16 February 2012

The Scapegoat

As well as suffering from an entirely understandable obsession with everything Charles Dickens at the moment, I am also the unwitting victim, since reading Rebecca a few months back, of a Daphne du Maurier related buying/borrowing frenzy. I just cannot get enough of her. Every book seems to catch me out with something entirely new and unexpected and I am currently begging, borrowing and stealing every book of hers that I am lucky enough to stumble across.

I find that the best charity shops are usually found in the most unlikely places. There is a pretty musty, fairly scruffy little place on a certain 'frontier' town on the outskirts of Derby that provides the Relish family with countless gems. There is most definitively a bibliophile with amazing taste frequenting that little shop whose high TBR turnover is currently filling our own little library corner to bursting!

All of this gushing about charity shops aside, I snapped up a practically brand new copy of Du Maurier's The Scapegoat whilst staying with family over Christmas and I just can't stress how much I loved this brilliant book; the story completely surprised and bowled me over and you must all go out and buy it right now!  But...what is it about? **Warning** I'm going to be very sparing on the details here..

'John' is a pretty dull English university lecturer, travelling back home to England through the village of Le Mans following a brief sojourn in France; a country that is very close to his heart. Thoughts of returning to work and his solitary, bachelor lifestyle is beginning to take its toll on our professor and his loneliness is driving him to pay a visit to the local abbey when he bumps into Comte Jean de Gué in the local watering hole; a man with an extremely dramatic life and some very messy relationships indeed.

This is sadly where my narration ends because I couldn't bare to spoil this book for anyone and think I would if I were to reveal any more. There are some formidable and typically 'Du Maurier' characters and atmospheric locations to be grappled with here and the prevailing feeling of displacement and tension kept me completely hooked to the very end. The premise of this story is just brilliant; terrifying, creepy, you name it. Du Maurier was apparently going through a particularly intense time in her own life at the time and the novel was written in a quite frenzied six months; a manner of birth that, although I'm sure was not pleasant for the author, merely lends weight and magic to this dark tale.

The plot may stumble into the realms of predictability for some people at times, but my only genuine criticism of this book is that the story only spans a period of a week and that I couldn't go on enjoying her writing for ever. There's a lot of room for introspection in John's tale; a deep exploration of desire, morality and identity that I just couldn't get enough of. What ever will happen to me when I run out of her books to read?



… I lived and breathed and had my being as a law-abiding, quiet, donnish individual of thirty-eight. But to the self who clamoured for release, the man within? How did my poor record seem to him?
Who he was and whence he sprang, what urges and what longings he might possess, I could not tell. I was so used to denying him expression that his ways were unknown to me; but he might have had a mocking laugh, a casual heart, a swift-roused temper, and a ribald tongue … Perhaps, if I had not kept him locked within me, he might have laughed, roistered, fought and lied. 
p.6/7

12 comments:

  1. The Book People have a great offer on a set of du Maurier books. I seem to have hoarded most of them so it wasn't worth it for me but they are super cheap from there.

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    1. Oooh good shout Ellie this is a great deal. Thanks for pointing it out! My credit card is burning a hole in my purse, especially now I've seen the Charles Dickens deal as well.

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  2. I love Daphne du Maurier. Great review. And, Ellie, thanks for the Book People heads up!

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    1. Thanks Dana. I've been on a Du Maurier fest at the library today actually. I can't get enough!

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  3. Hooray! As you may have spotted I am a huge, huge, huge fan of Daphne Du Maurier. I haven't had the pleasure of this one yet but from your, very beguiling and just teasing enough, review I now really want to.

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    1. Aw thanks Simon, I'm glad you found the review just teasing enough. I adored this book and the whole idea of the story so much I just wanted people to pick it up and find it out for themselves. You will LOVE it. Can't wait to see your thoughts!

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  4. My dad told me about Daphne du Maurier a while back but I haven't picked up anything of hers as of yet. Your review makes me want to change that immediately! The teaser paragraph was just wonderful and now I will definitely be keeping an eye out for Du Maurier's novels at our local Goodwill (the American version, I think, of what you call 'the charity shop') and the library. Thank you for following Bibliophile's Corner, I am pleased to return the favour.

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    1. Hi Olga

      Lovely lovely to meet you :-) I promise you will adore Daphne du Maurier, especially judging by your fab taste in books. Rebecca is the classic to begin with. Can't wait to hear your thoughts when you do!

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  5. I thought I'd read all of Daphne du Maurier but this one seems to have slipped by. Loved this review, I really want to read it now.

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    1. Thanks Victoria. This one came as a surprise find to me as well, I'd never heard of it either. A perfect story in a perfect location :-)

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  6. Finding a series you can't get enough is a double edged sword. There is the comforting knowledge that there will always be the next book to read and there is the suppressed frightening knowledge that one day there will not be another book to read. I first experienced this as a child when I read the books by Laura Ingalls Wilder and then later the Inspector Maigret novels.

    http://literarytaste.wordpress.com/

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    1. I feel the same way with Margaret Atwood for example :) (like a lot of people!) Luckily she has a huge back catalog to work through!

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