California Writers Club, Mt Diablo Branch

Welcome to CWC Mt. Diablo Branch!

  • Home
  • About
    • CWC-Mt. Diablo Privacy Policy
    • Board of Directors, Committees, Awards
    • In Memoriam
    • A State-Wide Organization
    • History
  • Membership
    • Membership Requirements and Annual Dues
    • Join CWC-Mt. Diablo
    • Renew Membership
  • Our Authors
  • Meetings and Workshops
    • Writers Table
    • Previous Writers Table Topics
    • Meeting Highlights
    • Past Speakers
  • Members Benefits
    • Resources for Writers
    • Helpful Editor
    • Critique Groups
    • Events and Member Spotlight
      • Event Calendar
      • Member Spotlight
    • Back Fence Online Discussion Forum
  • Newsletter
  • Young Writers
    • Improve Your Chances of Winning!
    • Meet the Winners of YWC and Read Their Stories
      • 2019 YWC Honorable Mentions
      • 2019 YWC Contest
    • History of Young Writers Contest
  • Ekphrasis
  • Member Directory
    • Login
  • Writers Helping Writers
  • Contact

Michael Barrington’s Review of “Silk,” by Herve Jancour

SILK: A Review

Silk is a startling, sensual, hypnotically compelling novella about a French silk merchant, Herve Jancour’s several dangerous journeys to and from Japan to obtain silkworms from one of its islands. Invited to stay in the court of an enigmatic nobleman, referred to as the “master of all that world might take away from the island,” he becomes enchanted by his reserved and beautiful concubine.

They do not touch. They do not speak. Though their bodies remain apart, they only meet in the presence of the master, or another woman, the reader can feel their vibrating and intoxicating chemistry. A glance takes the place of a kiss, a cup of tea sipped from the same place on the rim becomes an amorous embrace. Even the single note she gives him he cannot read until his return, and when he does, he becomes a man possessed. “Come back or I shall die,” she begs him.

I was spell bound with the story, and the powerful, evocative but terse descriptions: “Once he had held between his fingers a veil of Japanese silk thread. It was like holding between his fingers nothingness.”

It is a small book of less than one hundred pages, but that belies the fact that some chapters are simply a few sentences. It reads almost like a fable, an allegory but written with poetic license. The word choices, sentence structure, chapter sequences and lay out, all create a delicate air of mystery, wonder and unrequited love.

It’s a book that needs to be read slowly, and possibly several times. Words are at a premium. On each of his four journeys to Japan, it’s as if the author had cut and pasted the same section. But a close read shows that he can change a single word to impact a whole chapter. He reaches Lake Baikal which “the people of the place called the ‘sea’.” In his three subsequent journeys it becomes ‘the devil,’ the ‘last,’ and ‘the saint.’

I am amazed how much emotion is conveyed in such a short story. As one critic writes, “it is beautiful, sensual, desperate and heartbreakingly sad.”

Translated from the Italian of Alessandro Baricco by Ann Goldstein.

A must read!

Michael Barrington

Events in Other CWC Branches

Click to Find Events in other CWC Branches
Click to read the latest CWC Bulletin
 

Critique Group


CLICK HERE for information about our Critique Groups and how to join.

 

Our Community Partners

Reasonable Books for partner
Reasonable Books for partner
Art Embraces Words
Art Embraces Words
Our Community Partners
Our Community Partners
Our Community Partners
Our Community Partners

Copyright © 2023 ·Enterprise Pro Theme · Genesis Framework by StudioPress · WordPress · Log in