Miranda Seymour
A Quadrille at the Asylum
The Mad Women’s Ball
By Victoria Mas (Translated from French by Frank Wynne)
Doubleday 213pp £14.99
Victoria Mas’s enthralling and wonderfully imagined first novel is based upon an actual event. Back in the late 19th century, the great gloomy madhouse of La Salpêtrière became an unexpected draw for Parisian society. There were two main attractions, the more outwardly respectable of which were the remarkable public lectures at which Dr Jean-Martin Charcot used hypnosis to present to a riveted audience the spectacle of an attractive and compliant inmate unleashed, under the great physician’s will, into what appeared to be the throes of an orgasm. The second attraction was the Lenten ball.
I’ve been unsuccessfully trying to find out who it was who first dreamed up the grotesque idea of throwing an annual ball for three hundred ‘mad’ women. This was an event at which, magnificently dressed by wealthy Parisians with money to burn, the inmates of an elegantly designed asylum could mingle, dance and even flirt with voyeurs willing to pay handsomely to amuse themselves. The piquancy of the occasion lay in the fact that nobody at this particular event could be entirely sure, behind the masks and disguises, who was ‘mad’ and who was ‘sane’. For the inmates, it was the night when they dreamed of a miraculous reprieve.
The ball scene is reserved for Mas’s suspense-filled climax. The story is about two women drawn together by circumstance and – as it artfully turns out – mutual need. Geneviève, the hospital matron and Charcot’s doughtiest supporter, secretly grieves for a dead sister to whom, night after night, she writes
Sign Up to our newsletter
Receive free articles, highlights from the archive, news, details of prizes, and much more.@Lit_Review
Follow Literary Review on Twitter
Twitter Feed
It wasn’t until 1825 that Pepys’s diary became available for the first time. How it was eventually decrypted and published is a story of subterfuge and duplicity.
Kate Loveman tells the tale.
Kate Loveman - Publishing Pepys
Kate Loveman: Publishing Pepys
literaryreview.co.uk
Arthur Christopher Benson was a pillar of the Edwardian establishment. He was supremely well connected. As his newly published diaries reveal, he was also riotously indiscreet.
Piers Brendon compares Benson’s journals to others from the 20th century.
Piers Brendon - Land of Dopes & Tories
Piers Brendon: Land of Dopes & Tories - The Benson Diaries: Selections from the Diary of Arthur Christopher Benson by Eamon Duffy & Ronald Hyam (edd)
literaryreview.co.uk
Of the siblings Gwen and Augustus John, it is Augustus who has commanded most attention from collectors and connoisseurs.
Was he really the finer artist, asks Tanya Harrod, or is it time Gwen emerged from her brother’s shadow?
Tanya Harrod - Cut from the Same Canvas
Tanya Harrod: Cut from the Same Canvas - Artists, Siblings, Visionaries: The Lives and Loves of Gwen and Augustus John by Judith Mackrell
literaryreview.co.uk