Synopsis
A gem of a novel about an affair between a married woman
and a younger man.
Glinting like a moonstone with layers of emotion, The
Man of Feeling is a sleek and strange tale of cosmopolitan
love. An affair between a married woman and a young man
just becoming an opera star (curiously helped along by
the husband's factotum) meets with adamant resistance
from the implacable husband.
Narrated
by the young opera singer, the novel opens as he recalls
traveling on a train from Milan to Venice, silently absorbed
for hours by the woman asleep opposite his seat. In the
measured tones of memory, The Man of Feeling
revolves on the poles of anticipation and recollection.
The peculiar rarified life lived in the world's luxury
hotels, a life of rehearsal and performance, the constant
travel and ghost-like detachment of our protagonist adds
a deeper tone to the novel's weave of desire and detachment,
of consideration and reconsideration: its epigraph cites
William Hazlitt: "I think myself into love,/And I
dream myself out of it." As Marías remarks
in a brief afterword, this is a love story "in which
love is neither seen nor experienced, but announced and
remembered." Can love be recalled truly when it no
longer exists?