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Review: The Act Of Love

Howard Jacobson provocatively probes sexual jealousy.

September 12, 2008 12:02

By

Madeleine Kingsley,

Madeleine Kingsley

2 min read

By Howard Jacobson
Jonathan Cape, £17.99

Howard Jacobson's new novel presses the delete button on that old adage, "Tis better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all." The Act of Love explores in playful and provocative detail why, instead, it is better to love and lose, than ever to love and win. Better, at least, for a man like antiquarian bookseller Felix Quinn, for whom betrayal is not undiluted heartbreak but exquisite, addictive, anguish.

https://api.thejc.atexcloud.io/image-service/alias/contentid/173pr2yzkqyig465ohf/Howard-Jacobson-_1_.jpg%3Ff%3Ddefault%26%24p%24f%3Df959f6b?f=3x2&w=732&q=0.6Poaching the red-headed beauty Marisa from her perfectly satisfactory husband Freddy is not enough for the sexually cerebral Quinn. He positively needs to see her in someone else's arms and, moreover, to handpick Marius (he of the hawkish handsomeness and predatory mischief), as the adulterous other, before spying on the pair.

Quinn's viewpoint - "For me to burn for her, Marisa had to burn for someone else" - is one that women readers, at least, may struggle to comprehend. But it is apparently an obsession not peculiar to Quinn, who contends that "all men, in secret, seek infidelity in their wives". Should you balk at his perversely red-blooded take on love, Quinn maintains you have only to consult great literature and indeed littérateurs.