan, Sister Antoinette, Madame Barrett, Music Room, Miss Blum, August Perlman, Little Britain, Professor Bernheim, Queen's Hall, Charles Place, Helena Barrett, Miss Bauer, Royal Hospital, Fraulem Bauer, Lord of Darkness, Granville Bantock, James's Hall
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