Margery Kempe (Glück novel)
Margery Kempe is a 1994 novel by New Narrative founding member Robert Glück. It is a retelling of Margery Kempe's purported writing, The Book of Margery Kempe, through a narrator named Bob who is in love with a man named L. It was republished in 2020 by New York Review Books.[1]
Background and publication
[edit]Margery Kempe was a mystic in the 1400s who is purported to have written an autobiography entitled The Book of Margery Kempe.[2] It is sometimes referred to as the first autobiography written in the English language.[2]
Robert Glück published Margery Kempe in 1994 with High Risk Books.[3] It is a work in the New Narrative movement, a collection of experimental writing with queer themes and authors.[4] It is a retelling of The Book of Margery Kempe based on Barry Windeatt's 1985 translation of the text.[5] It centers on its 40-year-old narrator,[6] Bob, who discusses his love of a man named L. in Kempe's style;[7] in some cases, Glück directly quotes from Kempe's writing, though the story itself is set in the twentieth century.[8] Like The Book of Margery Kempe, Glück's novel is mostly focused on the interior life of Bob and the struggles of naming emotions through language.[9]
Reissue
[edit]In 2020, New York Review Books reissued the novel;[10] it included a foreword by Colm Tóibín and an afterword by Glück.[3]
References
[edit]Citations
[edit]- ^ "Sex and the Sacristy". www.bookforum.com. Retrieved 2023-07-21.
- ^ a b Tremblay-McGaw 2022, p. 18.
- ^ a b Burger 2021, p. 387.
- ^ Tremblay-McGaw 2022, pp. 18, 26.
- ^ Bartlett 2004, p. 438.
- ^ Tremblay-McGaw 2022, p. 17.
- ^ Bartlett 2004, p. 440.
- ^ Burger 2021, p. 388.
- ^ Bartlett 2004, pp. 441, 450; Burger 2021, p. 390.
- ^ "Los Angeles Review of Books". Los Angeles Review of Books. 2020-08-06. Retrieved 2023-07-21.
Works cited
[edit]- Bartlett, Anne Clark (2004). "Reading it personally: Robert Glück, Margery Kempe, and language in crisis". Exemplaria. 16 (2): 437–456. doi:10.1179/exm.2004.16.2.437. S2CID 143883101.
- Burger, Mary (2021). "'A failed saint turns to autobiography': Robert Glück's Margery Kempe". Journal of Narrative Theory. 51 (3): 387–392. doi:10.1353/jnt.2021.0021. S2CID 245507412.
- Tremblay-McGaw, Robin (2022). "'A real fictional depth': Transtextuality and transformation in Robert Glück's Margery Kempe". In Hadbawnik, David (ed.). Postmodern poetry and queer medievalisms: Time mechanics. New Queer Medievalisms. Medieval Institute Publications. ISBN 9781501511189.