Praise for Instances
of the Number 3
One
Man, Two Women.
Vickers's
portrayal of suppressed grief is masterly. Though their emotions
are in turmoil, Bridget and Frances must act out the mechanics
of living, Frances soothing her temperamental artists while
Bridget impulsively buys a ramshackle house in Shropshire
with
Peter's life insurance money. Woven through their recollections
of him, Peter's story begins to emerge: his first passionate
love affair; his secret conversion to Catholicism; and his
furtive
love for a mysterious young prostitute who somehow forms another
triangle between himself and God, sexual ecstasy making his "heart available to his God in a new way". As he is
mourned it is Frances, in an uncharacteristic act of piety,
who in inadvertently summons him from "the place of windy
dark" to begin his ghostly journey towards salvation.
The women make journeys too, even as new disruptive forces
enter their lives in the form of a charming Iranian lodger,
a tortoise-loving
artist and a Shakespeare-quoting Shropshire chimney sweep.
For a while this is a serious book, it is also a very funny
one,
with characters who could have stepped straight out of an Ealing
comedy. And if the authorial presence occasionally seems overbearingly
all-knowing, the reader is disarmed when Vickers acknowledges
of one many gnomic utterances that "that remark was either
extremely banal or extremely wise".
Instances of the Number 3 is touching, thought-provoking and
entertaining. I suspect it may also be extremely wise.
Mary
Gibson, The Tablet, 20/10/01,
|