07 December 2010

Book Review: Disturbed by Her Song

Title: Disturbed by Her Song
Author: Tanith Lee
Publisher: Lethe Press
Release Date: August 2010
Date Finished: 3 December 2010
eBook

Buy | Borrow | Accept | Avoid

Challenges: 100+ Reading, Hogwarts Reading Challenge, Reading Resolutions, GLBT Challenge


Lee channels Esther and Judas Garber, siblings and writers, to create this collection of short stories. While the Garbers, along with their sister Anne, are Lee's own creations, she claims they are as real to her as anything, and so this collection reads as a mix of fiction and memoir. Each story, despite the finale, is written from a first person perspective by either Esther or Judas and recounts an event from his/her life. Typically this event is of the romantic or sexual variety; although it should be noted that this is not erotica. The sex bows down before the story, is a tool for the story, not the reason for its existence.

There are nine stories in this 200+ page collection ranging from tales with chapters to one-page portraits. Esther's stories are Black Eyed Susan, The Kiss, The X's are not Kisses, Death and the Maiden, and Disturbed by Her Song. Judas's stories are Ne Que V'on Desir, Alexandrians, Fleurs en Hiver, and The Crow. Despite the fact that all stories were indeed written by the same person, Esther and Judas have very different voices, the distinction obvious. Of course, the difference is also noted in that Esther is a lesbian and Judas a gay man.

The entire collection is book-ended by the tale of the Princess and the Nightingale, the story which also gave the collection its title:
Once upon a time there was a princess, outside whose high bedroom window a nightingale sang every night from a pomegranate tree. While the nightingale sang, the princess slept deeply and well, dreaming of wondrous and beautiful things. However there came a night when the nightingale, for reasons of her own, did not sing but flew far away.

In the morning, the princess summoned a gardener and told him to cut down the pomegranate tree. The man protested; the tree was a fine one, young, healthy and fruitful. But the princess would not relent. For as she said, all that one previous night a nightingale had perched in the branches, and the princess's sleep had been very much disturbed by her song.

This passage begins the book, but the significance is not revealed until the final tale, and it's overall import is moving and melancholy, ending the book on the same sort of poetic and dreamy tone which has permeated all of the tales. These are not happy every after stories, nor are they darkly depressing tales; they are snippets of life which reflect on those deeply felt, somber but not lacking hope, type moments.

I think what most intrigued me by this collection is the creation of a universe in which these two siblings - and their never-there-but-always-present sister Anne - inhabit. Each story is separate from the others with minimal character duplication outside of the siblings, and yet they all come together to paint a portrait of this unique universe, a world of dreams, surreal and poignant. Alternating gothic, surreal, realistic, erotic, sad, hopeful, and deep, the collection is one I would definitely recommend.

With all this in mind, you may be wondering why I haven't marked it as a Buy, instead choosing to select Borrow for my rating. Simply put, short stories just do not capture me as much as full length novels: certain stories would be a Buy, others would be an Accept, so I'm splitting the difference.

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9 comments:

  1. This definitely sounds like something I'd enjoy.

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  2. This sounds absolutely excellent - I'm especially intrigued by the way Lee structured it!

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  3. Disturbed by the Cover

    The floating body parts are just a wee bit creepy.

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  4. I'm disturbed by the cover.

    Oh damn ... i see I'm not the first to say that. It is one creepy cover though.

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  5. I actually love the cover! In fact, I was sold on this book before even reading your review, but now I think I'd get the book even if the cover wasn't so great ;) Thanks for an excellent review!

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  6. I also am alternately disturbed and enticed by the cover and title, and think that this sounds like a very intriguing read, and very different than what I have been reading lately. Thanks for the great review on this one, I am going to have to check it out!

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  7. Good morning, hon! I discovered your blog via the Indie Lit Awards and I'm very happy to be a new follower.

    Haven't read this one yet, but I do love Tanith Lee's work - she has such a wonderful imagination and sense of style.

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  8. Sounds intriguing though I too am not a huge fan of short stories (gimme a big fat juicy novel to get lost in). But poetic and dreamy sound good.

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