Product Details
Written on the Body

Written on the Body
By Jeanette Winterson

List Price: £7.99
Price: £2.60

Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Dispatched from and sold by less4ukbooks

47 new or used available from £1.49

Average customer review:

Product Description

A novel of loss and love, and a philosophical meditation on the body. The novel explores the body as a physical entity and as an image of our innermost selves in order to reveal more about the phenomenon of love.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #5133 in Books
  • Published on: 1993-09-02
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 192 pages

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
Written on The Body is a tender dissection of erotic love. The prose is like a poem, lush with wit and imagery, but behind the luxuriant relish of the words, there is a scalpel-sharp cut of emotions. Love and longing are the wounds through which Winterson's imagery flows. The novel begins with regret: "Why is the measure of love loss? It hasn't rained in three months ... The grapes have withered on the vine." The narrator is also suffering from a heart-stricken drought. She is grieving for the loss of her true love, Louise.

Louise has flowing Pre-Raphaelite hair, and a body besieged by leukaemia, her cells waging war: "here they come, hurtling through the bloodstream trying to pick a fight." But Louise is not dead, merely abandoned by the narrator with the best of intentions. As the lament continues, striking in its beauty and dazzling inventiveness, more of the love story is revealed. The narrator has been a female Lothario, falling in love, and out again, swaggering like Mercutio. But then she meets Louise, married to Elgin--"very eminent, very dull, very rich"--and is hopelessly, helplessly smitten: "I didn't only want Louise's flesh, I wanted her bones, her blood, her tissues, the sinews that bound her together." Elgin persuades her to leave for the good of Louise's health, and all is undone.

Winterson does not shy away from grief, or joy. She has acutely described how love can transform a life, but also destroy it too. But, for Winterson, where there is love there is hope: "I stretch out my hand and reach the corners of the world ... I don't know if this is a happy ending but here we are let loose in open fields." Eithne Farry

Review
Can you write a compelling love story if you conceal the gender of one of the lovers? That's what the much-acclaimed British Winterson attempts in her fourth novel (The Passion, 1988; Sexing the Cherry, 1990; etc.). All we know about the narrator: (S)he lives alone in a London flat. (S)he is a freelance translator (Russian into English). (S)he used to like guys, but now is into women. (S)he will fight if provoked ("I've always had a wild streak"). (S)he has been around the block, and the bedrooms of various married ladies; nonetheless, after Catherine, Inge, Bathsheba, etc., (s)he is settling down with nice, undemanding Jacqueline when along comes Louise: an Australian redhead, married for ten years to wealthy, Jewish Elgin, a cancer researcher. Louise pursues the narrator ("you were the most beautiful creature male or female I had ever seen"), who happily succumbs; Louise leaves Elgin, and the lovers have five blissful months together before Elgin tells the narrator that Louise has cancer. Back under his care, she might survive; otherwise, no hope. The narrator leaves town ("our love was not meant to cost you your life"), then returns but fails to find Louise, who miraculously reappears. Granted, Winterson has found a medium-hip narrative voice that fits her requirements; that aside, her concealed gender gimmick is a barren demonstration of her craft. The cost of withholding is too high; a strained lyricism must do duty for the particulars of love, and the puzzle distracts attention from the heart of the matter: Can a veteran of bedroom sports still find an enduring love? That question disappears down the Segalesque escape-hatch of the deadly disease. (Kirkus Reviews)

Synopsis
A novel of loss and love, and a philosophical meditation on the body. The novel explores the body as a physical entity and as an image of our innermost selves in order to reveal more about the phenomenon of love.


Customer Reviews

beautiful5
This is truly one of my favourite books. It is beautifully written, with so much insight and emotion. If you are one of those people that needs to know the exact details of the whys and wherefores then maybe this isn't for you, but if you enjoy poetic prose, and believe in the beauty of love- its depths as well as its heights- then it is a real treat.

Correction to the Amazon Review5
I just wanted it noted that the amazon review is misleading. The major reason why this is well known in 'philosophical circles', particularly continental is that as one reader notes the narrator is in fact genderless! This is a bold statement that deconstructs the idea of gender specific experiences of love and sex and certainly one reason to have a look at this book.

Pure Brilliance5
This book,for me is my ultimate favourite.It is full of lyrical prose and sweeps the reader along in a sea of emotions.I really identified with this book,like I have no other.It is truly the most beautiful,powerful book about love and what that word means,in all its facets."It is no conservationist love.It is the big game hunter and you are the game."For anyone who has experienced the heady highs of love and the woeful lows of love,this book speaks to you like no other.Winterson is such an intelligent and deep- thinking writer.She makes us think,and feel things that are in our sub-conscious and makes those thoughts assessible.Her beautiful prose strikes a chord.
I read this book over and over and each time,something new and revelatory is found.
In short,this book and the story within is complete brilliance..