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Loading... Tipping the Velvetby Sarah Waters
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. I read this years ago and loved it, but only came back to it recently. As with most early Sarah Waters books, this is about the queer underground in Victorian London, following a young narrator who is thrown into show business in order to be with the woman she loves. Her disastrous relationships and identity crises follow, sometimes takign unexpected turns. It is not nearly as good as Waters's subsequent novels - it is at times saccharine, and her ear for dialog is not always true. But this is a sweet book, and I feel nostalgic about it. ( )Alleen al de titel in het Engels, 'Tipping the velvet'... Hartverscheurend verdriet, prachtige diepgaande liefde (helaas, eenzijdig...), mooie beschrijvingen van Londen aan het eind van de 19 de eeuw en het leven van lesbische vrouwen in die tijd Erotica, historical fiction, coming of age story, character portrait... The book was all of these. There were times when I lost my empathy for the main character, but they were times when she was lost herself. I rode the roller coaster with her and was thrilled as she found herself again. It was a good and daring book. Besides the character study, it was interesting for its historical setting and view of society. A classic picaresque, Tipping the Velvet chronicles the adventures of Nancy King, who begins life as an oyster girl in the provincial seaside town of Whitstable and whose fortunes are forever changed when she falls in love with a cross-dressing music hall singer named Miss Kitty Butler. When Kitty is called up to London for an engagement on 'Grease Paint Avenue,' Nan follows as her dresser and secret lover. Before long, Nan dons trousers herself, and the two male impersonators become a celebrated pair of the stage. But when Kitty betrays her, a solitary, heartbroken Nan reinvents herself as a butch roue - a sort of Moll Flanders in drag - navigating her way through London's seamy and flourishing gay demimonde as she pursues her thrilling and varied sexual education. A really good book for a debut. I didn't care much for the heroine, but the story was interesting nonetheless. Part 3 was my favorite part. Florence was by far my favorite character and I felt as though she brought out the real Nancy and I was happy with how the book ended. I can't wait to dig into Sarah Waters' other work. no reviews | add a review
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Tipping the Velvet, all 472 pages of it, is as saucy, as tantalizing, and as touching as the narrator's first encounter with the seductive but shame-ridden Miss Kitty Butler. And at first even Nancy's family is thrilled with her gender-bending pal, all but her sister, best friend, and bedmate, Alice, "her eyes shining cold and dull, with starlight and suspicion." Not to worry. Soon Nancy and Kitty are off to London, their relationship close though (alas for our heroine) sisterly. We know that bliss will come, and it does, in an exceptionally charged moment. A lesser author would have been content to stop her story there, but Waters has much more in mind for her buttonholing heroine, and for us. In brief, her Everywoman with a sexual difference goes from success onstage to heartbreak to a stint as a male prostitute (necessity truly is the mother of invention) to keeping house for a brother and sister in the Labour movement. And did I mention her long stint as a plaything in the pleasure palace of a rich Sapphist extraordinaire? Diana Lethaby is as cruel as she is carnal, and even the well-concealed Cavendish Ladies' Club isn't outré enough for her. Kitting Nancy out in full, elegant drag, she dares the front desk to turn them away. "We are here," she mocks, "for the sake of the irregular."
Only after some seven years of hard twists and sensual turns does Nancy conclude that a life of sensation is not enough. Still, Tipping the Velvet is so entertaining that readers will wish her sentimental--and hedonistic--education had taken twice as long. --Kerry Fried
(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:57 -0400)
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