11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Extraordinary and chilling, 23 April 2008
By Robert B. Rossney - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, the Girls of Slender Means, the Driver's Seat, the Only Problem (Everyman's Library Classics & Contemporary Classics) (Hardcover)
The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie is, as Tom Farber said of Evan Connell's Mrs. Bridge, satire written with a scalpel. It's precise and sharp, and you also get the feeling things are being laid open and cut away. At times she is as cruel and cold (consider Mary, for instance, whose stupidity is described with disdain even as she is dying horrifically). You have to have a certain amount of tolerance for an author who just isn't very nice.
This is a novel of exceptional complexity that reads like a simple little story of a bygone time. It's worth reading again and again.
And The Girls of Slender Means is, if anything, even better. In it's construction it's a little like one of the locked-room mysteries that Agatha Christie wrote, only it's about something much more upsetting than some vicar getting kacked in the rectory.
Ian McEwan would give his front teeth to be able to write novels like these.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
You must read this!, 8 Sep 2009
By Renee C. Ozer - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, the Girls of Slender Means, the Driver's Seat, the Only Problem (Everyman's Library Classics & Contemporary Classics) (Hardcover)
I ordered this book as part of my Recession Reading Strategy (cheap classics). Muriel Spark's writing was astoundingly varied, but all the novellas have in common not-very-nice characters who embody not-very-nice human characteristics, hypocrisy front and center. Her novellas feature flash forwards and lots of casual sex, and are very, very funny.
There's a lot of religious imagery here - the louche character in The Girls of Slender Means who is shocked into the priesthood when he witnesses a girl running back into a burning building to rescue a Schiaparelli evening gown, clambering over her doomed roommates in the process. (And yet, being too heavy to squeeze through a narrow window, she could have done nothing substantive for them, anyway.) In The Only Problem, a rich man who has retired to the French countryside to write a monograph on the Book of Job goes through his own trials with friends and press when his estranged wife goes from cheap, fashionable "revolutionary" sentiment (stealing gas-station chocolate) to leading her own little Baader-Meinhof Gang.
The Driver's Seat is a just plain creepy tale of a woman looking for "her type," in this case someone to violently kill her.
All are darkly funny - the crazy macrobiotic vegan who must have his orgasm a day, the sanctimonious aunt who travels to France to berate her nephew for his blasphemy and to sadly inform him that she has seen footage in a television documentary showing his wife climbing out of a double sleeping bag naked, adultery in a sack!, notable mainly for besmirching the family name.
Spark's father was Jewish and her mother, Anglican, and she later converted to Roman Catholicism. She was a wild child herself, and complained of her whiny artist son in unmotherly dialogue straight out of her own writing, "He can't sell his lousy paintings, and I have had a lot of success. He keeps sending them to me and I don't know what to do with them. I can't put them on my wall. He's never done anything for me, except for being one big bore."
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A little weird, but fascinating, 10 Mar 2011
By E.J. Kaye - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, the Girls of Slender Means, the Driver's Seat, the Only Problem (Everyman's Library Classics & Contemporary Classics) (Hardcover)
'The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie' was a well-written, vivid novella with a great twist at the end. One wonders at the mental status of the author, but the story is pretty gripping. 'The Girls of Slender Means' was also a really fascinating piece of writing, but from there, the collection takes a bit of a dive. The last two stories seem to dwell further into a mania that becomes downright repulsive.
Overall, an interesting set of stories that are worth an extended look.