Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Golding, William (Vol. 17) - Frank Kermode
Golding, William (Vol. 17) - Frank Kermode
FRANK KERMODE
[The Spire] is a book about vision and its cost. It has to do with the motives of art and prayer, the phallus turned spire; with the deceit, as painful to man as to God, involved in structures which are human but have to be divine, such as churches and spires. But because the whole work is a dance of figurative language such an account of it can only be misleading. It requires to be read with unremitting attention, and, first time perhaps, very little pleasure. It is second-period Golding; the voice is authoritative but under strain. The style might have been devised by some severe recluse for translating the Old Testament; it is entirely modern, without the slighest trace of god-wottery, yet it is almost unnaturally free of any hint of slang—a modern colloquial English but spoken only by one man….
It is a prose for violence. All Golding's books are violent;… his basic figure for terror, violence, and bloody creation is childbirth....
[The entire page is 334 words long]
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