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Justine (The Alexandria Quartet, I)

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Title: Justine (The Alexandria Quartet, I)
by Lawrence Durrell, Nigel Anthony
ISBN: 9-6263404-0-1
Publisher: Naxos Audio Books
Pub. Date: September, 1995
Format: Audio CD
Volumes: 3
List Price(USD): $19.98
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Average Customer Rating: 3.76 (21 reviews)

Customer Reviews

Rating: 5
Summary: Incandescent, word-drunk novel
Comment: Durrell has created a city out of language in this novel. I take that partially back--in _Justine_, the city IS language. His lush and tactile descriptions become as real as bricks and mortar in the reader's mind. The Alexandria of this novel hums, crackles, simmers...sometimes it devours the characters who choose to live there, sometimes it gives them moments of epiphany. But reading this novel, you will, yourself, become a kind of resident of this unreal city. You will follow with fondness and sadness the minor characters who give this novel so much texture. You will soak up the cadences of Durrell's prose in creating this city. Justine, Nessim, and the rest of the flawed, though achingly poignant characters will haunt your reading of this novel in one fashion or another. They will seem to you like people you have known in real life--who HASN'T had a topsy-turvy lover in their lives?-- but at the same time take on properties of something out of Greek theatre. The characters are realistic and yet are greater than the sum of their parts. I can't wait to read the next three novels in the Alexandria Quartet. This book will truly endure. It has set off firecrackers in my brain.

Rating: 5
Summary: Adrift in Alexandria
Comment: The British novelist Lawrence Durrell seeks to make a stylistic first impression. "Justine," the first volume of his "Alexandria" quartet of novels, exhibits his technique as an almost continuous stream of metaphorical associations as conjured by a writer imaginative with adjectives and in rapturous love with his exotic setting. Comparisons with other world-traveling literary modernists like Henry Miller and Paul Bowles are appropriate, but Durrell is more coherent than the former and more poetic than the latter, ultimately finding an unexplored niche somewhere between the two.

Set entirely in the historically and culturally rich coastal Egyptian city in the years preceding World War II, the novel is narrated by an unnamed Irish schoolteacher who keeps company with a colorful array of friends and lovers. The plot is a classic love triangle in which the narrator is having an affair with Justine, the voluptuous wife of his friend Nessim, a wealthy Copt. However, the novel is not as erotic as it could be given this premise; Durrell is much more interested in decorating the personalities of his characters to reveal their desires, fears, and motivations, allowing the characters to massage the plot rather than vice versa. For example, it is with a great amount of narrative preparation that Durrell springs a crucial scene in which one of the main characters, a Greek woman named Melissa who works as a dancer at a night club, approaches Nessim with the news that his wife is being unfaithful to him.

The novel has two levels of intrigue. One is that Justine is a woman of dire secrets, searching the city's houses of child prostitution for something dear she has lost and hiding the true nature of her relationship with a rich, lecherous ogre named Capodistria. The second is that of a conspicuous local doctor named Balthazar, one of the narrator's close friends, whose interests are pederasty and the Cabbalah and who is being investigated by an aged Secret Service officer named Scobie assigned to uncover avenues of espionage in Alexandria. Uniting these two threads is an independent, mercurial woman named Clea, friend to both Justine and Scobie, who is not so much introduced as a character as she is suffused throughout the story like a perfume to be sniffed here and there.

With an obviously intimate knowledge of Alexandria, Durrell describes the city and its surroundings in stunning detail that avoids the rigid tone of a travel guide, capturing the natural diversity of its population represented by his selection of characters. A cosmopolitan mixture of sophistication and squalor seemingly modeled on Miller's Paris, his Alexandria is virtually an original literary milieu, replete with possibilities for the expanse of British expatriate fiction.

Rating: 5
Summary: The Bigguns Have Come
Comment: When I say bigguns, I really mean "pretty words" and/or "incredible writing". So, whassup how's it going? No, but really... this book had me at hello. No matter how cliche that sounds. The strangest part about it was that it actually said "Hello!" to me. At first, I was afraid, and I hurled the book away in terror. But then, I thought, "Hey, I'm cool! That book's cool, we can chill together." And we did. Here's the thing: Lawrence Durrell is very good at making dusty egyptian scenes and writing angst-filled woeful monologues about the women who are incapable of deeper love. The titles of his books are deceiving in that they, with "Justine", "Balthazar", and so on, appear to be about those people. However, Justine plays about as big of a role in "Justine" as she does in "Balthazar". This book is one of four of the "Alexandria Quartet". It is about the city through the eyes of the narrator, which is a stunning and whirlwinding ride, but don't be disappointed for not getting to know the characters better. Love it for what it is.

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