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The Gap of Time
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2016 alt.TOB -- The Books
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The Gap of Time, by Jeanette Winterson
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This is an ebook read for me.
I liked that the book started off with a chapter called "The Original" which is a nice high level summary of The Winter's Tale. This set me in the mood for reading the author's contemporary version.
I am about 42% through and cannot wait to get back to the book this evening.

beverly -- i am so glad you are keen to get back to the book tonight! i hope it continues to go well for you.

I'm potentially judging this book and I haven't read The Winter's Tale and would feel bad if I didn't read it for background material. However, this adds one more book to read...

I don't think you need to do that or worry about it one bit unless it sounds like fun, AmberBug. That kind of thinking kept me from reading The Hours for the longest time but a friend finally said, no, read The Hours first because you're enjoy Mrs. Dalloway so much more--he was right, because of reading The Hours first I finally got through my first Virginia Woolf novel and actually enjoyed it.
I imagine you'll be fine with the summary and that's why it's there, because pretty much no one has read A Winter's Tale and Winterson knows it!

Thanks, that makes me feel better. This also makes me want to pick up The Hours, which has been hanging around on my bookshelf for a few years. Maybe I'll pick up Winter's Tale AFTER and see how that goes ;)

i agree that reading the original play shouldn't feel required -- and the summary does a very good job in covering it off for readers!!
i hope my comment didn't cause you to feel you should read the play!! i am just a dork and probably doing it anyway, so thought there might be one or two others out there contemplating the same. i did not intend to add any pressure or unpleasantness to the process!!!



If you know a little about Shakespeare's writing style/themes/characterizations I think it will also help in understanding how the author did this in the contemporary version.
But I am one who when I hear that an author's book is based on a classic I understand that the author will bring their own spin to the storyline and I just expect that some of the essence is there.


No problem, I hope that it is playing in your area. I don't think I can make the show here. I wish they broadcast it more than once.


So I completely understand about wanting to read or re-read any of his work.

Beverly, I've taught Shakespeare and Sophocles and Beowulf etc. to high school students and we always start as close as we can to the actual experience of these works as lived dramatic performed works of art, not words on a page. It's so great to see young people just -get- Shakespeare's vocabulary in context because someone just got stuck through with a poisoned sword or is lingering with a lover as the birdsongs change outside the window or whatever. No need for footnotes at all.
To digress all the way off the cliff here I want to link to a clip of my favorite Beowulf performance of all time, by Benjamin Bagby:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PzmmP...

There was another book like that this year that found added resonances when read in close proximity with its predecessor, The Meursault Investigation by Kamel Daoud, a novel that like Gap of Time is not a "sequel," but a deep familiarity with The Stranger would change the novel.
These sources of inspiration don't make either of these novels from 2015 "sequels" though and I also wonder if it's even fair to say a novel should be read in tandem with Shakespeare--it seems like something of an unfair advantage in our contest to include Shakespeare as a co-author!

Just an off the wall example--I read one of our 16 books, Aquarium, immediately after another 2015 novel, Disgruntled by Asali Solomon, and somehow the mental picture I had for the young girl protagonist in Solomon's book wandered into my mental picture of the young girl protagonist in David Vann's book--in my head they are the same girl.


Thanks so much for sharing this.
It shows how wonderful learning can be.




I was excited when I learned about the Hogarth Shakespeare series as I so enjoyed reading and watching Shakespeare’s plays when in school and was interested in what contemporary writers would do “reimaging” his works.
I think it was a good choice to start off with Jeanette Winterson’s “The Gap of Time”, a cover version of “The Winter’s Tale. This is one of the lesser known plays so I was hoping there would be less nitpicking over how the story was different from the original.
What I was looking for was the essence of Shakespeare along with the essence of the contemporary writer to be allowed to be put their stamp on their version. I certainly got that and more.
I was immediately drawn into the storyline and every time I had to put the book down I was anxious to get back to it.
I enjoyed the drama (and Shakespeare did love his “drama”) and the humor and how when I was in the midst of a scene – there was often this sentence/information that would make me stop and think about it. That is what I remember liking about Shakespeare you would be deep into what was going on and/or laughing and a statement would bring you back to reality.
I liked how Jeanette Winterson added her trademark grittiness and bluntness to the storyline.
I enjoyed the Shakespearean references that were included in the storyline.
And certainly how – Winterson had the character speak the line and then added “It crossed Cameron’s mind that this was a perfectly good sentence-adjective, noun, verb. Not Shakespeare certainly, but adequate.”
I so appreciated that for a couple of hours when reading this book I was engrossed with what was going with the characters and did not care what was happening in the real world.



Can't wait to hear your thoughs.
I felt the same way as you did but you said it so wonderfully.

When I read reviews of both these novels-based-on-Shakespeare-plays it's clear people don't know what to make of them. Should they be reviewed as stand alone novels? Or should they be read as adaptations, and judged for how wittily or aptly they transform the source material? What are these books, anyway? Depending on how reviewers decide to categorize them, as novels or adaptations, they next decide whether the work meets the criteria for that category or not.
For The Gap of Time the confusion is all the more confusing because people don't know what to make of the original play, either. From the Independent:
Shakespeare's late play The Winter's Tale mingles fairytale coincidence with psychological realism so unapologetically that some people have always found it hard to take. Not so Jeanette Winterson, whose new novel is a modern rewriting of the story which pays tribute to its imaginative riches and message of human hope and redemption.
I think my own expectations and decisions about what Gap of Time is supposed to be unnecessarily colored my reading of the novel. Also, I think Jeannette Winterson can love The Winter's Tale because she doesn't categorize the play and then blame it for not perfectly fitting that category.

This is so good to hear! I am eager to read the others in the series as they are released as I enjoyed Winterson's so much.

I agree with what you have said.
Because of reviewers having different expectations on how to review books "based on" other books, I had decided for me - what I wanted to see was did the author keep to the "essence" of the book. I expected the author to also be true to themselves and their writing style and hopefully I would get a little twist to the original story.
I probably liked The Gap of Time a little more than you did as I thought the Winterson met my criteria.
And then I also just plain liked the story. Which I think is another criteria to add to the complications of reviewing a book that is a retake. How did you feel about the "original" I think also comes into play.
Glad you are enjoying Shylock Is My Name as I have been looking at an ARC sitting on my shelf calling my name. But decided that I am going to finish with the alt-TOB books first. I can be such a fickle reader about what I am going to read next.

Yes, I like these criteria. I think I read Gap of Time too quickly. I also have come to believe that the best way to read this series is to begin with reading or re-reading the play and then immediately read the novel after it. For me that was certainly the best way of reading Pym at least and I never would have understood the genius of that novel if I hadn't just read The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket.
That said I'm diving into Shylock is My Name headlong, not taking my own advice to read The Merchant of Venice again first.

I am going to read a summary of The Merchant of Venice before I delving into Shylock Is My Name . I know that's cheating in some ways.

I am going to read a summary of The Merchant of Venice before I delving into Shylock Is My Name . I know that's cheating in some ways. "
that's ok--i watched the Lawrence Olivier version while doing my paperwork today--
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0EGBK...


I'm trying to sneak more altTOB's in before Jan and figured car rides would eke out an extra book or two! Open for suggestions! (Already read Delicious Foods so I'll wait on that one which sounds (ahem) pitch perfect!)


I'm trying to sneak more altTOB's in before Jan and figured car rides would eke o..."
This one's pretty good on audio although maybe a bit trickier to follow than some others might be. Girl/Gun, Udala, Sweetland, and Star Side are also excellent on audio. I would avoid Landfalls on audio--good narrator but poor editing of dubbed-in corrections.
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Books mentioned in this topic
The Gap of Time: The Winter's Tale Retold (other topics)Shylock Is My Name (other topics)
The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket (other topics)
Pym (other topics)
Shylock Is My Name (other topics)
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About the Book
The Winter's Tale is one of Shakespeare's “late plays”. It tells the story of Leontes, King of Sicily, whose insane jealousy results in the banishment of his baby daughter, Perdita, from the kingdom and then the death of his beautiful wife, Hermione. Perdita is brought up by a shepherd on the Bohemian coast, but through a series of miraculous events, father and daughter, and eventually mother too, are reunited.
In Jeanette Winterson's retelling we move from London, a city reeling after the 2008 financial crash, to a storm-ravaged city in the US called New Bohemia. Her story is one of childhood friendship, money, status, video games and the elliptical nature of time. It tells in a hyper-modern way, full of energy and beauty, of the consuming power of jealousy on the one hand, and love, redemption and a lost child on the other.
About the Author
Jeanette Winterson, OBE (born 27 August 1959) is an award-winning English writer, who became famous with her first book, Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit, a semi-autobiographical novel about a sensitive teenage girl rebelling against conventional values.
Some of her other novels have explored gender polarities and sexual identity. Winterson is also a broadcaster and a professor of creative writing. Winterson was born in Manchester and adopted by Constance and John William Winterson on 21 January 1960. She grew up in Accrington, Lancashire, and was raised in the Elim Pentecostal Church. Intending to become a Pentecostal Christian missionary, she began evangelising and writing sermons at age six.
By the age of 16 Winterson had identified herself as a lesbian and left home. She soon after attended Accrington and Rossendale College, and supported herself at a variety of odd jobs while reading English at St Catherine's College, Oxford.
Winterson was made an officer of Order of the British Empire (OBE) at the 2006 New Year Honours "For services to literature".
She is a two-time winner of the Lambda Literary Awards. Written on the Body won in the category of Lesbian Fiction in 1994, and Why Be Happy When You Could Be Normal? won in the category of Lesbian Memoir or Biography in 2013. Additionally, Winterson's book Sexing the Cherry won the 1989 E. M. Forster Award.
Biographic Source: Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeanett...
Author's Website: http://www.jeanettewinterson.com
Review in the Guardian: http://www.theguardian.com/books/2015...
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Happy reading!!