The Mookse and the Gripes discussion

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Case Study
Booker Prize for Fiction
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2022 Booker Longlist - Case Study
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I will be curious to see what you think of Seven Moons and the author’s choices there."
I usually don't read author interviews until I'm done. I just did a quick search and didn't see more than a handful about this book.
It's obvious to me yet cleverly obscured in the text - sexual orientation isn't an overt subject of the novel for example.
* Edit: I forgot about the Dick Brogarde interaction. It's clearly sign posted.

Braithewaite introduced himself to Brogarde with the words 'You're a very good actor.' . . . He had been observing his interactions with various guests at the party. 'Everything you do and say is false,' he said. 'It's an act.' At this point Brogarde looked at him with the supercilious smile familiar to anyone who had seen him onscreen. Before he could reply, Braithewaite continued: 'See, even now, you're acting. You're smiling but your smile is a mask.'

“Bogarde lived for forty years with his partner, Tony Forwood, but always denied that he was gay. This was understandable in the 1960s when, as Coldstream puts it, the possibility of ‘exposure’ as a homosexual was to live with the ‘very real fear of state-initiated disgrace’. Even after homosexual activity was decriminalised by the Sexual Offences Act of 1967, public opinion languished a long way behind the law. So Bogarde learned to live a compartmentalised life, oscillating between his public and private selves. Arthur Braithwaite, the ironmonger’s son from Darlington, might have reinvented himself as Collins Braithwaite, but Bogarde’s public profile meant that maintaining the carapace was a necessity in a way that it never could be for Braithwaite. The stakes for Bogarde were considerably higher.”





Incidentally the blog mentioned two psychologists, one, who seemed equally far fetched, actually real. But the author did then write a fictionalised radio script based on one of the cases:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/series/m...

I was being a tiny bit provocative by saying Case Study is the queerest book on the longlist but I stand by that assessme..."
It's interesting to see it in that light - thanks!!


This isn’t in that league but then nothing written since is.

I was being a tiny bit provocative by saying Case Study is the queerest book on the longlist but I stand by that assessme..."
The reference to 'Rebecca' does seem to reinforce that notion, another novel known for a similarly queer subtext, which is also easy to overlook. But I wondered too if he isn't also partly drawing on the concept of Caledonian antisyzygy that's been so significant in Scottish literary traditions as far back as Hogg's The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner. Ideas about split or divided selves, buried identities, doppelgangers etc It surfaces in books like The Testament of Gideon Mack which also draws on found documents, testimonies although I don't think the conceit is taken as far as it is in GMB's work.

Alwynne wrote: "David wrote: "I will withhold spoilers for After Sappho.
I was being a tiny bit provocative by saying Case Study is the queerest book on the longlist but I stand by..."
Interesting that you mention Gideon Mack - that was not the only Robertson novel that arguably belongs to this tradition and I was thinking of him too as I read this. News of the Dead and To Be Continued... also have this kind of structure.
I was being a tiny bit provocative by saying Case Study is the queerest book on the longlist but I stand by..."
Interesting that you mention Gideon Mack - that was not the only Robertson novel that arguably belongs to this tradition and I was thinking of him too as I read this. News of the Dead and To Be Continued... also have this kind of structure.

I had to look that up. Case Study certainly does seem to fit within that tradition too. In fact, it might be that Caledonian antisyzygy is the primary mode Burnet is working in, with a queer re-working of that tradition.

I had to look that up. [book..."
Sorry about that David! I love Hogg's novel, and I've read a fair amount of Scottish lit. and came across the term a while ago in relation to that, and it seemed to fit with some of the things you were discussing. So glad it made sense.
And glad, Hugh, that the point about Robertson seems to fit too.

I think one copy will arrive towards the end of the month, so if someone in the US needs a copy let me know.

Yet another great read on what is clearly (for me) a very strong longlist.




https://thebookerprizes.com/the-booke...
Largely this covers ground in previous interviews

That said, I do agree with David's posts about this being a queer text with all the instabilities of identities above and beyond the impersonations that happen at the plot level.
As well as Rebecca, this has also explicitly mentioned 'the madwoman in the attic', taken from a classic piece of feminist criticism (The Madwoman in the Attic: The Woman Writer and the Nineteenth-Century Literary Imagination), and there's a sly little reference to peeling wallpaper low down on the wall of the psychiatrist's surgery which immediately recalls The Yellow Wallpaper, a short story/novella about women, writing and 'madness'.
This all ought to be great for me but... somehow isn't. I wasn't a fan of His Bloody Project either, so not sure whether I'll carry on or not.

It's an entirely valid critique that this is full of interesting themes and allusions (some very subtle) but still boring.





I felt it was very laboured with the identity is performative theme. And found it hard, even skimming, to get through the dull Braithwaite biography sections.
'Rebecca' was quite fun but the ending was just silly, and the Veronica hook fizzled away and seemed to get forgotten.

I am currently feeling a bit this way with Seven Moons - it’s good but 200 pages would be plenty.

At least you aren’t desperately trying to read it for a self imposed end July deadline having only procured a copy on the last day of the month.



I felt it was very laboured with the identity is performative theme. And found it hard, even skimming, to..."
I loved the braithwaite bio sections!

Just goes to show what a tough job novelists have trying to please all us wayward readers :))

https://www.instagram.com/p/CheM3eVML...


Very funny that your receptionist hung up on Paul, GY. You could have really tripped her up by saying hello as you pass her on your way into your office, then have Paul walk past her in the exact same outfit and repeat the same greeting as he went into your office.
I liked ended up liking this. I have to sit with it to see how much I liked it. I think it will be a 3 star.
I loved Nameless Narrator/Rebecca, but was bored by Braithwaite. The points where I wondered if I could go on reading we’re always during Braithwaite sections, but then a NN/Rebecca section would begin and renew my interest. Braithwaite was an interesting character, but for some reasons, unlike you Robert, the Braithwaite bio sections took this from a 4 star to a 3 star for me. Maybe I just couldn’t stand him!
There was a lot to this book which has already been discussed so nothing I can add, but I am interested I hearing more about Caledonian antisyzygy. I can’t be the only one who had to write the word down then go look it up! I liked Gideon Mack and was enjoying News of the Dead before I put it down to read something I felt I needed to read first.
I send a copy to my best friend who is a psychoanalyst. I’m curious to see what she thinks of it. (She thought Playthings was brilliant.)

Books mentioned in this topic
Playthings (other topics)The Yellow Wallpaper (other topics)
The Madwoman in the Attic: The Woman Writer and the Nineteenth-Century Literary Imagination (other topics)
Rebecca (other topics)
Case Study (other topics)
More...
The book is perverse so you're fine. :) What I mean is that the novel itself is perverse in the ways it constructs and moves desire (of characters and readers) in queer ways with the text. So, I'm with David that this is one of the queerest novels on the longlist yet given what is achieved with the text.