Basic Black With Pearls

by Helen Weinzweig

Other authorsSarah Weinman (Afterword)
Paperback, 2018

Status

Available

Call number

823.912

Collection

Publication

NYRB Classics (2018), Edition: Reprint, 160 pages

Description

"A brilliant, lost feminist classic that is equal parts domestic drama and international intrigue. Shirley Kaszenbowski, nee Silverberg, is a middle-aged, middle-class woman in a Holt Renfrew tweed coat, a basic black dress, and a strand of real pearls. She may seem ordinary enough, pricing silk scarves at Eaton's or idling in hotel coffee shops, but in fact she is searching for her lover. He is an elusive figure, a man connected with "The Agency," a powerful technocrat who may or may not have suggested a rendezvous based on a secret code in the National Geographic. Her search takes her to the world of her past as a Jewish immigrant in the Spadina-Dundas area of Toronto. She finds the bakeries and rooming houses of her youth still haunted by survivors of postwar Europe and by her own memories of guilt and loss, while the consolations of art, opera, and pornography offer only echoes of her own illusions and desires. Her strange, wryly funny odyssey ends in a dramatic confrontation scene with her husband and "the other woman," as she trades in her basic black for another chance. In Basic Black with Pearls, Weinzweig displays her gift for creating sympathetic characters in a slightly surreal, but always recognizable world"--… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member larryking1
Written in 1980, this cult classic is a noirish portrait of Shirley, aka Lola Montes, who travels the world for clandestine assignations with her spy/lover, Coenraad. Momentarily, for me anyway, her latest destination, Toronto, made me wonder if anything would even happen! Toronto, if you don't
Show More
know, is the home to the most boring people on the face of the planet. Any city inhabited by depressives, who counter their morbid despair with a grim alcoholism, makes for a bleak backdrop! I blame the terrible weather! However, this dense, textured story picks up momentum with the memories of other happier places in other times. Soon the reader knows Shirley's entire story, and it is not a happy one! Eventually, and this is the novel's beauty, a feminist subtext emerges: lives that are supposed to follow a preordined route -- girlhood, marriage, motherhood, dotage -- can be programmed to accomplish other, greater achievements. Or can they? The finale is first rate!
Show Less
LibraryThing member LynnB
why are so many female protagonists in classic feminist literature insane? The answer is so sad when you think about the restrictive lives women led in the past.

In this novel, we see Shirley travelling the world meeting her secret agent lover in exotic places. What an adventurous life she lives!
Show More
As the story goes on, we begin to wonder if everything...or anything...is as it seems. It becomes harder to tell what's real for a while, then insights come and suddenly we know more about Shirley's life than we realized. This is accomplished through masterful storytelling and great writing. I loved it.
Show Less
LibraryThing member sturlington
Well, I did read this. I didn't have much of a reaction to it--not even enough to write a real review. Wrong book at wrong time, or perhaps I am just struggling in general with reading right now. I don't seem to have a lot of focus. In any event, this book did not speak to me, I'm sorry to say.

Awards

Toronto Book Award (Winner — 1981)

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1981

Physical description

160 p.; 8 inches

ISBN

1681372169 / 9781681372167

Similar in this library

Page: 0.8045 seconds