Reviews

Titus Awakes: The Lost Book of Gormenghast by Mervyn Peake, Maeve Gilmore

ellikiress's review against another edition

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reflective medium-paced

halesb's review

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3.0

Like many, I gave this book a shot largely for the sake of completion. I can't really decide what to make of it but it's certainly food for thought.

ezbun's review against another edition

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reflective slow-paced

2.75

emilybryk's review against another edition

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1.0

Unreadably bad, but I read it anyway.

emhanc's review against another edition

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dark reflective sad medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

2.5

richardpierce's review against another edition

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4.0

I loved Peake's Gormenghast trilogy. This did not disappoint. I found the tone lighter, and room for hope in a desperate world.

el_entrenador_loco's review

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adventurous dark reflective fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.25

stephilica's review against another edition

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There is no central antagonist to the plot like there is in Steerpike from the main two Gormenghast books or even in Cheeta from Titus Alone. Rather, it is mostly episodic, where Titus runs into several different colorful characters. The plot’s real antagonist is Titus himself; this is an intensely character-driven book. The first half is intensely depressing, as Titus abandons every single person who helps him, becoming more self-loathing as he does so. The second half is the reciprocal; Titus gives back to society by becoming a caregiver, and then retreats to hermetical contemplation before setting out on his final journey. Dotted throughout these major arcs are satirical encounters that feel like Maeve Gilmore has a personal vendetta against Communists (far be it from me to blame her).

The key to Titus’ character is his realization of agency. First he laments how he abandons everyone but he ‘cannot help it.’ But after he meets the Poet (who is obviously Mervyn Peake even if you Google nothing), Titus wants to change that. He needs a goal beyond ‘wandering.’ And to do that, he needs to understand himself better than ‘someone who wanders.’ So where is he to go to do that? To understand himself, he goes back to his beginning—not Gormenghast, though the prose echoes that with “not a road, not a track but will lead you home”—but to the Ur-Home: his journey ends when he finds Mervyn Peake happy and well. There is a therapeutic aspect to this (Maeve writes Titus finding her marriage during its most sunlit days) but it is also fitting for the character. He had no father, as Sepulchrave died when he was an infant, but Titus has found a guiding figure, which is what he most sorely needed.

fuchsia_groan's review against another edition

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5.0

Poco o nada se puede "criticar" de una obra escrita por alguien tras la muerte de su marido y que al terminar guardó en una caja y no intentó publicar. En la introducción Brian Sibley explica que Maeve lo escribió como un intento de negar que el hombre, igual que la historia que había creado, estaban perdidos para siempre; ella muere en 1983, y es después cuando su nieta encuentra el manuscrito en una caja (Sibley sí sabía que existía, eran amigos y hablaban de ello).

Lo único que Peake dejó de lo que iba a ser la cuarta novela de Los Libros de Titus fue un fragmento, datado de julio de 1960, que constituye el primer capítulo de este libro, y una lista de las posibles tramas para cada capítulo, en la que Maeve se inspiró para crear la historia, además de en los tres libros anteriores y en la vida del propio Mervyn.
El libro iba a titularse Search without end (que es como se titula el último capítulo), pero al final Maeve lo cambió por el título que Mervyn tenía planeado: Titus Awakes.

En el primer capítulo, escrito por Peake, por un lado tenemos Gormenghast, a Lady Gertrude y a Prunescualo, ¿quizás iba a retomarlos? Por el otro, a Titus, exactamente en el mismo punto en el que quedó en el anterior libro.
A partir de ahí, Maeve sigue con la obra, al principio ciñéndose más o menos al esquema de Peake, para ir alejándose poco a poco (tanto en temas como en estilo), juntando al autor con su obra, convirtiéndose más en un homenaje que en una continuación.

Creo que este libro se disfruta muchísimo más si se lee antes A World Away, un libro de memorias de Maeve sobre Mervyn y su vida juntos.

elizafiedler's review against another edition

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2.0

The writing style is nothing remotely like Peake. It's missing all the attention to surprising detail and the whimsy.