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'''''Conceit''''' is a novel by the [[Canadian]] author [[Mary Novik]], published in 2007 by [[Doubleday Canada]].
'''''Conceit''''' is a novel by the [[Canadian]] author [[Mary Novik]], published in 2007 by [[Doubleday Canada]].


Set in [[Stuart_London|17th century London]], ''Conceit'' is the story of Pegge Donne,<ref name=OConnor>Edward O'Connor. "The Poet and His Headstrong Daughter", ''The Fiddlehead'', No. 238 (Winter 2009), pp. 98-100</ref> the daughter of the [[metaphysical poet]] [[John Donne]], a contemporary of [[Shakespeare]]. Other fictional characters based on historical people<ref name=Nelson>Holly Faith Nelson. "Milton and Poetry, 1603-1660", ''The Year's Work in English Studies'', Vol. 88, No. 1 (2009)</ref> are Donne's wife Ann More, the diarist [[Samuel Pepys]], the fisherman [[Izaak Walton]] and, appearing briefly, [[Christopher Wren]]. Both old and new [[St Paul's Cathedral]] (of which Donne was Dean, 1621-1631) and the [[Great Fire of London]] 1666 feature in the novel, which has been praised for bringing [[London]] vividly to life.<ref name=Bartley>Jim Bartley. "Mary Novik's ''Conceit'': A Magnificent Novel of 17th-century London", ''The Globe and Mail'', September 8, 2007, pp. D1, 8, 25</ref> The story is told from the point of view of several characters, including Pegge and her parents Ann and John Donne. Featured in the narrative are Donne's love poems, his ''Devotions'', and his sermons--in particular, ''Death's Duel'', a sermon the moribund Donne preached to [[Charles I]]. The novel also draws upon [[Izaak Walton|Izaak Walton's]] 1640 biography, more myth than history, ''The Life of Dr John Donne''.
Set in [[Stuart_London|17th century London]], ''Conceit'' is the story of Pegge Donne,<ref name=OConnor>Edward O'Connor. "The Poet and His Headstrong Daughter", ''The Fiddlehead'', No. 238 (Winter 2009), pp. 98-100</ref> the daughter of the [[metaphysical poet]] [[John Donne]], a contemporary of [[Shakespeare]]. Other fictional characters based on historical people<ref name=Nelson>Holly Faith Nelson. "Milton and Poetry, 1603-1660", ''The Year's Work in English Studies'', Vol. 88, No. 1 (2009)</ref> are Donne's wife Ann More, the diarist [[Samuel Pepys]], the fisherman [[Izaak Walton]] and, appearing briefly, [[Christopher Wren]]. Both old and new [[St Paul's Cathedral]] (of which Donne was Dean, 1621-1631) and the [[Great Fire of London]] 1666 feature in the novel, which has been praised for bringing [[London]] vividly to life.<ref name=Bartley>Jim Bartley. "Mary Novik's ''Conceit'': A Magnificent Novel of 17th-century London", ''The Globe and Mail'', September 8, 2007, pp. D1, 8, 25</ref> The story is told from the point of view of several characters, including Pegge and her parents Ann and John Donne. Featured in the narrative are Donne's love poems, his ''Devotions'', and his sermons--in particular, ''Death's Duel'', a sermon the moribund Donne preached to [[Charles I of England|Charles I]]. The novel also draws upon [[Izaak Walton|Izaak Walton's]] 1640 biography, more myth than history, ''The Life of Dr John Donne''.


After the clandestine marriage to Ann More that ruined his career, John Donne reportedly said, "John Donne. Ann Donne. Undone." In Novik's novel, Pegge obsesses about their love affair. Piecing together the story she finds in her father's love poems, she identifies with her mother and invents a fiction about their lives. When her father tries to place his two sons in careers and arrange marriages for his five daughters, Pegge defies him, seeking a passion to equal his.
After the clandestine marriage to Ann More that ruined his career, John Donne reportedly said, "John Donne. Ann Donne. Undone." In Novik's novel, Pegge obsesses about their love affair. Piecing together the story she finds in her father's love poems, she identifies with her mother and invents a fiction about their lives. When her father tries to place his two sons in careers and arrange marriages for his five daughters, Pegge defies him, seeking a passion to equal his.

Revision as of 00:21, 7 November 2009

Conceit
Cover of paperback
AuthorMary Novik
Cover artistPierre-Narcisse Guérin
LanguageEnglish
GenreNovel
PublisherDoubleday Canada
Publication date
2007
Publication placeCanada
Media typePrint (hardcover and paperback) and e-book
Pages402
ISBN978-0-385-66206-2 paperback, 978-0-307-37338-0 e-book, 978-0-385-66205-5 hardcover Parameter error in {{ISBNT}}: invalid character
OCLC192053178

Conceit is a novel by the Canadian author Mary Novik, published in 2007 by Doubleday Canada.

Set in 17th century London, Conceit is the story of Pegge Donne,[1] the daughter of the metaphysical poet John Donne, a contemporary of Shakespeare. Other fictional characters based on historical people[2] are Donne's wife Ann More, the diarist Samuel Pepys, the fisherman Izaak Walton and, appearing briefly, Christopher Wren. Both old and new St Paul's Cathedral (of which Donne was Dean, 1621-1631) and the Great Fire of London 1666 feature in the novel, which has been praised for bringing London vividly to life.[3] The story is told from the point of view of several characters, including Pegge and her parents Ann and John Donne. Featured in the narrative are Donne's love poems, his Devotions, and his sermons--in particular, Death's Duel, a sermon the moribund Donne preached to Charles I. The novel also draws upon Izaak Walton's 1640 biography, more myth than history, The Life of Dr John Donne.

After the clandestine marriage to Ann More that ruined his career, John Donne reportedly said, "John Donne. Ann Donne. Undone." In Novik's novel, Pegge obsesses about their love affair. Piecing together the story she finds in her father's love poems, she identifies with her mother and invents a fiction about their lives. When her father tries to place his two sons in careers and arrange marriages for his five daughters, Pegge defies him, seeking a passion to equal his.

The title of Novik's novel, Conceit, alludes to both the vanity of her fictionalized John Donne and the conceit, a literary device used by the metaphysical poets. The metaphysical conceit is a far-fetched comparison, as when Donne, in his poem "A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning", compares two separated lovers to a geometry compass with its legs roaming apart. Several critics, including Edward O'Connor and Gudrun Will, have pointed out that Novik's novel is itself a conceit, "in the best literary sense of the word". [4]

Conceit was chosen as a Book of the Year by both The Globe and Mail and Quill & Quire and as a Canadian Book of the Year by Abebooks.

Awards and nominations

References

  1. ^ Edward O'Connor. "The Poet and His Headstrong Daughter", The Fiddlehead, No. 238 (Winter 2009), pp. 98-100
  2. ^ Holly Faith Nelson. "Milton and Poetry, 1603-1660", The Year's Work in English Studies, Vol. 88, No. 1 (2009)
  3. ^ Jim Bartley. "Mary Novik's Conceit: A Magnificent Novel of 17th-century London", The Globe and Mail, September 8, 2007, pp. D1, 8, 25
  4. ^ Gudrun Will. "17th-century immersion: Donne & Daughter", Vancouver Review, No. 15 (Fall 2007), p. 25.