It is the clothes that cover us
that stir desire for what lies beneath . . . A girl in primitive times was the
victim of male lust and the guile required to survive and flourish is the mask
she subconsciously wears today. Love is war, and clothes are our armour . . .
Being naked for a woman isn’t the
same as it is for a man; our clothes acquire different associations. We don’t
dress in clothes, we masquerade in the robes of contrivance: too tight, too
small, the contours outlining shapes and displaying slivers of flesh like
promises, like the trailers for a film. Nudity is a logical progression.
from Katie in
Love
Chloe
Thurlow clearly enjoys being a girl—and her readers are all the more richly
enlightened for it. Katie in Love is
Thurlow’s sixth erotic novel, albeit her first (and I would have to say quite auspicious)
venture in the realm of independent publishing. It is also a masterpiece on
many levels; a romance that transcends the surly bonds of genre convention; a
trenchant novel of ideas that skillfully entertains; an acutely-observed comedy
of manners in which even the shallow characters are imbued with a certain sympathetic
depth; a classic Bildungsroman (novel
of education) with clever nods to Herman Hesse, Anais Nin, Vladimir Nabokov, Albert Camus, Georges
Bataile and George du Maurier, the creator of Svengali. Thurlow seems to have
taken Mahler’s notion of the symphony to heart, ingeniously applying it to a
work of literature that is “like the world, containing everything.” If this is
“erotic romance”, it is erotic romance with an awe-inspiring intelligence.
And
what is it that turns a work of smart, broadly appealing fiction into “erotica”?
The author and editor M. Christian says that erotica is fiction in which the
author “does not blink” or turn away with distaste or discomfort when it comes
time to describe the sex act. An amorist at heart, Thurlow has, for all
practical purposes, given her readers an
accessible, first-rate literary novel that “does not blink”; a work in which
sex is treated as an essential element of a compelling story, not as some unpleasant
afterthought or demeaning literary chore. “Erotica” the eponymous narrator tells
us:
is an untapped well of human
mystery and potential, the seam of gold hidden below the fault lines of a
culture that imposes limitations on our true nature. If erotic writing is to be
regarded as literature, the taste and cadence of the words must embrace the
senses, ignite the passions. The emotion is integral to the story. Readers must
be stripped naked and led to a warm bath perfumed by sex. They must feel as
they dress the softness of silk and the chafe of leather. Each description is a
portrait so fresh and vivid they can hear the adagio slap of flesh against
flesh, the rattle of chains, the snap of the whip, the sound of one hand
clapping against willing buttocks.
Readers should be inspired to seek
in their lovers new erogenous places, the enchantment of roll play, masks, ball
gags and bonds. In the heat of the night when you allow the brain to rest. the
body lives a life of its own . . .
Erotica holds up the mirror to a
society where those things damned and outlawed are secretly desired. The erotic
explores human extremes, lost love, impossible love, innocence and purity
mingled with decadence and debauchery. All human fears become clearer analysed
under the microscope of erotica. As I keep telling mother, erotica is about
feeling, not fucking.
At
first glance, a basic description of the plot is not especially promising: A
handsome physician with a clouded romantic past hooks up on New Year’s Eve with
an attractive, if slightly self-absorbed writer of erotic fiction. The doctor
is a dedicated do-gooder, working in the Third World with the poorest of the
poor, and he must shortly return to his frontier practice after a short holiday
in London. The sex is better than good, and there is clearly a spark between
these two—or, at least, the heroine thinks there might be. But, of course,
there are obstacles, both real and imagined, trivial and serious, to that
proverbial happily-ever-after, and therein lies the tale.
This
could easily serve as the framework for almost any potboiler romance—I sometimes
suspect that certain authors keep a template on their computers in lieu of an
outline, making it fast and easy to fill in a set of blanks, different names
and slightly altered details here and there to suit. It’s the way such basic plot-skeletons
are fleshed out that, in the end, makes the difference between the merely
amusing and the genuinely enlightening, the disposable and the indispensable,
the generic remainder and the future classic; ultimately separates the hackish
has-been from the undisputed mistress of her craft.
And—wowzer!—is
Chloe Thurlow ever the latter! This is highly original storytelling of
breathtaking assurance and awesome craft. Especially impressive is the way the
author integrates essential backstory into a highly-elaborate, almost symphonic
structure, gradually revealing her character’s pasts in a kind of grand,
sweeping arc —wholly visible only at the end—expertly overlaying and bridging
the narrative of the here-and-now. (I was reminded of those massive, but always
tuneful, late-romantic symphonies, say, Mahler’s 3rd or 7th, Bruckner’s 4th,
7th, or 8th.). And
yet again, as in any well-conceived symphony, the intimate phrases, the solo
passages and moments for small ensemble are as deliciously memorable and moving
as the mightiest tutti.
There
is no forced conflict here, no contrived melodrama. Katie’s self-doubt may be de rigueur in the genre, but this is not
the shallow, formulaic wool-gathering of the typical romantic heroine fresh from central-stereotype casting. For once, we are treated to genuine
introspection. This author respects her characters—and herself— too much to
treat them like mere ex machina plot
facilitators or pawns—and she gives her supporting players a chance to shine as
well, portraying them as real people with real passions and real things to say,
rather than convenient constructs, employed to inject odious or disagreeable
alternate points of view into the story, thus eschewing preachiness and
propaganda—the conjoined-twin buzzkills of otherwise-intelligent
storytelling
Thurlow’s
writing is very much like her main character;
moody—by turns melancholy and reflective—beautiful, sensuous and
cerebral. This is “writer-ly” writing to be sure, the sort that stirs serious
critical buzz and garners shelffuls of prestigious literary awards—or would if
life were fair. Not that there isn’t a good deal of authorial absolute
certainty here—the sort of “let me dazzle you, dear reader” assertions brooking
no contradiction that judges for those awards seem so thoroughly to adore. One
sometimes gets the sense that Katie is as much the author’s thinly veiled
personal avatar as her creature. And
yet, there is a depth to all Thurlow's characters—a feat in itself—but, even more
impressively, a sophistication—a real, complex dimensionality—to the world they
inhabit, a compelling richness that transcends the banal mechanics of genre scene-setting.
And
what a world it is! There’s grit as well as glamour here; a hefty dose of moral
complexity to go with the simple thrills of lust, a certain seriousness to
balance these lovers’ candy-floss flirtations with all their delightfully glib
sweet nothings. They are not so blinded by love as to be willfully ignorant of
the turmoil that surrounds them. They delve the issues of the day, discuss geo-politics
and macro-economics, lament the cancerous inequality in a society grown so rich
that it can no longer see the poor; the clueless high-rise-dwelling haves and
the hustling ant-like have-nots below, so far apart that one can never truly
comprehend the life of the other. The author does not blink at the painful
contradictions in her own heroine’s heart, feeling guilty about her own
privilege, but also helpless in the face of need she has never been encouraged
to consider.
Things
come, more or less, to a conventional head; the characters arrive at a cusp and
must decide what to do with the rest of their lives. At first glance, the
leisurely leave-taking of the penultimate chapters feels like a let-down after
what has gone before, the tying up of all the loose strands of the narrative in
a bow that seems overly elaborate. Yet, without this dreamlike bridge, the ending itself
might have seemed too abrupt, too pat. In retrospect, it is just right. Along
the way the author seems to play a set of elaborate variations—something like
one of J.S. Bach’s mind-bending masterpieces for the harpsichord—her deft
fingers gently pressing the keys of our imagination until we can only groan
with delight.
As
the stunning—and stunningly clever—heroine of Katie in Love reminds us, the great 20th-century English
literary critic Cyril Connolly once said “whenever you start writing a book,
you must set out to write a masterpiece . . .”
In
this, Chloe Thurlow has surely succeeded.
Passionately
recommended!
It is hard to describe my feelings, beyond mere pleasure, on reading this thoughtful review, except to say that it encourages me to get on with the new novel with the the understanding that my analysis of contemporary culture, capitalism and politics through an older woman/younger man sub-dom romance set in Long Island and New York will not be met with total horror. More than that, that erotica as a genre is all the more richer when writers feel free to be experimental, literary, lyrical and intelligent knowing that there is an audience for their work.
ReplyDeleteBravo TAS and bravo Chloe. Here's to challenging readers with the extraordinary.
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