In
Like A Cat Loves a Bird, James Bailey has given his reader
a sparkling and witty exploration of Spark's life and work and a serious and complex study of the slippery, playful connections between art and artist. Spark remains as curious and elusive as ever, and
Bailey treats the reader to tantalising glimpses of one of our finest novelists without ever reducing her. I loved this bookBailey must be commended for getting as close as anyone can to capturing the slipperiness of this elusive, restless novelist, an intellectual monster who privileged her writing above all else, who came and went as she pleased, like one of her favourite felines, stalking and toying with her characters, forever on the prowl for a life less ordinary.
I cannot imagine a book I'd rather read, one that brings Spark's fascinating life and works together in electrifying detail and dynamic structure. Bailey somehow evokes Spark's enigmatic style when weaving together the many histories that compose her artistic biography. It's
as entertaining as a thriller and as enlightening as a whole course in Spark Studies, which should exist with James Bailey as the don.
Like Spark herself, this book is razor-sharp yet full of mystery. James Bailey traces the flicker between love and art, devotion and destruction, with extraordinary sensitivity. His portrait of Muriel Spark reveals a woman both brilliant and brutal, propelled by wit, ambition and moral daring. It's a study of artistic power and emotional risk, of how genius can illuminate and consume.
Like a Cat Loves a Bird is as luminous and unsettling as the woman who inspired itBailey's slippery Spark is chaotic, complex, often hilarious, and constantly shapeshifting. His kaleidoscopic portrait illuminates Spark's life and work from every angle, yet - crucially - allows her the freedom she craved to confound and elude those who would try to pin her down.
This is a deeply stylish, astute and illuminating biography of a fascinating writerUtterly charming. A book as elegant, sharp-witted and mischievous as its subject. If you love literary biography, you'll feel like the cat that got the cream
You don't have to be a Muriel Spark fan to enjoy the sharp wit of Like A Cat Loves A Bird, a fascinating and nuanced exploration of the sacrifices some make to focus on their art. Bailey toys with Spark as the title implies - but there's an implication too that so does she, with her biographer and her readers, on the page, and from beyond the grave
Beautifully written ... a r
eadable and fascinating book, about an under-appreciated literary giant