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Unless
 
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Unless (Hardcover)

by Carol Shields (Author)
3.4 out of 5 stars See all reviews (29 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 224 pages
  • Publisher: Fourth Estate Ltd (7 May 2002)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0007137702
  • ISBN-13: 978-0007137701
  • Average Customer Review: 3.4 out of 5 stars See all reviews (29 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 442,318 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review
Unless offers us engrossing proof--if ever we needed it--that Carol Shields is a writer of incomparable creative agility, wit and tenderness. In her eight novels (including Orange Prize-winner Larry's Party and two short-story collections she has continued to combine an extraordinary inventiveness with prose of suppleness and grace. Her terrain is the domestic and her thematic ambitions are delivered with a beguiling lightness of touch that never undercuts a depth and seriousness of intent--the perfect velvet glove over the iron fist.

Towards the end of Unless its central character, fortysomething Reta Winters--wife, mother, editor, translator and recent novelist--takes issue with how an eminent critic has belatedly bestowed status on her first novel, My Thyme is Up. What had been judged until then as her "fresh, bright springtime piece of fiction" has become... 'a brilliant tour de force', says Professor Casey, and this quote will, of course, appear on the jacket of the sequel...in the same size type as the name Reta Winters, but I am trying not to think what that means." This is just one of countless delicious asides (yet none of Shields' asides are ever throwaway) which Reta makes in her light, self-mocking tone; indeed, she sees herself as a woman for whom "tragedy was someone not liking my book".

But into her happy family comes a situation which overshadows all else: the eldest of Reta's three daughters becomes a bag lady on a Toronto street corner, obsessed by goodness, but refusing to speak or be spoken to. This threnody of loss and grief, and Reta's consequent self-questioning, is at the heart of the narrative. Running alongside are chapters taking up Reta's other selves, each narrated in a very different register: Reta as the translator of French feminist texts; Reta as purposeful, and increasingly driven letter writer on the subject of women's exclusion; the frayed author trying to complete her sequel, Thyme in Bloom, in the face of harassment by an editor of woefully dumb and obdurate incomprehension. This woman of many parts allows Shields to reflect--wittily, thoughtfully, playfully, and with wicked subversiveness--on issues of power, on the nature of goodness, the meaning of family, and the place of women. Crucially, she asks how--or even whether--women's voices are heard and "read", how they are (re)interpreted, and given value in the culture. It is these brave and still necessary, if no longer "fashionable", questions, and Carol Shields' enormous capacity to entertain so wisely and unflinchingly, that make Unless such a joy to read.--Ruth Petrie

Review
'Her perceptions are so quick, her style is so acute, that she can tack a breath to the page and skewer a thought on the wing. It is her speciality to isolate moments that remain distinct in the mind for years, perhaps for a lifetime.' Hilary Mantel, Sunday Times

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Customer Reviews

29 Reviews
5 star:
 (10)
4 star:
 (5)
3 star:
 (6)
2 star:
 (4)
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Average Customer Review
3.4 out of 5 stars (29 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
30 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A novel that is both feminine and feminist., 10 Nov 2002
By Mary Whipple (New England) - See all my reviews
(TOP 10 REVIEWER)   
A mother's agonized attempt to help to her 19-year-old daughter Norah, a drop-out who now begs on a street corner while wearing a sign saying "Goodness" around her neck, provides the framework for Shields's thoughtful and sensitive look at women's roles and the juggling acts they sometimes require. Reta Winters, a successful writer, believes at first that by writing a bright, perky novel about "lost children and goodness and going home," she will be "remaking the untenable world through the nib of a pen." But real life--and Shields's real novel--are, of course, much more complex than that.

Despite the support of her two younger and very caring daughters, her empathetic husband, her friends, and Danielle Westerman, the French feminist whose books she has translated, Kate nevertheless discovers that trying to help a child who will not be helped is a terrible loneliness to bear: "I need to know I'm not alone in what I apprehend, this awful incompleteness that has been alive inside me all this time." Evaluating her life as a wife, writer, friend, mother, and, increasingly, feminist, Reta allows us to share her inner life, both as it is revealed in her writing and as she wrestles with Norah's "hibernation" on the street corner.

Filled with dazzling images (an idea that has "popped out of the ground like the rounded snout of a crocus on a cold lawn" ; women who have been "sent over to the side pocket of the snooker table and made to disappear"), this Shields novel is more meditative than many of her other novels. "I've been trying to focus my thoughts on the immensity, rather than the particular," Reta/Shields says. As she inspires the reader to share this immensity, she provides insights into the essence of who we are and who be might become. Mary Whipple

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27 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Breathtaking, 20 Aug 2002
By A Customer
In recent years, with so many weak novels being so over-hyped, and so few really good novels being published at all, I sometimes feel I can no longer find any points of reference for what constitutes "good writing". This novel, Unless, reminds me what a joy it is to read a wonderfully-written and -constructed novel. It has a deceptively simple style, engaging characters and quite a gripping story, making you want to read on, eager to find out what happens next. But then you're disappointed that in your rush you didn't take time to enjoy the details.

It is packed with insights and reflections, some carried through as themes in the novel. Some are profound, some are disturbing (for example, the theme of the continuing lack of influence of women in the world in general and the intellectual world in particular). Some are just fun thoughts (for example, the idea that the only reason people read novels is to get a break from the incessant monologues in their own heads). And yet you never feel you are leaving the territory of the novel to enter the pop-psychology, self-help mode that such domestic novels can sometimes fall into. It is serious, without taking itself too seriously.

The story of this novel is kind of unimportant (albeit deeply moving). It's the mood, the language, the ideas and the insights that carry you along and make you want to turn back and re-read it the moment you finish the last page. If you enjoy good writing, read it.

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38 of 42 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Stunning. It has to make the Booker shortlist., 10 Jun 2002
By A Customer
Like all the very best novels, this one is deceptively simple. Reta Winters is a forty-something mother of three, living what on the surface is a comfortable, settled life. She has a loving partner -it wasn't fashionable to marry in the 1970s - three clever daughters and a dog. She has published a light, but popular novel and translates the work of a distinguished French feminist. She meets her friends for coffee. Her mother in law comes round for supper every evening. But slowly and subtly, Carol Shields unravels her life and shows a complex mix of emotions under the surface. Her eldest daughter has given up her studies and is begging on a Toronto street corner. 'It's just a phase,' she is re-assured. But Reta is not re-assured and this situation colours everything she does even writing a frothy sequel to her novel and composing hilarious letters of complaint to pretentious authors. Brilliantly and sharply written, Reta comes to life before your eyes. She is typical of the middle-aged woman today, especially the sharp and witty way she observes the world. She may be miserable but she makes us smile - not at her but at the crazy world we live in, especially the literary world. (perhaps the Booker judges won't find this funny at all.)This novel made me rail against the way women like Reta are generally viewed but it also made me laugh out loud. Rita is full of self-deprecation and veiled scorn. Delicious. All Carol Shields' novels and short stories are brilliant, but none more so than 'Unless.'
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars A perfectly formed jewel
I recently re-read this novel after first reading it some five years ago. The first time around I was bowled over by its directness, its simplicity and the immense "event" behind... Read more
Published 3 months ago by Disgusted, Tunbridge Wells

5.0 out of 5 stars Unless by Carol Shields
This was the first novel of Shields' that I have read. I found it quite difficult to get into at first but, almost imperceptibly, became imersed in the life of Rita, a writer,... Read more
Published 16 months ago by Mrs. A. L. Jacobs

1.0 out of 5 stars Self-indulgent and dull
I cannot agree more with reviewer Adam K, London ("A crashing, dull disappointment"). I am an avid reader and can usually see the good in most books, but I'm afraid this felt... Read more
Published 18 months ago by M. Stapleton

4.0 out of 5 stars The external internalised
Unless by Carol Shields has been my third novel in a row written from the perspective of a self-analytical, self-critical and perhaps self-obsessed female narrator, the other... Read more
Published 19 months ago by Philip Spires

1.0 out of 5 stars A crashing, dull disappointment
Oh, lord. I read "The Stone Diaries" and loved it -- instantly swore to read more Carol Shields. Unfortunately, this was the book I chose to follow up. Read more
Published on 25 Jul 2006 by Adam K.

5.0 out of 5 stars Fabulous
I found this a very thought-provoking and challenging book, there are numerous strands running through-out one which looks at women's place in the world today. Read more
Published on 2 Mar 2006

3.0 out of 5 stars A disappointing "thyme"
This is the first book of Shields' that I've read and her writing style is alluring enough to make me read another, though I found this one flat and unappealing. Read more
Published on 14 Aug 2005

5.0 out of 5 stars A wonderful book
I loved this book and I can't believe that Carol Shields is dead and there will be no more...

It's a lovely, subtle evocation of family, and goodness, and the marginalisation of... Read more

Published on 28 Jun 2005 by Fiona Cartwright

3.0 out of 5 stars Disappointing after reading Stone Diaries
I'm torn in reviewing this book. I read the Stone Diaries a few weeks earlier and LOVED it, it was such a treat. I really recommend the Stone Diaries!! Read more
Published on 1 Jun 2005 by raising27

4.0 out of 5 stars Vivid and economical - a lesson in good writing
Unless, the last novel by Canada's second most famous female novelist, is in danger of autoconsumption, dealing as it does with a female writer writing about what it is to be a... Read more
Published on 28 Mar 2005 by Rgh1066

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