The Baudelaire fractal

Lisa Robertson, 1961-

Book - 2020

"A debut novel by acclaimed poet Lisa Robertson, in which a poet realizes she has written the works of Baudelaire. One morning, the poet Hazel Brown wakes up in a strange hotel room to find that she's written the complete works of Charles Baudelaire. Surprising as this may be, it's no more surprising to Brown than the impossible journey she's taken to become the writer that she is. Animated by the spirit of the poète maudit, she shuttles between London, Vancouver, Paris, and the French countryside, moving fluidly between the early 1980s and the present, from rented room to rented room, all the while considering such Baudelairian obsessions as modernity, poverty, and the perfect jacket. Part memoir, part magical realism,... part hilarious trash-talking take on contemporary art and the poet's life, The Baudelaire Fractal is the long-awaited debut novel by the inimitable Lisa Robertson."--

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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographical fiction
Psychological fiction
Magic realist fiction
Published
Toronto : Coach House Books [2020]
Language
English
Main Author
Lisa Robertson, 1961- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
205 pages ; 20 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781552453902
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Poet Robertson's debut novel (after the poetry collection 3 Summers) is a heady, meditative look at art, the self, and the complex relationship between the two. Hazel Brown, a poet, wakes up one morning "to discover that I have written the complete works of Baudelaire." This confounding and impossible occurrence, though, is no more amazing to the narrator "than it was for me to have become a poet, me, a girl, in 1984." The novel eschews conventional plot, instead investigating the narrator's development as a person and poet filtered through examinations of Baudelaire's life, work, and milieu, especially the mistreated and forgotten women. The prose oscillates between Hazel's scrutiny of her younger self--living in Paris, clumsily beginning to write, having sex--and contemplations of, for instance, the erasure of Baudelaire's mistress Jeanne Duval from a painting by Gustave Courbet. As for the authorship of Baudelaire's work, Hazel notes that there wasn't any "tiresome striving after it on my part," implying that rather it was something imposed on her, just as the legacy of male-centric histories are imposed on women. That Hazel became a poet true to her own voice, that she wasn't erased or overlooked because of her gender, or because men treat women like "a concept," is for the narrator the more unlikely event. A difficult work of ideas, by turns enlightening and arcane, part autobiographical narrative, part literary theory, Robertson's debut novel, for those interested in possibilities of fiction, is not to be missed. (Jan.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

An itinerant poet makes an autofiction of her wayward wandering youth in this debut novel.One morning in the spring of 2016, the poet Hazel Brown awakens in a Vancouver hotel to discover that she's written the complete works of Charles Baudelaire. Although "perhaps it is more precise to say that all at once, unbidden, I received the Baudelairean authorship, or that I found it within myself." Already middle-aged at the time of this curious inheritance, the poet attempts to trace the contours of this bequest through a kind of fragmented, allusive double biography: both of Baudelaire brooding amid the onset of industrial modernity and of her young self, coasting through Paris, the city Baudelaire left behind, more than a hundred years in his wake. Throughout the bookpart Knstlerroman, part biography, part artist's statement, part political tractwe track Baudelaire's bourgeois dispossession, his revolutionary and then reactionary politics, his love, his losses, his furniture, his friendships. All this interpenetrates with the loose and jumbled story of Hazel's artistic awakening as she spins a set of concepts (the hotel room, the stain, the garment) into a tapestry of memory and desire. Through Hazel, poet Robertson (3 Summers, 2016, etc.) meditates on the impossibility of any coherent "I"especially that of a woman writing poetry. But as Hazel reads philosophy and cleans apartments and seduces men and writes in her diary, she grows into herself, in glimmering, beautiful sentences that illuminate as much as they obscure: "First, I knew nothing, then I believed anything, now I doubt everything." An intense if abstract portrait of the poet as a young woman in search of a kind of language that might lead to liberation. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.