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Lament for Julia

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A celestial overseer observes—and is continually confounded by—a young woman’s path into adulthood in this uncanny and darkly humorous novel, unpublished until now and accompanied by a selection of the author’s stories.
Susan Taubes’s novella “Lament for Julia” is the story of a young woman coming of age in the twentieth century as seen through the eyes of a sexless spirit who supposes himself to be charged with her oversight.
What is this spirit? An operator from on high (though hardly holy), a narrative I, and a guiding presence that is more than a bit of a voyeur, who remains entirely unknown to Julia herself. About her, the spirit knows both a good deal and very little, since Julia’s emotional and physical and sexual being are all baffling, if also fascinating, to an entity that is pure mind.
The I and Julia are a mismatched couple, set up for failure from the start, it seems, even if they do somehow manage to deal in their different ways with childhood and Mother and Father Klopps and ugly pink outfits and dances and crushes for a while. After which come love and marriage, not necessarily in that order, at which point things really start to go wrong.
Unpublished during Taubes’s lifetime, “Lament for Julia” appears here with a selection of her stories. A brilliant metaphorical exploration of a woman’s double consciousness that is also a masterpiece of the grotesque, it is a novel like no other, a book, as Samuel Beckett wrote to his French publisher, “full of erotic touches of an emphatic sort [and] raw language,” the product of an “authentic talent,” adding, “I shall reread it.”
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 22, 2023
      This tantalizing and surprising posthumous novella from Taubes (Divorcing), who died in 1969, is presented here with several of her short stories, all hovering around similar themes of isolation, entrapment, and confused connection. The novella follows Julia Klopps from her lonely childhood among the remnants of genteel poverty in a big house with her parents, up through her years of young motherhood in her 30s, all observed and narrated at close quarters by a genderless narrator who has been with Julia for all of her life. It’s unclear who this companion is—“Was I her servant or her master then? Parent, lover, or friend? All.” As Julia carries the spirit with her throughout her life, it passes judgment on her decisions, include an affair she kindles with a man while her husband is away. Taubes brings to life her strange and singular creation with aplomb, and the stories also startle and convince with their outlandish details. In “Medea,” a modern woman reignites the fury of the Greek myth, murdering her children to punish her husband; in the disturbing “Swan,” an analyst commits the men interested in his daughter to an asylum. A dark beauty reigns throughout this worthy collection.

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Languages

  • English

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