Sisters Catherine and Vinny are writers living in London with secrets to Catherine publishes erotic novels unbeknownst to her husband, while Vinny defaces the homes of women authors. When tragedy strikes, however, both women face their betrayals with new perspective. Acclaimed author Michèle Roberts brings history to life-threaded into this contemporary narrative is the story of another set of sisters, the Brontës. Evocative, emotional, and intelligent, The Mistressclass is an exploration of the desires that move us-toward art and literature, and toward each other.
Michèle Brigitte Roberts is the author of fifteen novels, including Ignorance which was nominated for the Women's Prize for Fiction and Daughters of the House which won the W.H. Smith Literary Award and was shortlisted for the Booker Prize. Her memoir Paper Houses was BBC Radio 4's Book of the Week in June 2007. She has also published poetry and short stories, most recently collected in Mud: Stories of Sex and Love. Half-English and half-French, Roberts lives in London and in the Mayenne, France. She is Emeritus Professor of Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia.
I didn't like it at first, but grew to love it while reading - and could not stop thinking about the characters when I wasn't reading it. Metanarrative at times, and intertextual, the novel made me think not only of Charlotte Bronte, but also of Mrs Dalloway. The Bronte bits are well-researched and reflect the spirit of Bronte writing fantastically. I was blown away by Chapter 11. This book reminded me why I love Michele Roberts - although it starts slowly, it does seduce you with poetic, luscious language...
This is a bizarre book which I would not have usually chosen, but it was on my reading lists at uni. On the one hand it's a story of two modern day sisters and their complicated love triangle past. On the other, there is an (apparently linked, but not linked very well) story of Charlotte Bronte's love letters to Mr Heger, which quickly descends into S&M Bronte sisters.
As I studied this at the University of East Anglia, where Michele Roberts teaches, we then has the prospect of Ms Roberts explaining the piece to us... not very well. She didn't really have an explanation for why she'd made the Bronte sisters' relationship so sexual, or why they were necessary at all to the modern day plot - except to explain that there are literary ghosts in the modern world.... echoing through, but why echoing through these two? Except that they're all sisters and they all like books, and...no, I didn't get it.
This book gets two stars from me because the modern day story features a bohemian cliché character who I'm rather fond of - who does fun things like make her own blue plaques at sites of literary interest, and has furniture out of skips and gets stoned to read - but though the actual writing style is masterfully executed, and the (modern day) characters are fully-fledged, I think the plot is badly thought out and clumsily put together.
I couldn't actually finish this book. I had high hopes because of the implied parallels to the Bronte sisters. Depressing and after about 3/4 of the book, I didn't care about the plot or the characters. sorry for being so harsh.
This book jumps into the middle of lives and leaves you to figure it out. I kept waiting for it to develop, but it never did. Would not recommend it to anyone.