fantasykvm.blogg.se

The book of v by anna solomon
The book of v by anna solomon












the book of v by anna solomon

Finely written and often vividly imagined, this is a cerebral, interior novel devoted to the notion of womanhood as a composite construction made up of myriad stories and influences.Ī bold, fertile work lit by powerful images, often consumed by debate, almost old-school in its feminist commitment.Ī retelling of ancient Greek lore gives exhilarating voice to a witch. And while layers of overlap continue among the three women's stories-second wives, sewing, humming-so do subtly different individual choices. Alongside questions of male dominance, issues of sexuality arise often, as do female communities, from Esther’s slave sisters to Vee’s consciousness-raising groups to Lily’s sewing circle. Lily, in 21st-century Brooklyn, has chosen motherhood over work and is fretting about the costumes for her two daughters to wear at the Purim carnival honoring Esther.

the book of v by anna solomon

Vee, wife of an ambitious senator in 1970s Washington, finds herself a player in a House of Cards–type scenario, pressured toward sexual humiliation by her unscrupulous husband. Her magical powers can bring on a shocking physical transformation or reanimate a skeletal bird, yet she is still a prisoner in a gilded cage, mother to an heir, frustrated daughter of an imperiled tribe. Esther, selected from 40 virgins to be the second queen-after her predecessor, Vashti, was banished (or worse)-is the strangest. All three are grappling-some more dangerously than others-with aspects of male power versus their own self-determination. Esther, the Old Testament teenager who reluctantly married a Persian king and saved her people, is connected across the ages to two more contemporary women in a sinuous, thoughtful braid of women’s unceasing struggles for liberty and identity.īiblical Esther, second-wave feminist Vee, and contemporary mother-of-two Lily are the women whose narrative strands and differing yet sometimes parallel dilemmas are interwoven in Solomon’s ( Leaving Lucy Pear, 2016, etc.) questing, unpredictable new novel.














The book of v by anna solomon