But here it is.
Dear Eleanor Catton,
I read a lot, and I also write a lot, but I
haven't written anything like this before. I suppose this is a fan letter.
I just read The Rehearsal. I think the last time I remember being so impressed
by a writer was when I first read Elfride Jelinek, or possibly when I read Blindness by Jose Saramago. In both
cases I was torn between feeling a huge excitement at the possibilities of
fiction and a kind of yawning terror at the impossibility of my ever producing
something so wonderful. I reminded myself that both Jelinek and Saramago were
established masters of their craft. I'm only 31 years old. Eleanor Catton, you
are younger than me. Eleanor Catton, you are fucking with my head.
You probably think there are all kinds of
things wrong with The Rehearsal,
given that it's a few years since you wrote it. I want to tell you, the book is
note perfect. It is incredibly beautiful, well executed and true. I don't
usually even like similes, but almost every one of yours shows the reader
something new, and does so with revelatory clarity. You put a poet's grasp of
imagery into a prose work, but without sacrificing narrative thrust or
characterisation. How can you craft so many flawless sentences?
The vision The Rehearsal presents of social structures and the way people
relate to themselves is realised with complete integrity. It is compelling to
read. The interlinked stories are all equally fascinating. The structure of the
overall narrative serves the themes at the same time as it triggers emotions
and generates colours in such a way that one could be forgiven for missing how
virtuosic its construction actually is. Your book is brilliant.
Congratulations.
You probably don't even want to hear about
that book anymore. I see from your Wikipedia page that you have another novel
you're working on. I imagine you have other projects too, and it's likely you want
them to be very different from what you've done before. I'm sure they will be
different, and I'm sure they will be excellent. If you are ever subject to
doubt, please don't be. You are what so many of us want to be in this life. You
are a great writer.
Best regards,
Vince Stephen.