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Madeleine Is Sleeping

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Author - Sarah Shun-lien Bynum ... [Goo?] [Posters]

This Hardcover Book item from Harcourt was reviewed on 23-Jul-2008.

Search ISBN:0151010595 offer from Abebooks or used books from Alibris. Madeleine Is Sleeping Reference Book. Classifications : General Literature & Fiction Children Bargain Books Custom Stores Specialty Stores Books General Literature & Fiction Bargain Books Custom Stores Specialty Stores Books All Deals Blowout Books Special . Click the following link to view the cover of Madeleine Is Sleeping.

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1) Hardcover Book Madeleine Is Sleeping by Harcourt. The novel offers a ripe setting infused with poetic language and seamless sequences of the surreal. Bynum succesfully creates a luscious scene for each part of Madeleine´s dream. This novel captures the delicious wonderment of adolescence in all its curious mischeviousness and the strangeness that accompanies it.

Bynum fuses poetry and prose to create a beautiful piece. The running theme of music (the opera, le petomane´s gift, the violin) the circus, unrequited love, and the gross but sensually delightful images of Mme. Colchon, the sexual mishappening with the town dullard, and the details of Madeleine´s enchanted sleep are each uniquely arresting.

The form is much like Evan Connell´s Mrs. Bridge-- the language mellifluous and never cumbersome. It is no surprise that this book was a national fiction finalist.

And as an endnote, I am currently a student of Bynum and have to unashamedly announce my enthusiasm for her love of writing, literature, and teaching. The experience has been challenging and wonderfully enriching.¤

2) Hardcover Book Madeleine Is Sleeping by Harcourt. From reading the description of this book (I resisted reading any reviews until after I was done reading it.) I expected a dream-like quality and a surrealistic fairy-tale quality. And these things attract me. It has those qualities, and I found the form interesting, but had a hard time getting through this book. I found it difficult to determine the dream from the reality (although maybe that was the point?), and some of the writing was full of beautiful images but I didn´t know what the meaning behind the images was.¤

3) Hardcover Book Madeleine Is Sleeping by Harcourt. This book is very pleasing to read because of the lyrical writing. Lyrical is the perfect word to describe this book´s writing. Certain passages are worth reading over and over because of the wonderful images created by words. This book to me seems to be a deeper metaphor for transitions of any kind, not just the transition we go through when we leave behind childhood. Because of these things, and the dream like quality of the writing of the book in general,I would be more likely to call this book a prose poem rather than a novel.

I enjoyed the book quite a book and would definitely recommend it to anyone interested in something other than mainstream fiction.¤

4) Hardcover Book Madeleine Is Sleeping by Harcourt. In "Indivisible," one of the vignettes that compose Bynum´s mesmerizing new novel, one of the characters reminisces about a children´s story of a tailor who stitched his shadow to himself. "And she knows that, as with all things sutured, the two leaves cannot be separated without destroying them both. She is certain of it. Yes she persists in picking at the edges; she delights in seeing how the wound seeps, where the scab has been lifted away by a fingernail."

This vignette is emblematic of how Bynum´s novel operates. The "real" and the "unreal" or "dream-like" are sutured together throughout the book. Can they be separated? Probably not, but we readers keep trying, we keep "picking at the edges," trying to sort out the separation. Bynum seems to be suggesting that reading is not so much a creative act as it is a destructive one. Trying to separate the real and the dream in this novel would, if we could do it, destroy the book.

But, of course, none of the novel is "real." It´s all a verbal representation on a series of pages. Some of the words represent "real" things (e.g. Le Petomane, a unique musical performer who actually lived in France a century ago), but in the novel, those things aren´t the actual things, merely verbal constructs of them. So as we read and try to figure out what is a dream and what is "real," we´re being drawn into the story, seduced into believing that at least some of it is "real." Or at least that some parts are more "real" than the "dream" parts. And that act of believing is a creative act of reading.

So Bynum´s great accomplishment is to involve us in simultaneous acts of creation and destruction as we read her novel. A careful reader can´t help but do both, for we cannot do one without the other. This is an exhilarating novel to read as a result.¤

5) Hardcover Book Madeleine Is Sleeping by Harcourt. In this strange and often beautiful novel in which reality and fantasy overlap, Madeleine, a young girl, reclines romantically in what appears to be a permanent state of sleep, with her family and neighbors all tiptoeing around her. Her mind, however, is active, creating a bizarre dream world in which she lives out a series of adolescent fantasies, exploring who she is, what kind of adult will she become, what her role in life may be, what makes her unique, and how her sexual fantasies might be fulfilled.

Unique characters appear in her dreams--an immensely fat woman (Mathilde, Madame Cochon) who has two pairs of wings, a girl who has a stringed body which she can play like a viol, a man who creates the sounds of the nightingale and the cuckoo with his flatulence, a "half-wit" who exposes himself to children, an opera singer dethroned by a castrato, and a photographer in a mental institution, along with Madeleine´s real-life family. The "action," real and imagined, ranges from a gypsy circus, where Madeleine studies tumbling, to the home of a widow, where the strangely gifted circus performers act out tableaux vivants, and eventually to a mental hospital, before returning to Madeleine´s family and home in rural France.

As in our own dreams, strange connections occur among the characters. Madeleine, at one point, becomes the Madeleine from the children´s stories about a Parisian convent school, her real-life brothers and sisters appear in the mental hospital dream sequence, and she engages in a love triangle, which becomes a literary joke when the author tries to figure out how to conclude the love story of three characters. Irony takes on new meaning in a book that is itself so out-of-the-ordinary, and the humor is both broad and dark as Madeleine´s dreams constantly juxtapose unlikely elements.

The "action," while intriguing on a psychological, dream-like level, sometimes leaves the reader feeling starved for connections to reality, however, and the novel is often self-conscious. Though most readers will see some parallels between action within the dreams and the fantasies of typical adolescents, many will also find it difficult to identify with the cartoonish characters on a personal level or to care much about what happens to them. Art and creativity are strong themes in what passes for the plot, and the conclusion re-emphasizes this theme. Fascinating and often beautifully poetic, the novel ultimately feels like a literary exercise, containing some universal elements of reality, but distanced from the reader. Mary Whipple
¤

6) Hardcover Book Madeleine Is Sleeping by Harcourt.

2004 NATIONAL BOOK AWARD FINALIST

When a girl falls into a deep and impenetrable sleep, the borders between her provincial French village and the peculiar, beguiling realm of her dreams begin to disappear: A fat woman sprouts delicate wings and takes flight; a failed photographer stumbles into the role of pornographer; a beautiful young wife grows to resemble her husband´s viol. And in their midst travels Madeleine, the dreamer, who is trying to make sense of her own metamorphosis.

Part fairy tale, part coming-of-age story, this enchantingly inventive novel follows Madeleine as she leaves home, joins a gypsy circus, and falls into an unexpected triangle of desire and love.

Embracing the earthy and the ethereal, the comical and the poignant, Madeleine Is Sleeping is an adventure in the discovery of art, sexuality, community, and the self that transcends both time and place.









(10/26/2004)¤

Page Updated: Robert N. Goolsby, 20-Aug-2008, 01510105959780151010592, 950-430-100-370-6OB-3IB-LQB-8


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