|
176p PERSEPHONE BOOKS ISBN 1903155126
PREFACE BY JULIA NEUBERGER
This 1888 novel is about a couple who love each other,
but his political ambitions demand money and she is poor: Reuben
Sachs would be a fairly standard late-Victorian novel
about the cruelty of the marriage market if it were not
imbued with feminist polemic - Amy Levy (1861-89) was sharply
critical of the empty lives led by women with nothing
to do all day except gossip, play cards and go shopping.
The setting is the Anglo-Jewish community in Bayswater,
portrayed with a sardonic gaze that shocked contemporary
readers. Yet the author's theme was broader, for she
was in part reacting against Daniel Deronda: she
believed that George Eliot had romanticised her Jewish
characters
and that no novelist had yet described the modern Jew
with 'his surprising virtues and no less surprising vices.'
Oscar Wilde observed: 'Its directness, its uncompromising
truths, its depth of feeling, and above all, its absence
of any single superfluous word, make Reuben Sachs,
in some sort, a classic'; Julia Neuberger writes in her
Preface, 'This is a novel about women, and Jewish women,
about families, and Jewish families, about snobbishness,
and Jewish snobbishness'; while in the Independent on
Sunday Lisa Allardice said: 'Sadder but no less sparkling
than Miss Pettigrew, Reuben Sachs is another
forgotten classic by an accomplished female novelist. Amy
Levy might be described as a Jewish Jane Austen.'
Since the theme is marriage as a financial
and social construct, and since the tone is heavily ironic,
we chose an 1888 cotton velveteen called 'Orange Blossom'
(the flower traditionally carried by a bride) in sombre
colours. |