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‘Superb. She had me at page one’
Chris Cleave, author of Everyone Brave is Forgiven
The kaleidoscopic story of one woman as seen through the eyes of those she has loved or been loved by.
In gemlike chapters, nine characters illuminate an unknowable woman. From the school art teacher who sees a spark of talent in her, to the man whose fleeting passion with her could change his life, to the female student whose friendship turns into love. This kaleidoscopic novella builds a life with colour, with light and dark, and in turn asks the reader: How does the world see you?
The Nine-Chambered Heart is a deeply intimate, luminous and fine-boned novel that explores the nature of intimacy and how each connection you make forms who you are.
216 pages, Kindle Edition
First published November 1, 2017
You seem to be a woman to whom something is always about to happen
Ideas bolting from you like wild horses. I like it. It makes me imagine that, with you, anything could happen; that there will always be surprises.
‘Let’s go somewhere,’ you say. And this becomes, I notice, a recurring request. Let’s go somewhere, anywhere, to get out of this rut.
It's easy to love.This turned out to be a pleasant surprise! In some ways (although they are very different in other ways), it reminded me a lot of The Life and Death of Sophie Stark. Both books are about one woman and use the different perspectives of multiple characters to build up her character. But by the end of the book, you question, despite everything you've learnt during the course, whether you really know her character at all. The protagonist of The Nine-Chambered Heart remains nameless, emphasising the idea that, perhaps, the reader and her lovers never really know her or understand. Are all nine narrators describing the same woman, adding layers to her personality, or are they seeing a different character? How can she be one and the same? There are contradictions, similarities and repetitions to each perspective which add to this mystery. Ultimately, this book is above love. Whether it's about the source of that love or the act itself is another question. Both beautiful, mysterious, and slightly discomforting at times, I believe I've found a hidden gem.