Harman Patil (Editor)

The Golden Notebook

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Language
  
ISBN
  
0-7181-0970-8

Originally published
  
1962

Genre
  
Novel

Country
  
3.8/5
Goodreads

Publication date
  
1962

Dewey Decimal
  
823/.9/14

Author
  
Publisher
  
OCLC
  
595787

The Golden Notebook t2gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcQNBIPi33yX4hw2X

Media type
  
Print (hardback and paperback)

LC Class
  
PZ3.L56684 Go5 PR6023.E833

Similar
  
Doris Lessing books, Feminism books, Novels

Doris lessing the golden notebook 2014 audio dramatisation 1 of 2


The Golden Notebook is a 1962 novel by Doris Lessing. This book, and the two that followed it, enters the realm of what Margaret Drabble in The Oxford Companion to English Literature has called Lessing's "inner space fiction", her work that explores mental and societal breakdown. The book also contains a powerful anti-war and anti-Stalinist message, an extended analysis of communism and the Communist Party in England from the 1930s to the 1950s, and a famed examination of the budding sexual and women's liberation movements. The Golden Notebook has been translated into a number of other languages.

Contents

In 2005, the novel was chosen by TIME magazine as one of the 100 best English-language novels since 1923.

Plot summary

The Golden Notebook is the story of writer Anna Wulf, the four notebooks in which she records her life, and her attempt to tie them together in a fifth, gold-coloured, notebook. The book intersperses segments of an ostensibly realistic narrative of the lives of Molly and Anna, and their children, ex-husbands and lovers—entitled Free Women—with excerpts from Anna's four notebooks, coloured black (of Anna's experience in Southern Rhodesia, before and during World War II, which inspired her own best-selling novel), red (of her experience as a member of the Communist Party), yellow (an ongoing novel that is being written based on the painful ending of Anna's own love affair), and blue (Anna's personal journal where she records her memories, dreams, and emotional life). Each notebook is returned to four times, interspersed with episodes from Free Women, creating non-chronological, overlapping sections that interact with one another. This post-modern styling, with its space for "play" engaging the characters and readers, is among the most famous features of the book, although Lessing insisted that readers and reviewers pay attention to the serious themes in the novel.

Major themes

All four notebooks and the frame narrative testify to the above themes of Stalinism, the Cold War and the threat of nuclear conflagration, and women's struggles with the conflicts of work, sex, love, maternity, and politics. However, Lessing herself in the preface claimed that the most important theme in the novel is fragmentation; the mental breakdown that Anna suffers, perhaps from the compartmentalization of her life reflected in the division of the four notebooks, but also reflecting the fragmentation of society. Her relationship and attempt to draw everything together in the golden notebook at the end of the novel are both the final stage of Anna's intolerable mental breakdown, and her attempt to overcome the fragmentation and madness.

Characters

  • Anna (Freeman) Wulf: Writer. Main character of Free Women and writer of the Notebooks.
  • Max Wulf: Anna’s ex-husband
  • Janet Wulf: Anna and Max’s daughter
  • Molly Jacobs: Actress, Anna’s friend.
  • Richard Portmain: Molly’s ex-husband
  • Tommy Portmain: Molly and Richards’s son
  • Marion Portmain: Richard’s second wife
  • Michael: Anna’s former lover
  • Willi (Wilhelm) Rodde (Black Notebook): Anna’s boyfriend, refugee from Germany, based on Max Wulf.
  • Paul Blackenhurst (Black Notebook): Royal Air Force Pilot
  • Ted Brown (Black Notebook): Royal Air Force pilot, socialist.
  • Jimmy McGrath (Black Notebook): Royal Air Force pilot. Homosexual.
  • George Hounslow (Black Notebook): Worked on roads.
  • Maryrose (Black Notebook): Paul and George's love interest, born in Southern Rhodesia
  • Mr Boothby (Black Notebook): Proprietor of the Mashopi Hotel
  • Mrs Boothby (Black Notebook): Proprietor of the Mashopi Hotel
  • June Boothby (Black Notebook): Daughter of Mr & Mrs Boothby
  • Jackson (Black Notebook): Cook at the Mashopi Hotel. Friend of Jimmy.
  • Marie (Black Notebook): Jackson’s wife. Has an affair with George.
  • Ella (Yellow Notebook): Based on Anna Wulf. Writes for a women's magazine.
  • Julia (Yellow Notebook): Based on Molly Jacobs
  • Dr West (Yellow Notebook): Writes a medical column under the name Dr Allsop for the women's magazine.
  • Patricia Brent (Yellow Notebook): Editor
  • George (Yellow Notebook): Based on Max Wulf
  • Paul Tanner (Yellow Notebook): Ella’s lover
  • Michael (Yellow Notebook): Ella’s son
  • Saul Green (Blue and Golden Notebooks): American writer
  • Milt (Free Women 5): American writer (= Saul Green from the Blue and Golden Notebooks)
  • Mother Sugar (Mrs Marks): Anna and Molly's psychoanalyst
  • Tom Mathlong (Free Women): African political activist
  • Charlie Themba (Free Women 4): Trade union leader, friend of Tom Mathlong
  • References

    The Golden Notebook Wikipedia