“And, more
than the marks of fresh bruises on fading bruises on faded bruises, it was as
if she had been beaten flat, had all the pile, the shine banged off her
adolescent skin, had been beaten threadbare, or as if she had been threshed, or
beaten to the thinness of beaten metal; and the beatings had beaten her back,
almost, into the appearance of childhood, for her little shoulderblades stuck
up at acute angles, she had no breasts and was almost hairless but for a little
flaxen tuft on her mound.” (p.130)
As the
book begins, ‘Fevvers’ an aerialist who may or may not be half bird, is being
interviewed by a seemingly uninterested young reporter. She is a Cockney Wonder: hatched onto the streets and raised in a
whorehouse and taught to fly by a prostitute who talks too much. As the bird
woman spins her tale, Jack Walser realises he isn’t quite the mocking, all
rational reporter he thought he was and runs away with the circus in a
desperate attempt to separate fact from fiction. As the travelling circus
progresses through Europe and the wilds of Siberia, an assortment of circus
dwellers are revealed. Many of whom seem to be equally enigmatic as Sophie ‘Fevvers’.Like
most Angela Carter novels, the title alone was enough to draw me in. And, with
is envious tigresses’ and insecure Strong Man, I wasn’t disappointed. There
were just moments in this story, so wonderfully written and intricate, that I
had to stop and reread them. The image most vivid in my mind, is that of the gilded
cage hidden within a Faberge Egg that the Grand Duke tries to seduce Fevvers
with. That, or the revolving metal institute for the criminally insane woman
which appears later in the novel. If you
are to enjoy this novel you must, like Jack Walser, abandon any scene of judgment
for Angela Carter leaves a lot to the imagination.I feel
this is a book that deserves a couple re-reads in order to be fully understood.
For example, the suggested manipulation time through the use of the whorehouse’s
clock. The winding prose and long words reveal subtle clues that I think I might
have missed this time round. Which is fine, I like subtle symbolism and
ambiguity.Nights
at the circus as a wonderful fable that fuses feminism and humanity with picaresque
adventure. The characters never get lost
amongst the surreal, grotesque tableau but remain fully realised. To me, it’s a
tale of kindness, introspection and in the end, love.
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