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Joy D's Reviews > The Black Prince

The Black Prince by Iris Murdoch
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really liked it
bookshelves: boxall-list, literary-fiction, europe, booker-nominee, relationships, zzck, reviewed, favorite-authors

Protagonist and narrator Bradley Pearson, a fifty-eight-year-old retired tax accountant, intends to retreat from society to write his masterpiece. He is about to leave town when he receives a series of phone calls. We meet Bradley’s ex-wife, Christian, brother-in-law, Francis, and sister, Priscilla. We meet fellow author, Arnold, his wife, Rachel, and their twenty-year-old daughter, Julian. Bradley is called to intervene in a domestic violence episode between Arnold and Rachel. After a brief dalliance with Rachel, he believes he has found the ultimate in true love with Julian. Bradley writes about a critical period in his life. He presents his version of events, then four of the main characters offer postscripts to provide their viewpoints.

The reader will need to pay close attention to the details of the story in order to figure out what to believe. Bradley admits that he lies to the other main players. He makes excuses. He does not accept responsibility for his actions. He often behaves atrociously. He seems deluded in many ways. He says he has learned something through his ordeal, and we want to believe him. But he also seems reprehensible and hypocritical in his actions.

We spend lots of time in Bradley’s thoughts, and these thoughts meander into ponderous inner dialogues about life, love, art, marriage, morality, self-deception, jealousy, and suffering. The characters are well developed. It contains elements of both comedy and tragedy.

The story is written in such a way that spurs the reader’s curiosity. I came up with a satisfactory interpretation and I think part of the fun of reading this novel is analyzing it at the end. Published in 1973, this is the second novel I have read by Iris Murdoch. I very much enjoy her writing style and plan to read more of her works.

Memorable passages:

“People who model their experiences on works that they admire are all too likely to be egocentric lovers, seeking to cast the beloved into a scenario dreamed up inside their own fantasy.�

“We are always representing people to ourselves in self-serving ways…that gratify our egos and serve our own ends. To see truly is not the entirety of virtue, but it is a very crucial part.�

“If one is prepared to publish a work one must let it speak for itself.�

“She [Julian] had filled me with a previously unimaginable power which I knew that I would and could use in my art. The deep causes of the universe, the stars, the distant galaxies, the ultimate particles of matter, had fashioned these two things, my love and my art, as aspects of what was ultimately one and the same. They were, I knew, from the same source. It was under the same orders and recognizing the same authority that I now stood, a man renewed.�

“Art is not cosy and it is not mocked. Art tells the only truth that ultimately matters. It is the light by which human things can be mended. And after art there is, let me assure you all, nothing.�

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Reading Progress

July 7, 2020 – Shelved
March 14, 2022 – Started Reading
April 22, 2022 – Finished Reading

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message 1: by Tundra (new)

Tundra Intriguing review Joy. I must say I have a few Iris Murdoch novels on my shelves that I have picked up second hand but haven’t actually found time to read them yet � perhaps I need to make time for them. Thanks.


Joy D Tundra wrote: "Intriguing review Joy. I must say I have a few Iris Murdoch novels on my shelves that I have picked up second hand but haven’t actually found time to read them yet � perhaps I need to make time for..."
My pleasure. I have read this one and The Sea, The Sea (which I highly recommend) and enjoyed both. I plan to read several more.


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