The Crimson Petal And The White (Harvest Book)
The Crimson Petal And The White (Harvest Book) book cover

The Crimson Petal And The White (Harvest Book)

Paperback – September 1, 2003

Price
$9.75
Format
Paperback
Pages
928
Publisher
Harper Paperbacks
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0156028776
Dimensions
5.31 x 1.66 x 8 inches
Weight
1.55 pounds

Description

PRAISE FOR UNDER THE SKIN "Michel Faber is a strong, moral voice, and this first novel promises great things for the future."-- The Wall Street Journal "A fascinating book . . . The fantastic is so nicely played against the day-to-day that one feels the strangeness of both. . . . Remarkable."-- The New York Times Book Review "An extraordinary book that touches on the most profound issues of the human condition."-- The Times (London) — A New York Times Notable BookMeet Sugar, a nineteen-year-old prostitute in Victorian London who yearns for escape to a better life. From the brothel of the terrifying Mrs. Castaway, she begins her ascent through society. Beginning with William Rackham, a perfume magnate whose lust for Sugar soon begins to smell like love, she meets a host of lovable, maddening, unforgettable characters as her social rise is overseen by assorted preening socialites, drunken journalists, untrustworthy servants, vile guttersnipes, and whores of all kinds. Named a Best Book of the Year by: People, Entertainment Weekly, and The Chicago Tribune."Gorgeous.... Colossal, kaleidoscopic... Capable of rendering the muck of a London street amid the delicate humming-bird flights of thought with equal ease." -Time"Ambitious and accomplished...nothing could have prepared readers for the sweep and subtlety of The Crimson Petal and the White."--The New York Times Book Review"Tell[s] a good story grippingly and colorfully.... An old-fashioned page-turner with pleasingly newfangled twists." --The Washington Post Book WorldMichel Faber's work has been published in twenty countries and received several literary awards. He lives in Scotland. Michel Faber's work has been published in twenty countries and received several literary awards. He lives in Scotland. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Watch your step. Keep your wits about you; you will need them. This city I am bringing you to is vast and intricate, and you have not been here before. You may imagine, from other stories you've read, that you know it well, but those stories flattered you, welcoming you as a friend, treating you as if you belonged. The truth is that you are an alien from another time and place altogether. When I first caught your eye and you decided to come with me, you were probably thinking you would simply arrive and make yourself at home. Now that you're actually here, the air is bitterly cold, and you find yourself being led along in complete darkness, stumbling on uneven ground, recognising nothing. Looking left and right, blinking against an icy wind, you realise you have entered an unknown street of unlit houses full of unknown people. And yet you did not choose me blindly. Certain expectations were aroused. Let's not be coy: you were hoping I would satisfy all the desires you're too shy to name, or at least show you a good time. Now you hesitate, still holding on to me, but tempted to let me go. When you first picked me up, you didn't fully appreciate the size of me, nor did you expect I would grip you so tightly, so fast. Sleet stings your cheeks, sharp little spits of it so cold they feel hot, like fiery cinders in the wind. Your ears begin to hurt. But you've allowed yourself to be led astray, and it's too late to turn back now.It's an ashen hour of night, blackish-grey and almost readable like undisturbed pages of burnt manuscript. You blunder forward into the haze of your own spent breath, still following me. The cobblestones beneath your feet are wet and mucky, the air is frigid and smells of sour spirits and slowly dissolving dung. You hear muffled drunken voices from somewhere nearby, but what little you can understand doesn't sound like the carefully chosen opening speeches of a grand romantic drama; instead, you find yourself hoping to God that the voices come no closer. The main characters in this story, with whom you want to become intimate, are nowhere near here. They aren't expecting you; you mean nothing to them. If you think they're going to get out of their warm beds and travel miles to meet you, you are mistaken. You may wonder, then: why did I bring you here? Why this delay in meeting the people you thought you were going to meet? The answer is simple: their servants wouldn't have let you in the door.What you lack is the right connections, and that is what I've brought you here to make: connections. A person who is worth nothing must introduce you to a person worth next-to-nothing, and that person to another, and so on and so forth until finally you can step across the threshold, almost one of the family. That is why I've brought you here to Church Lane, St Giles: I've found just the right person for you.I must warn you, though, that I'm introducing you at the very bottom: the lowest of the low. The opulence of Bedford Square and the British Museum may be only a few hundred yards away, but New Oxford Street runs between there and here like a river too wide to swim, and you are on the wrong side. The Prince of Wales has never, I assure you, shaken the hand of any of the residents of this street, or even nodded in passing at anyone here, nor even, under cover of night, sampled the prostitutes. For although Church Lane has more whores living in it than almost any other street in London, they are not of the calibre suitable for gentlemen. To connoisseurs, a woman is more than a carcass after all, and you can't expect them to forgive the fact that the beds here are dirty, the décor is mean, the hearths are cold and there are no cabs waiting outside. In short, this is another world altogether, where prosperity is an exotic dream as distant as the stars. Church Lane is the sort of street where even the cats are thin and hollow-eyed for want of meat, the sort of street where men who profess to be labourers never seem to labour and so-called washer- women rarely wash. Do-gooders can do no good here, and are sent on their way with despair in their hearts and shit on their shoes. A model lodging-house for the deserving poor, opened with great philanthropic fanfare twenty years ago, has already fallen into the hands of disreputables, and has aged terribly. The other, more antiquated houses, despite being two or even three storeys high, exude a subterranean atmosphere, as if they have been excavated from a great pit, the decomposing archaeology of a lost civilisation. Centuries-old buildings support themselves on crutches of iron piping, their wounds and infirmities poulticed with stucco, slung with clothes-lines, patched up with rotting wood. The roofs are a crazy jumble, the upper windows cracked and black as the brickwork, and the sky above seems more solid than air, a vaulted ceiling like the glass roof of a factory or a railway station: once upon a time bright and transparent, now overcast with filth.However, since you've arrived at ten to three in the middle of a freezing November night, you're not inclined to admire the view. Your immediate concern is how to get out of the cold and the dark, so that you can become what you'd thought you could be just by laying your hand on me: an insider. Apart from the pale gas-light of the street-lamps at the far corners, you can't see any light in Church Lane, but that's because your eyes are accustomed to stronger signs of human wakefulness than the feeble glow of two candles behind a smutty windowpane. You come from a world where darkness is swept aside at the snap of a switch, but that is not the only balance of power that life allows. Much shakier bargains are possible.Come up with me to the room where that feeble light is shining. Let me pull you in through the back door of this house, let me lead you through a claustrophobic corridor that smells of slowly percolating carpet and soiled linen. Let me rescue you from the cold. I know the way.Watch your step on these stairs; some of them are rotten. I know which ones; trust me. You have come this far, why not go just a little farther? Patience is a virtue, and will be amply rewarded.Of course - didn't I mention this? - I'm about to leave you. Yes, sadly so. But I'll leave you in good hands, excellent hands. Here, in this tiny upstairs room where the feeble light is shining, you are about to make your first connection. She's a sweet soul; you'll like her. And if you don't, it hardly matters: as soon as she's set you on the right path, you can abandon her without fuss. In the five years since she's been making her own way in the world, she has never got within shouting distance of the sorts of ladies and gentlemen among whom you'll be moving later; she works, lives and will certainly die in Church Lane, tethered securely to this rookery.Like many common women, prostitutes especially, her name is Caroline, and you find her squatting over a large ceramic bowl filled with a tepid mixture of water, alum and sulphate of zinc. Using a plunger improvised from a wooden spoon and old bandage, she attempts to poison, suck out or otherwise destroy what was put inside her only minutes before by a man you've just missed meeting. As Caroline repeatedly saturates the plunger, the water becomes dirtier - a sure sign, she believes, that the man's seed is swirling around in it rather than in her.Drying herself with the hem of her shift, she notes that her two candles are dimming; one of them is already a guttering stub. Will she light new ones?Well, that depends on what time of night it is, and Caroline has no clock. Few people in Church Lane do. Few know what year it is, or even that eighteen and a half centuries are supposed to have passed since a Jewish troublemaker was hauled away to the gallows for disturbing the peace. This is a street where people go to sleep not at a specific hour but when the gin takes effect, or when exhaustion will permit no further violence. This is a street where people wake when the opium in their babies' sugar-water ceases to keep the little wretches under. This is a street where the weaker souls crawl into bed as soon as the sun sets and lie awake listening to the rats. This is a street reached only faintly, too faintly, by the bells of church and the trumpets of state.Caroline's clock is the foul sky and its phosphorescent contents. The words 'three a.m.' may be meaningless to her, but she understands perfectly the moon's relationship with the houses across the street. Standing at her window, she tries for a moment to peer through the frozen grime on the panes, then twists the latch and pushes the window open. A loud snapping noise makes her fear momentarily that she may have broken the glass, but it's only the ice breaking. Little shards of it patter onto the street below.The same wind that hardened the ice attacks Caroline's half-naked body too, eager to turn the sheen of perspiration on her pimpled breast into a sparkle of frost. She gathers the frayed collars of her loose shift into her fist and holds them tight against her throat, feeling one nipple harden against her forearm.Outside it is almost completely dark, as the nearest street-lamp is half a dozen houses away. The cobbled paving of Church Lane is no longer white with snow, the sleet has left great gobs and trails of slush, like monstrous spills of semen, glowing yellowish in the gas-light. All else is black.The outside world seems deserted to you, holding your breath as you stand behind her. But Caroline knows there are probably other girls like her awake, as well as various scavengers and sentinels and thieves, and a nearby pharmacist staying open in case anyone wants laudanum. There are still drunkards on the streets, dozed off in mid-song or dying of the cold, and yes, it's even possible there's still a lecherous man strolling around looking for a cheap girl. Caroline considers getting dressed, putting on her shawl and going out to try her luck in the nearest streets. She's low o... Read more

Features & Highlights

  • A teenage prostitute ascends through the many layers of Victorian London society in this highly acclaimed “big, sexy, bravura novel” (
  • New York Times
  • ).
  • London, 1870s. At the heart of this panoramic narrative is a young woman’s struggle to lift her body and soul out of the gutter. Sugar, a nineteen-year-old whore in the brothel of the terrifying Mrs. Castaway, yearns for a better life. Her ascent through the strata of Victorian society begins with the egotistical perfume magnate William Rackham. Infatuated with Sugar, William’s patronage brings her into the circles of his family and milieu: his wife who barely overcomes chronic hysteria to make her appearances during “the Season”; his mysteriously hidden-away daughter, left to the care of minions; his pious brother, foiled in his devotional calling by his lust for the Widow Fox; as well as preening socialites, drunken journalists, untrustworthy servants, vile guttersnipes, and whores of all stripes and persuasions. Twenty years in its conception, research, and writing,
  • The Crimson Petal and the White
  • is teeming with life, rich in texture and incident, with breathtakingly real characters. "Cocky and brilliant, amused and angry, [Faber] is rightfully earning comparisons to observer extraordinaire Charles Dickens. . . . It's hopeless to resist" (
  • Entertainment Weekly
  • ).

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(729)
★★★★
25%
(607)
★★★
15%
(364)
★★
7%
(170)
23%
(559)

Most Helpful Reviews

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A New Faber Fan

Where to begin? Here's a cumbersome story, over 800 pages in length. And what's more, it's a story that moves at a snail's pace--a story almost as frozen as icycles hanging from a Victorian setting. And the characters? We have William Rackham, a rebellious, unambitious cretin who, after just one visit to the remarkable prostitute Sugar, suddenly becomes a baron of industry by taking over his father's soap-making business, so that he may comfortably support his new toy. And Sugar? She's good at what she does, to be sure, yet her life of degradation has made her a manhater extraordinaire, as evidenced by the brutal novel she's secretly writing. There's poor Agnes Rackham, William's fragile wife, so mentally and emotionally unstable the reader never gets a chance to know her, and what's the point of Henry Rackham, William's elder brother--a man tormented by his faith and his lust for a widow--other than to fill a couple of hundred pages? Finally, the ending is as abrupt as a statement from my accountant.

And yet, I give THE CRIMSON PETAL AND THE WHITE five enthusiastic stars. Why, you may ask? (Notice I'm lapsing into Victorian formality.) Because, my dear sir/madam, author Michel Faber is one of the most talented writers I've ever had the pleasure to experience. Faber doesn't just tell the story, a story set in London of the 1870's, he presents it in full, intricate detail. This book has been called a modern Dickensen novel, and the comparison to Dickens is certainly appropriate when it comes to Faber's meticulous attention to setting, background, attire, and the appearance of the people he brings to life. Yet Faber's descriptive prose is further enhanced by his marvelous mastery of the English language, by his ability to create fluid, flowing passages that are best read out loud, where they can be savored and tasted like fine wine. And then, just when the reader is mesmerized by all the elegant prose, the author will discreetly throw in a four-letter bomb (or other nasty vulgarity). Such a device is jarring, but oh so effective--and entertaining.

THE CRIMSON PETAL AND THE WHITE, with its superficial story and (mainly) unlikeable characters, is carried, enhanced, and glorified by Faber's uncanny talent. This author could make tank manuals enjoyable. Highly, highly recommended.

--D. Mikels, Esq.
19 people found this helpful
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"Watch your step."

Michel Faber's sprawling "Crimson Petal and the White" is, well, what exactly? It's both an homage to the Victorian novels, but with a very postmodern outlook, as well as a critique of them. Does it re-create the Victorian era? Well, not exactly. Does it re-create the Victorian novel? Again, not exactly. Let's just say that while its setting is Victorian, its sensibility is very much 21st century. The author warns you on the first page that his vision of mid-Victorian London may not be what you were expecting, and that you do not belong here. "The truth is that you are an alien from another time and place altogether."

In time, this becomes quite apparent. For example, Mr. Faber presents you with the classic "madwoman," but offers up a reason for her madness that Dickens, say, wouldn't have known about. And his prostitute's heart is far from golden. There's a Christmas scene, but it's far from heartwarming. So beware.

However: What "Crimson Petal" surely will do is continously surprise and delight readers who will allow themselves to be surprised and delighted, while those who resist will be bored. And it won't take very long for you to discover which sort of reader you are.

Clever, maybe too clever by half (although deliberately so), the author assumes the role of guide, as he shows his readers the contrast between the genteel life of a prosperous perfume maker with the ugly (and smelly) life of the lower orders, while he ironically follows the rise of the prostitute Sugar from her brothel to her digs as a kept woman, and eventually to governess in the house of the perfumer.

The author's style intrigues; he tells the tale of the past in the present tense, and he does it with nudges and winks, as he introduces you to the many characters he's populated the tale with. It's sometimes funny, at other times sad, but it's never sentimental.

The plot? Don't worry about it. What there exists of one is rudimentary and often rambling. It's not a progression; it's a complete circle--a ride on a carrousel. The book doesn't really conclude; it just comes to a stop.
15 people found this helpful
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The ending ruined it.

Like some of the reviewers below I found the book held my attention, but was unworthy of it. Crimson is rich in detail, but lacking in character development. The ending, if you could even call it that, was awful. There is no conclusion. It was as if the author simply stopped writing--literally.

I would not recommend this book, even to fans of the genre, unless you don't mind being left hanging.
7 people found this helpful
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Another disappointment

I had great expectations for this book. Luscious style, magnificent attention to details, great historical reconstruction. The first two parts and the characters of Sugar and William Rackam are just great. Then the author neglects the story of the major protagonists to delve in the pityful details of some of the three most boring characters found in literature: the wife of William Rackam, who is languishing from an unspecified illness, sees angels and has fits of crude sincerity, after which loses consciousness; the brother of the protagonist, who would be a pastor, but doesn't feel worthy of it, because of his carnal desires, and pays prostitutes to listen his sermons; finally a member of the Salvation Army (or something similar), a lady very gentle, awfully boring, who suffers from tubercolosis. Reading in details of the lives of those three makes a depressing and boring read indeed.
Moreover, the daughter of Henry Rackam enters the scene only in the final chapter, we almost never see her before, yet we are au courant of every development in Rackham House: seeing her grow would have been much more interesting than the inner torments of the undecided parson ( a character almost laughable).
As for the end, the book halts abruptly in the middle of a rather dramatic development, loose ends floating in mid-air everywhere.And the author, in the final note, is not deigning to explain if there will be a sequel, nor why he decided to end his book there.
Read a real victorian novel, this is my advice
7 people found this helpful
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A Neo-Victorian Crock

The novel begins well, but by page 400 I had gotten sick of waiting for the story to get moving. The author just keeps hitting the reader over the head with the same information. By time I reached page 400, I looked back and realized that any proper Victorian novelist, or actually any proper novelist, would have accomplished in approximately 100 pages what it takes Faber over 400 pages to accomplish. I can't fault Mr. Faber on ambition, just on execution.
Read some Dickens or some Trollope instead. They're faster, funnier, and far more interesting, to say nothing of being far less BORING, than Mr. Faber.
5 people found this helpful
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Such Memorable Characters!

While I agree that this book might not be for everyone, it provides SUCH intense and vivid personalities. It really brings the reader into a sense of time and space (Victorian England) and captures the life of a young (and so shrewd and sarcastic!) prostitute. The language is fiercely detailed, descriptive and at times (for the prudish reader) offensive. Do not read this if you are a prude. Faber goes into great detail about the inner sexual thoughts of men.

My favorite character is Agnes. She evokes sympathy, disgust, and she is just down right hilarious with her crazy delusions.
2 people found this helpful
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Truly absorbing, keeps getting better and better as it goes.

Set in 1870's London, the story of the prostitute Sugar and the wealthy married man William who becomes smitten with her.
Instead of "hanging in there" like I do with so many lengthy books, this one just gets better and better as it goes.
The colorful characters and situations were completely absorbing, esp. the last half of the book. Good dialogue. My fascination with Sugar, William, and
Agnes grew as the story progressed and we come to know them more and more intimately.
A great sense of place during Victorian London where classism and sexism were overpowering. No preachiness or clichés.
I love writing that is capable of keeping you happily wrapped up in a story; quite
a feat for an almost 900 page book.
2 people found this helpful
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Perhaps number two on my list of best books.

In Victorian times, the ideal upper class woman was disembodied; a spirit of gracious selflessness whose perfection was measured in direct proportion to her disattachment from the physical. An underclass of women moved in to fill the voids left by these angels of the home. Cooking, cleaning, raising children and having sex were all relegated to women who didn't "count." This book tells their story, and details an exquisite act of revenge against a man who used these women without recognizing their humanity.

This is a deeply imagined and satisfying book, brilliantly conceived and executed. If you have any questions about the mechanics of Victorian prostitution, down to the hygiene, you'll have them answered here. If you're squeamish, wade through that part and get to the story of Sugar. She is unforgettable.

This is a novel of class, sex, and invisible gender warfare. The story of Agnes Rackham, with its echoes of The Yellow Wallpaper, is heartrending. I'd like to recommend The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox to anyone who is especially moved by Agnes's story, and also Angelica: A Novel.

Those who complain about the ending must have read a different book than I did. I thought the final scene was a stunning comeuppance for Rackham, when he finally understood how he was seen by Sugar, and what exactly she'd done to his life.
2 people found this helpful
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Victorian England as never before!

"The Crimson Petal and the White" contains shades of Anne Perry and Charles Dickens but do not be misled by any similarities, except in the most positive sense. Michel Faber's "The Crimson Petal and the White" is a good period piece, a well-written novel set in 1870s London.

It is the story of Sugar, a 19-year old prostitute who is determined to life herself out of these dismal and destructive circumstances and create a better, happier life. We find Sugar works at a brothel run by the ruthless (yes, even evil) Mrs. Castaway (right out of Dickens!), and we are made aware of her dreams and desires to "get away from it all." And, of course, Sugar gets her opportunity and thus begins this littany of characters, situations, and dilemmas, first and foremost the wealthy William Rackham and his relatives and acquaintances. Faber's secondary characters are pure Dickensian and run the gamut of just about every unacceptable lifeform of the time!

Like Dickens, Faber's theme of class divisions, gender political issues, and other socially significant topics that today seem only matter of fact. Faber, in this 800 plus "tome" pulls on punches and relies upon modern freedom of the press to discuss aspects of Sugar's life that Dickens couldn't have touched (even if he knew they existed!). Still, with this length, Faber seems in control of the plot development, theme presentation, and characterizations. Like Michael Chricton'' "Great Train Robbery" Faber clearly uncovers the Victorian "façade" of propriety and "high tea," and especially the hypocrisy. Those 800 pages may seem intimidating, but actually they read fast, and not because of the bawdiness of the characters and episodes, but because the story, while certainly dated, is one that keeps you reading! ([email protected])
2 people found this helpful
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Truly a book you don't want to see end!!!

A full emersion into the world of late 19th century, early industrial England. Through the eyes of an unusually clever prostitute names Sugar and her "long term customer" Rackham, we see the moral turmoil, social climbing and seedy conditions of this fascinating era. We also get to delve into some details of everyday life, such as the relationships between servants and the households they serve, the role of nannies, the evolution of industry and marketing, etc. etc. But best of all we get to meet some VERY flawed but fascinating major characters. The prostitute Sugar leads the way...she's richly detailed for us, yet her character is elusive nonetheless. Our feelings towards her change constantly, but she is always engaging. A great creation, in my opinion. There is Rackham, a major mover and shaker in world of perfume, soaps, etc. His wife is slowly going insane, and his brother is already mad with the desire to be pious enough to become a minister. I know this brief, haphazard description makes it sound weird, but trust me, this is a juicy story with juicy characters.
It is NOT for children. Parts are VERY explicit, and the general tone of the book is very obsessed with things sexual. But the storytelling is strong and draws the reader fully into its world. This was a book I didn't want to put down...and it's a big book!! I highly recommend it.
Two comments inspired by other reviews here:
1) The ending: it's a disappointment because it is abrupt. It is a "fair" ending given the manner in which the "storyteller" has treated us up to this point, but I admit, it would have been nice to have a little better closure.
2) The device of having a narrator occasionally speak directly to the reader: This sort of device as often used in "older" novels and Michael Faber is using it here to help evoke that era too. He also uses it less and less as the book goes on. Frankly, after about two pages to get used to it, it never bothered me again. I don't know what people are complaining about!
2 people found this helpful