Become a Member
Books

Review: Where The God of Love Hangs Out

Love in its gloriously different aspects

February 25, 2010 14:09
Bloom: poignant, convincing portraits of tender and passionate feelings

ByRebecca Abrams, Rebecca Abrams

2 min read

By Amy BloomGranta, £10.99

Amy Bloom has the gift of drawing you into her fictional worlds so swiftly and acquainting you with her characters so deftly that, within a few, short sentences, you feel you must have known these people and places in a previous life. This gift helped establish her literary reputation in two previous short-story collections and two novels, and is abundantly in evidence in this new collection. So, too, is Bloom's wry, tender view of human foibles, which renders them both faintly ridiculous and deeply endearing.

Take William and Clare, whose late-blossoming love affair is at the heart of the four linked stories that open this collection. William has gout, a dicky heart and arthritis. Climbing the stairs makes him sweat. Their lovers' trysts are fitted around their medical ailments. Standing together, they look, "like a woolly mammoth and a stiff-tailed duck". Yet for all the evidence of physical decline, or perhaps because of it, this is one of the most poignant and convincing portraits of passionate love I have read in a long time. It is beautiful in its own precise and transcendent way.

All of these stories are concerned in one way or another with love, the arbitrary manner of its appearance, and its life-altering impact. Whether it is the secret love of a young woman for her murdered flatmate; an unhappily married man's violent infatuation with a local waitress, or the long-concealed love of an obnoxious and verbally abusive father for his grown children, Bloom shows us love in all its glorious, painful complexity.