Iris Murdoch

1 - I can do better 2 - Jury's out 3 - Pretty darn good 4 - Splendiferous 5 - Awesometastic by 3 people | Log in to rate

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For Everyone Else

My first contact with Iris Murdoch was through the movie Iris. I fell in love with the author through Kate Winslet's depiction. Knowing this to not be an accurate representation of the author I decided to start reading her books, hopefully in order. This is not an easy task as many of her books I was not able to find. Iris wrote twenty-six novels in her life. A few of which were written when she was stricken with Alzheimer's.

Iris was born in Dublin but grew up in London. She studied at Oxford and Cambridge and later taught philosophy at Oxford where she met her future husband John Bayley. Typically her writing is adored by scholars but there's no reason why the average person can't or shouldn't enjoy her writing as well.

This lens is dedicated to the author and philosopher Iris Murdoch and her novels as I work them. Feel free to take the journey with me.

"Language is not a cage."
~Iris Murdoch

Under the Net 

Under the Net was Iris Murdoch's first novel published in 1954 and is one of Time Magazine's 100 best novels of all time. Much is made of Murdoch's philosophy background and how she married it with her fiction writing. And while I do find this present it doesn't make the story any more or less entertaining. The most common philosophical theme in this book is that of truth and lies in communication and how we are incapable of ever telling the complete truth.

James Donaghue (Jake) is a struggling British writer and book translator living in London. The story opens with Magdalen (Madge), a typist and model, kicking him out of her flat in a reverse psychology attempt at getting him to commit.

According to Jake, Hugo Belfounder "is the central theme of this book". Jake first met Hugo years earlier when they participated in a medical research project as test subjects. They shared a room, lively conversation and a mutual respect. Jake ended up publishing a book about Hugo's ideas on the sly. He felt guilty about it and ditched his friend with no notice. Years later, Hugo is suddenly under his radar and all Jake wants to do is find Hugo and apologize for what he feels is a great grievance against him.

Finding Hugo and a new place to live doesn't come as easy as expected because Jake is easily distracted especially when he discovers a planned double-cross involving his Madge, her new beau Samuel Starfield and The Wooden Nightingale (Jake's current translation). Throughout Jake gets himself into a number of extraordinary situations (like stealing an acting dog, skinny dipping in the Thames or bringing down an entire movie set on a crowd of protesters), always managing to get out from under the net at the last moment.

Many think the title of Murdoch's first book has to do with her philosophy background; specifically with Austria philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein. After reading this novel I think it has more to do with Jake's escapades and how he gets so close to being caught but manages to slip out from "under the net" at the last moment.

"Under the net" appears in an excerpt that Jake shares from his published book, The Silencer, in a conversation between Tamarus and Annandine on the theory of why we do what we do. "All theorizing is flight. We must be ruled by the situation itself and this is unutterably particular. Indeed it is something to which we can never get close enough, however hard we may try as it were to crawl under the net."

In reviews, I kept reading about how laugh-out-loud funny this book was but I didn't actually make a peep until Jake met Mars the acting dog and asked it to feign death so Jake could skirt the police. The whole scenario was a riot... literally. Overall, the book was a big disappointment for me but I haven't sworn off Murdoch yet. It is after all only her first book. There are twenty-five more to go.

Add Under the Net to your Book Shelf 

Under the Net

Amazon Price: $10.20 (as of 11/24/2009)Buy Now

Join Jake on his escapades through the streets of London as he looks for a long lost friend and meets an array of interesting characters.

What's in a Title 

Share your opinion on the title choice for Iris Murdoch's first book Under the Net. Which side are you on?

What does 'Under the Net' refer to?

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It has a deep philosophical meaning...

It's a little simpler than philosophy...

 

"We can only learn to love by loving." ~Iris Murdoch

Getting to know Iris 

A Review of the Movie Iris
The focus of this story is Iris and John's relationship and their mutual love of words. It follows the course of their rocky courtship and lovely philosophical discussions to...
Iris Murdoch Interactive Quiz
Do you think you know Iris Murdoch? Here's a little interactive quiz to test your knowledge.

Iris 

The Movie...

Beautifully filmed creative biography telling the story of Iris's life from the perspective of her husband and long time companion John Bayley. It stars Kate Winslet as a young Iris and Judi Dench as a senior Iris. If you are a fan of romantic movies then you are sure to enjoy this film. Here is the movie trailer for Iris.

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The Bell 

"As wise as serpents, as harmless as doves."

This story opens with Dora Greenfield, a creative spirit who has trapped herself in a marriage where the husband spends more time degrading her than nurturing her. She's ran away and shacked up with another free spirit but this doesn't last for long and she ends up following her husband Paul, an art historian, to a small community of God-fearing people who have set up a settlement out side a nunnery called Imber Abbey. This group is lead by Micheal Meade, a man with his own secrets and internal turmoil. Micheal owns the land outside the Abbey which the members affectionately call Imber Court. These two seem like the most unlikely duo to establish a relationship with one another but without knowing it they do.

There are a host of other characters that affect their lives in both positive and negative ways. There's Noel the journalist, Toby the student, Nick the renegade, Catherine the future nun, Murphy the dog, and Gabriel... the bell. A reference to an old church bell buried in the sludge of the lake between the Abbey and the Court is made throughout the book giving it a position of an important character. Dora even suggests as much when the bell is finally unearthed. "She came near to the bell which seemed more and more like a living presence."

There are a number of strong issues throughout the Bell but the most dominant is religion. This is followed by a healthy dose of homosexuality, marriage and adultery. Some sources site a strong theme of good and evil (probably associated with religious beliefs) but I think evil is really too harsh a term. There are no real evil people or situations in this story. It's about a group of people trying to make it through this life as best they know how while dealing with the foreseen, unforeseen and exaggerated bumps they encounter along the way. Murdoch does use her philosophical background to insert interesting questions along the way like: "Could one recognize refinements of good if one did not recognize refinements of evil?"

Iris Murdoch's The Bell is her fourth of twenty-six published novels. It was released in 1958 but takes place in England in the late forties. This is my second Murdoch novel and I found it flows and is much more vivid in detail than her first book, Under the Net. While I felt this book was certainly better than my first taste of Murdoch, as a whole it bored the heck out of me. Seriously, after the first chapter until they brought up the bell I was bored silly. I realized that is quite a subjective statement but if I had not committed myself to reading all her books I probably would have stopped here. Language differences often slow story down: "After breakfast he repaired as usual to the estate office to cast an eye over the day's correspondence (page 88)." Or just unusual, "From within the dog's barking was redoubled (page 53)." And while cliche is perfectly understandable to most I think it's the easy way for someone who was considered such an established writer. Perhaps it is still too early in her works for me to recognize her greatness.

Add The Bell to your Book Shelf 

The Bell (Penguin Twentieth-Century Classics)

Amazon Price: $11.25 (as of 11/24/2009)Buy Now

"A lay community of thoroughly mixed-up people is encamped outside Imber Abbey, home of an order of sequestered nuns. A new bell is being installed when suddenly the old bell, a legendary symbol of religion and magic, is rediscovered. And then things begin to change. Meanwhile the wise old Abbess watches and prays and exercises discreet authority. And everyone, or almost everyone, hopes to be saved, whatever that may mean."

Iris Murdoch Discusses Philosophy and Literature 

Be patient, she doesn't appear until almost two minutes in.
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The Interview Continues Here 

Here are five more segments to the above interview.
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"Some kinds of obsession, of which being in love is one, paralyze the ordinary free-wheeling of the mind, its natural open interested curious mode of being, which is sometimes persuasively defined as rationality. I was sane enough to know that I was in a state of total obsession and that I could only think, over and over again, certain agonizing thoughts, could only run continually along the same rat paths of fantasy and intent. But I was not sane enough to interrupt this mechanical movement or even the desire to do so." ~Iris Murdoch (The Sea, The Sea)

John Bayley On Iris 

John Bayley met Iris at Oxford where he was a professor. He was with Iris for over 40 years. No one knew her like he did. He's written an number of books about her and her writing.

Elegy for Iris

Amazon Price: (as of 11/24/2009) Buy Now

Iris and Her Friends: A Memoir of Memory and Desire

Amazon Price: $13.95 (as of 11/24/2009) Buy Now

Iris: A Memoir of Iris Murdoch

Amazon Price: (as of 11/24/2009) Buy Now

"Love is the difficult realization that something other than oneself is real." ~Iris Murdoch

"We live in a fantasy world, a world of illusion. The great task in life is to find reality." ~Iris Murdoch

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