Shroud (novel)
Shroud is a 2002 novel by John Banville. It is part of the Alexander and Cass Cleave Trilogy along with the novels Eclipse, published in 2000, and Ancient Light, published in 2012.
Plot summary
Axel Vander, famous man of letters and recently widowed, travels to Turin to meet a young woman called Cass Cleave. Cleave is a literary researcher and she has unearthed two secrets about Vander's early years in Antwerp, the first being that in the years prior to World War Two Vander contributed some anti-Semitic articles to a right-wing newspaper, and secondly, that he is not Axel Vander at all. He is Vander's childhood friend and appropriated his name and identity after Vander disappeared and was presumed dead.
Background
The novel is partly inspired by two scandals regarding famous academics that occurred in the 1980s: the posthumous discovery of anti-Semitic texts written during World War II by literary critic Paul de Man, and the death of Hélène Legotien, wife of Marxist philosopher Louis Althusser, by his hands.
Banville has stated that this is one of his favourite of his novels - "a dark, hard, cruel book", one in which he came closest to achieving what he set out to write at the start of the writing process. He also noted that - "Everybody hated Shroud—even, I think, the people who admired it. It was favorably reviewed, but it was not and is not a book a reader could readily love. Shroud is my monstrous child whom I cherish but who horrifies others."[1]
References
- Bawer, Bruce (2003-03-16). Books. "Double Exposure". The New York Times. Retrieved 2009-01-27.
Review by reader http://www.biblio.com/9780375411304
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