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The Courage Consort: Three Novellas

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With his elegant prose, distinctive imagination, and deep empathy, the bestselling author of The Crimson Petal and the White once again dazzles us in three novellas. "The Courage Consort" tells of an a capella vocal ensemble sequestered in a Belgian chateau to rehearse a monstrously complicated new piece. But competing artistic temperaments and sexual needs create as much discordance as the avant garde music. In "The Hundred and Ninety-Nine Steps," a lonely woman joins an archaeological dig at Whitby Abbey and unearths a mystery involving a long-hidden murder. In "The Fahrenheit Twins," strange children, identical in all but gender and left alone at the icy zenith of the world by their anthropologist parents, create their own ritual civilization.

In each of these novellas, Michel Faber creates a unique, self-contained world, where the perennial human drama plays out in all its passion and ambiguity.

232 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2004

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844 people want to read

About the author

Michel Faber

76 books2,099 followers
Michel Faber (born 13 April 1960) is a Dutch writer of English-language fiction.

Faber was born in The Hague, The Netherlands. He and his parents emigrated to Australia in 1967. He attended primary and secondary school in the Melbourne suburbs of Boronia and Bayswater, then attended the University of Melbourne, studying Dutch, philosophy, rhetoric, English language (a course involving translation and criticism of Anglo-Saxon and Middle English texts) and English literature. He graduated in 1980. He worked as a cleaner and at various other casual jobs, before training as a nurse at Marrickville and Western Suburbs hospitals in Sydney. He nursed until the mid-1990s. In 1993 he, his second wife and family emigrated to Scotland, where they still reside.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 105 reviews
Profile Image for Quirkyreader.
1,629 reviews9 followers
March 13, 2017
This was a volume of three short stories that make you muse on many things. I especially enjoyed how Faber used element of Gothic Fiction in the stories.

Of the three stories the one I enjoyed the most was "The Hundred and Ninety-Nine Steps".

Each of these stories also has an aspect of horror that will stick with you after the story is over.

It is a perfect read for a snowy or rainy day.
Profile Image for Bandit.
4,940 reviews578 followers
September 30, 2015
Turns out The Book of Strange New Things wasn't a one off. Faber really is that good of a writer. This collection of three novellas certainly attests to it and, in fact, was a book of strange (very, but mesmerizingly so) new (to me) things. Meditative, pensive tales, even depressing at times, depending on one's mood. wasn't quite sure how to review, until the last story, which was just a work of sheer beauty and wonder. The author stated that he has now retired from storytelling, which is sort of impressive, to get out while the going was good is a talent as well certainly. Recommended.
Profile Image for Leah Shafer.
35 reviews12 followers
September 5, 2008
Faber's first novel The Crimson Petal and the White was so magnificent that I leaped at the chance to read something else by this literary badass.

IT WAS SO GOOD--three goodnesses, actually. The first, self-titled novella is a story about an English choral group retreating to the Belgian chateau for rehearsals on a modern piece. The second, The Hundred and Ninety-Nine Steps, is about a paper conservator on work holiday who discovers a grisly 1788 murder. Third, the Fahreinheit Twins, is the most out-there of all three, the journey tale of two neglected children living in the Arctic wilderness.

In all three, Faber balances the surreal and fantastical with active plot movement. All three are about corrupted innocence, sexual drive, and the challenges of facing life as it is presented to us: imperfect, sometimes scary, often weird. I now must read all his books. He is worth a small obsession.
Profile Image for Lisa.
58 reviews20 followers
January 9, 2014
full review: http://wp.me/p42FJU-cP

I've come to realize that Michel Faber is really ****ing weird, and I love it. My third Faber adventure, after The Crimson Petal and the White and The Fire Gospel is his collection of three novellas entitled The Courage Consort. I liked it much better than The Fire Gospel and can see how his wit and his sense of the strange and surreal influenced the writing of Crimson Petal. These three novellas are witty, ironic, sometimes downright ridiculous, and unexpectedly poignant at times. The three are "The Courage Consort," "The Hundred Ninety-Nine Steps," and "The Fahrenheit Twins."

The Courage Consort Review"The Courage Consort" begins this collection. It tells the story of an a cappella group named, appropriately, The Courage Consort. Their group is christened such both because their founder's surname is Courage and also for the old Wesleyan adage, "sing lustily and with much courage." Roger and Catherine Courage are a married couple in the Consort who live for weeks in the Chateau de Luth, practicing a modern piece for a concert. The dynamic of the five members of the consort figure prominently in the narrative, as does the mental state of Kate, who suffers from depression. Kate has fantasies of suicide and is unhappy in her marriage. She also hears an ethereal, anguish-filled child's cry every night during her sleep. Kate is the main protagonist of this story, as she navigates her awkward, sexless marriage; her relationship with the only other woman in the consort, a sexual, confident mother named Dagmar; and the kinship she feels with bulky, overweight Ben Lamb. It's an interesting story of character development and the way these very different people manage not to rip each others' hair out. When tragedy strikes the consort, they must examine their principles and begin new lives.

"The Hundred Ninety-Nine Steps" takes place in the UK town of Whitby, the same setting as Dracula, a gothic setting for a less-than-gothic novella. It does have touches of the dramatic, however:

She closed her eyes, longing to trust him, longing to rest her head in the pillowy crook of his arm, but at the last instant, she glimpsed sideways, and saw the knife in his other hand. Her scream was gagged by the blade slicing deep into her throat, severing everything right through to the bone of her spine, plunging her terrified soul into pitch darkness.

Thus this novella begins, with a thirty-something archaeology student named Siân on a dig of a monastery in Whitby. Since her arrival in Whitby, Siân has been plagued by the same murderous dream night after night. A shy, idealistic woman, Siân meets a fit jogger named Mack, a Londoner in town to handle his late father's affairs. The two are attracted to each other but find themselves constantly butting heads on issues of religion, antiquity, and faith. Siân believes strongly in the virtue of the medieval monks and priests, in the truth and nobility of history, in a higher power. Mack, a cynic, tries to disabuse Siân of her long-held notions and comes across, to me, as obnoxious and self-serving. When Mack discovers a message in a bottle in his father's estate, he enlists Siân's help with interpreting its contents, hoping for a grisly tale of murder. What they find plays with the readers' expectations of the gothic genre and sheds new light upon the nature, and sometimes contradictory nature, of religion and faith. A great, quick read with solid, interesting characters and a satisfying ending.

"The Fahrenheit Twins" was my favorite of the three stories. It's set on an island near the North Pole and follows the lives of young twins Marko'cain and Tainto'lilith as they make sense of their bleak, desolate world around them. The twins are the children of ethnologists who are conducting research on nearby aboriginal communities on the island. Marko'cain and Tainto'lilith, who are probably around ten years old, were born on the island, possess impressive survival skills, know nothing of the outside world, and together, piece together little bits and pieces of facts they write down in a book. Their banter and wit and they way they finish each others' sentences lend this story a touch of levity in an otherwise bleak novella. Bleak, because their ethnologist mother dies, and their alleged father (it's implied that an aboriginal man is actually the twins' biological father) sends them on a deadly expedition from which they must find their way back. Because of my love of the North, the lively little characters, and the dry humor of this piece, it was easily my favorite.

Faber is an interesting writer for the way he infuses his stories with a bit of surrealism and the fantastical without explaining anything; for example, the nightmares Siân has echo the murder she discovers in the bottle's message; and Kate in "The Courage Consort" never discovers the source of that eerie, unearthly child's cry. I liked those elements of unexplained, otherworldly events. They add a touch of surreality to the narrative and do much to explain the characters' mental states.
Profile Image for Marc Nash.
Author 18 books465 followers
June 28, 2012
An accapella quintet, performers of difficult modern compositions. They have a date in a European modern music festival in Belgium. They are housed in a chateau in the middle of a forest in order to rehearse. They are called 'Courage' not for their ambition in tackling difficult works, but because it is the surname of Roger the group's leader and driving force. The book is narrated by his
wife Catherine, whose mind has been unravelling for some years now, but she still possesses the voice of an angel. A mentally unstable artist, she reminded me of Patrick Gayle's heroine from "Notes From An Exhibition", but unlike that character whom I found frustratingly opaque and exclusionary of the reader, Catherine's manias and paranoia are well rendered and credible. This was a far better portrait of the artist struggling with their sanity.

The book is slight but for all that a pitch-perfectly scored orchestration of the five characters moving round one another in what is almost a prison. The two female members Dagmar and Catherine are the ones who venture out into the forest, even though for Catherine it threatens a creature whose wails unhinge her during her sleepless nights. Very quickly little routines in a foreign space are established for each character, the inter-relationship each ritual invites or excludes so that the whole is a rather wonderful tapestry of the group dynamics of a collaborative band of artists. When they are visited in turn by the festival director, the composer of the willfully difficult piece they are performing, the designer of their backdrop visuals and a Luxembourg journalist, the subtle changes in the dynamics through the intromission of each of these is fascinating to plot. Almost like particles in a collider, Faber demonstrates wonderful control over the nuanced changes and subtle changes of state.

I am ever so slowly working my way through Faber's entire catalogue, not an honour I bestow readily. I think some Faber fans feel this novella to be too slight and maybe it was my circumstances that demanded a one-day read, but I am so admiring of his economy, his easy insight into human beings and group dynamics on show in this book, that I simply cannot agree with his critics here. And I don't even like accapella music, but I fell in love with this book. Maestro! Encore!
Profile Image for Christine.
7,212 reviews566 followers
August 23, 2011
This collection of three novellas by Faber runs quickly. The first and title story, "The Courage Consort" is a wonderful story with a double meaning title. It is about a group of singers who go to the Netherlands to pratice before a performance. Part of the charm comes from Faber's brillant character painting.

The second story, "The Hundred Ninety-Nine Steps" takes place in Whitby, yes that Whitby and those steps. There are no vampires here, at least not in the traditional sense of the word. Faber uses the town's novel reputation and gothic feeling to his advantage and tells a rather moving story about life, faith, and struggle. It also has a dog in it.

The final story, "The Fahrenheit Twins" is Hansel and Gretel in the Russian Artic. It is a worthy successor to the Grimms.

The stories share much in common with The Crimson Petal and the White, but are also studies in the manner of the shorter work.
Profile Image for Peter Jones.
201 reviews3 followers
September 19, 2025
When you finish reading a Faber book, you’re left feeling things.

You don’t know what you’re feeling, but you’re feeling things.

You feel impacted by the story, but you don’t know why it was impactful.


All in all, you don’t really know what’s going on, but you love it anyway. A sense of hope in often fantastically difficult situations.


I swear, Michel Faber’s writing is like the 8th wonder of the world or something.
Profile Image for Virginia.
1,285 reviews164 followers
March 13, 2021
A large part of the fun of finishing a book is reading other readers' opinions of it. What a wide range of impressions and takeaways at GR! I liked this novella almost as much as The Hundred and Ninety-Nine Steps and found that again Faber has made the woman real people while the men stayed rather murky caricatures. I enjoyed Catherine's regrowth of confidence through bicycling and was sorry when the story ended, although it all made sense and felt more like a fleshed-out short story. Glad I never have to listen to that abominable a capella monstrosity the group sang!
Profile Image for Susan Kinnevy.
649 reviews1 follower
December 24, 2019
I just love this author. This is actually three very different novellas, all of which are intriguing and thoughtful. The Courage Consort is a solidly constructed story of a small group of musicians practicing for a concert in a chalet in the middle of the forest. The main protagonist has the best story arc, moving from helpless female dependent on her husband to someone with a promise of self-sufficiency. The same type of protagonist is more robustly the center of 199 Steps, an archeologist suffering from the trauma of the Bosnian war, finding herself while working on a dig at Whitby Abbey. Usually these types of females turn into cliches and annoy me no end, but at the ends of such a good writer, they are fully realized and easy to like.

The last story is a whimsical tale of twins raised in near isolation in an Arctic archipelago, completing a seemingly impossible task. Loved everything.
Profile Image for Virginia.
64 reviews
May 27, 2012
Like many others, lured to read this collection by my enjoyment of his previous work. but I did not find this work as engaging. The Courage Consort is the best of the novellas, but could easily have been developed further, and probably should have. The story was too neatly wrapped up, without proper exploration or resolution of conflict. The second story was a snore and the characters irritating (maybe authors shouldn't be commissioned to write stories as publicity?). The last had potential, but Faber copped out of putting the children in genuine danger, depicting their journey closer to adventure than a struggle. He denied them insight or growth. In the end, sacrificed fairytale quality in favour of a most ordinary conclusion.
Profile Image for Bosorka.
628 reviews76 followers
January 3, 2020
Kvintet Courage představuje pěvecké těleso, které spolu musí strávit delší čas při zkoušení jedné složité skladby. Která nejspíš ani jednoho z nich nenadchla. Na malém prostoru Faber dokázal představit jednotlivé členy skupiny a jejich různé vztahy mezi sebou. Pomocí lehkých náznaků pak gradoval napětí, které mezi nimi vznikalo a evidentně už se stupňovalo z dřívějška, o němž se čtenář také nedozví nic extra konkrétního. Což ale nevadí, autor tak dává opět prostor představivosti. Typický Faber, nechá nás dumat, co bylo a bude, kdo s kým a kdo proti. A proč vlastně. Nechala bych ho ovšem zase rozehrát Kvintet Courage ještě do větší šíře, rozmáchnout se s ním a dodat ještě na důrazu, pak by to bylo za plných 5, takto 4 a půl.
Profile Image for Alison.
441 reviews7 followers
June 5, 2021
Exquisite hilarious delightful novella, not at all about a woman on the brink of madness as the back cover says but about the bodies and appetites of a choral quintet come together to rehearse in a chateau in a forest for 2 weeks. Clever, unexpected, quite enthralling.
Profile Image for Miriam Michalak.
852 reviews27 followers
October 5, 2014
A suberb collection of three novella's written in Michel Faber's indomitable style - wonderful!
Profile Image for Paul Ataua.
2,178 reviews281 followers
May 31, 2023
"I didn't cast my boat out on the dangerous sea of a cappella music to sing 'Obla-di, Obla-da' to a crowd of philistines in funny hats."

A slowly ‘coming apart at the seams’ Catherine is part of a disparate group of five Capella singers who are holed up for two weeks in a Belgian forest chateau while they rehearse and attempt to fine tune a flawed ‘masterpiece’ in preparation for an avant garde festival. Catherine is the soprano whose sense of time is beginning has begun to slip. Her husband, Roger Courage is both the leader of the group and the one who is guiding her through life. What struck me from the start is the wonderful ease which Faber draws together the comedic and the serious and entertains while not letting you forget the underlying tension. The novella has received little standing in Faber’s work but I found this among his most touching. I was both moved and stunned. Please note I am only dealing with 'The Courage Consort' in this review.
Profile Image for Vicky.
19 reviews1 follower
May 24, 2018
The Courage Consort by Michel Faber follows the seventh best a capella group in the world as they share a house in the Netherlands, practising an almost impossible piece of music. It focuses on the awkward relationships and tensions between the group, with a bit of odd spooky cries in the forest added for good measure.

As a short story (as opposed to a novella), The Courage Consort is a pretty good example of the form. It is filled with interesting observations and a group of characters that each receive their own little arcs, their own quirks. The real joy would come with re-reads and close study, which is not something I'm up for. For anyone who enjoys a short story, there will be plenty to please in this slim volume.

Full review here: https://alternativemrmen.blogspot.co....
1 review
February 22, 2023
About the courage consort, to me it was just a boring story. It was just a bunch of people from an orchestra group (Courage consort) spend some days in the forest. They have their own problems like we all do. They do whatever activities they like. A member just heard creepy cries in the middle of the night, the other mountain biking whatever. They always had breakfast together, one of them loves havermout so much, alright.... On every single page you there's a Partitum Mutante being mentioned. Seriously in almost every page. Lord almighty....

The other two stories however... are sooo soo good. The Hundred and Ninety-nine Steps is a page turner. I just don't understand why the main character idolised St.Hilda so much and why is she being mentioned in the plot that has no correlation to her at all.

The Fahrenheit Twins... My God. I love it,so intricate, so unpredictable.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Dawn.
78 reviews7 followers
January 26, 2020
A concise story that is full of imagery, you really get a sense of the inner world of the characters as well as the world they're inhabiting. Some of the writing made me feel a little uncomfortable, especially related to the main character of the story, Catherine. There is a sense that she is subservient to her husband and just lets him dictate her life. There is a sense of this changing throughout the book but it does make for uncomfortable reading at times. As does the writes fixation on the character of Dagmar and her body. Ultimately both of these 'issues' are in aid of the story.
34 reviews
November 12, 2020
Instantly forgettable. I carried on to the end only because I am interested in contemporary music. In fact, that was all that kept me interested. The characters didn't do it, except for Catherine, who I found reasonably sympathetic.
Apart from the last few pages, when something of significance happened, I found the bulk of the action not much above the level of trivia.
I do accept I may have missed the point of the plot of this novella. And yes, I should have concentrated.
Michel Faber is still one of my favourite authors.
Profile Image for Matthew.
890 reviews8 followers
April 25, 2025
I read one of Michel Faber's books last year and was totally blown away, so naturally I added a bunch of his crap to my TBR. Now I see that this was probably jumping the gun. I straight up didn't like the first novella at all. I thought it had a promising start, but it went absolutely nowhere. The second novella was okay, and I thought the third one had that creepy uneasiness that Faber's other book, Under the Skin, had. Short stories and novellas just aren't the best experience for me it seems and this author couldn't change that.
31 reviews2 followers
October 14, 2017
I wanted to like it, I truly did, but I could NOT STAND the female leads of the first two stories. I found them unsympathetic and annoying. Trust me, women do much more than worry about men all the time.

I enjoyed the "murder" in the second story and how it turned on itself and make you reconsider your own perceptions. I wish the Fareignheit Twins could have been longer and more fleshed out, it had so much potential.
711 reviews2 followers
June 28, 2021
I only read the first of the three novellas.

I have loved Mr Faber's books mostly, but this story just didn't hold my interest.

And it's about group dynamics and I have a master's degree in group dymanics - from a long time ago.

There was nothing wrong with the writing, the characters or the story line, and all the little side line thingees to think about, it just never got me excited enough to keep reading.

And too many other books on the TBR shelf to continue with a ho-hum one..
759 reviews5 followers
December 18, 2020
I’ve liked other works of his, but after the last book I read I was in no mood for prim Englishwomen wondering if they were going mad. It’s rare that I can appreciate a dithering, unconfident female voice in literature these days, particularly ones written by men. Got two stories in and it was quits for me.
Profile Image for T P Kennedy.
1,100 reviews8 followers
November 27, 2022
An experimental read that didn't really pan out for me. There's an air of detachment to all three novellas. The characters are unsympathetic for the most part. The first novella was dull and inward looking, the second much better with a real tale at its heart and the third read like an effort to try something new. Not for me.
111 reviews
June 25, 2017
I like Faber's imagination. These stories kept me interested because each was so different. I'm not a fan of the endings, hence four stars on each book of his I have read, but I am a fan now. The Crimson Petal and the White will be next, though THAT one will take me a while.
Profile Image for Anton Segers.
1,313 reviews20 followers
September 25, 2018
Door Fabers observatievermogen en goedmoedige spot krijgen we een milde satire op de asociale trekjes van kunstenaars, maar meer dan dat is het ook niet. Ik blijf buiten de personages staan.
De voor Faber typische bovennatuurlijke dreiging lijkt er hier wat bij gesleurd...
Profile Image for Laura.
407 reviews
November 2, 2018
This book is made up of three novellas. I loved the second one and like the other two. The author is an excellent writer, but I much preferred his novel The Crimson Petal and the White to this book.
Profile Image for Chloe.
225 reviews
May 10, 2021
Didn’t mean to buy, got this free with the 199 steps. It’s actually better than the former, with endearing characters and some funny tableaux, such as Wim Waefels’ presentation of his proposed video art for the Courage Consort’s performance. Coherent and pleasing.
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