The Blue Flower, Penelope Fitzgerald
The Blue Flower, Penelope Fitzgerald
9 Rating(s)
List: $21.99 | Sale: $15.39
Club: $10.99

The Blue Flower

Author: Penelope Fitzgerald, Candia McWilliam

Narrator: Thomas Judd, Stephanie Racine

Unabridged: 5 hr 59 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Fourth Estate

Published: 12/15/2016


Synopsis

From the Booker Prize-winning author of ‘Offshore’ comes this unusual romance between the poet Novalis and his fiancée Sophie, newly introduced by Candia McWilliam. The year is 1794 and Fritz, passionate, idealistic and brilliant, is seeking his father’s permission to announce his engagement to his heart’s desire: twelve-year-old Sophie. His astounded family and friends are amused and disturbed by his betrothal. What can he be thinking? Tracing the dramatic early years of the young German who was to become the great romantic poet and philosopher Novalis, ‘The Blue Flower’ is a masterpiece of invention, evoking the past with a reality that we can almost feel.

About Penelope Fitzgerald

Penelope Fitzgerald was a Booker Prize-winning English novelist, poet, essayist, and biographer. In 2008, the Times included her in a list of "The 50 greatest British writers since 1945." In 2012, the Observer named her final novel, The Blue Flower, as one of "the ten best historical novels."


Reviews

Goodreads review by Ilse on March 22, 2021

The dream of the blue flower What means something to us, that we can name. People in distress are selfish beyond belief. You must know that people are only interested in their own dreams. The Blue Flower is a delectably rich, multi-layered novel, as some of the excellent reviews (see here, here, here, h......more

Goodreads review by Alexandra on February 18, 2009

A gorgeous, elliptical book, which I was drawn to by its subject (eighteenth century German philosopher and poet becomes obsessed with unattractive twelve year old girl). I fell in love with The Blue Flower just like Fritz - later known as Novalis - did with Sophie, only the book's positive qualitie......more

Goodreads review by Gumble's Yard - Golden Reviewer on March 11, 2019

My thanks to Jonathan for pointing out a rather superior literary treatment of blue flowers [URL not allowed] I read this book as part of the 2019 Mookse Madness Tournament and also from intrigue – Penelope Fitzgerald (perhaps appropriately for an author who only began her liter......more

Goodreads review by Paul on December 31, 2018

Penelope Fitzgerald cannot write unlike herself. The Blue Flower is a historical novel based on the youth of 18th-century poet Friedrich von Hardenberg, better known by his pen name Novalis. Fitzgerald shares, in an uncharacteristic author’s note, that she drew much information from a German edition......more

Goodreads review by Paul on January 06, 2019

Revisited for the 2019 Mookse Madness after originally reading in 2013. Despite winning the Booker Prize and being shortlisted three more times, the brilliant Penelope Fitzgerald was, for much of her career, treated condescendingly by (mostly male) literary critics. Indeed her Booker win, for Offsho......more


Quotes

‘The Blue Flower is a model of what historical fiction can be at its best – when the radical otherness of other times is not merely acknowledged but made integral to the fictional experience. It's also Fitzgerald at her best – elegant, inventive, hilarious, unsparing. I adore this book.’ Jonathan Franzen ‘Reading a Penelope Fitzgerald novel is like being taken for a ride in a peculiar kind of car. Everything is of top quality – the engine, the coachwork and the interior all fill you with confidence. Then, after a mile or so, someone throws the steering-wheel out of the window.’ Sebastian Faulks ‘Wise and ironic, funny and humane, Fitzgerald is a wonderful, wonderful writer.’ David Nicholls ‘An enchanting novel about heart, body and mind. The writing is ellipitical and witty… so that what could be a sad little love story is constantly funny and always absorbing. This novel is a jewel.’ Carmen Callil, Daily Telegraph ‘Her sense of time and place is marvellously deft, done in a few words. She knows how they all walked, eased their old joints. She knows the damp smell of decay of the ancient schlosses. In a bare little book she reveals a country and an age as lost as Tolstoy’s Russia and which we seem somehow always to have known.’ Jane Gardam, Spectator ‘Detail, expertly dabbed in, provides a substantial background for the story of a poet which, it is subtly suggested, is also the story of a remarkable moment in the history of civilisation… It is hard to see how the hopes and defeats of Romanticism, or the relation between inspiration and common life, between genius and mere worthiness, could be more deftly rendered than they are in this remarkable novel.’ Frank Kermode, LRB