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April 2019                            April 2019

 In  2017  I  stood  for  election  on  a  mandate  that  the  UK  would  be  leaving  the   BERE REGIS BOOK GROUP
 European Union, as voted for by the people in the referendum. I still believe that
 this is the right thing to do, and I will continue to vote in Parliament accordingly.
   For  those  of  you  who  are pleased  that  this  column is  not usually  about  Brexit, I   Our last three titles have all been by female writers, a
 hope to resume normal service next time!   fair reflection perhaps of the Reading Group’s gender
       balance (eight women, two men).
   As ever, if you have an issue that you need help with, please do get in touch;
 email me on michael.tomlinson.mp@parliament.uk or contact my office on 01202
 624216. You can also follow what I’ve been doing on Twitter @Michael4mdnp or   The Goldfinch  -  Donna Tartt
 Facebook www.facebook.com/michael4MDNP
       In December we met to pass judgement on Donna Tartt’s The Goldfinch (2002).
       Moving between the murky intertwined worlds of drug dealing and the antique
       art trade in New York, Las Vegas and Amsterdam, this is a fascinating coming-of-

                               age  novel  in  which  a  thirteen-year-old  boy,  Theo
                               Decker, survives a horrific terrorist bomb attack on a
                               New  York  art  gallery,  ‘rescuing’  in  the  process  a
                               priceless painting of a goldfinch by the seventeenth-
                               century Dutch artist Carel Fabritius, to which over the
                               following  years  Theo  becomes  obsessively  and
                               perilously attached.

                               There are distinct echoes of Dostoevsky in the novel
                               (and  not  just  in  its  length  –  over  650  pages).
 LOCAL MEMBER OF PARLIAMENT    Dostoevsky’s  The  Idiot  is  specifically  referred  to  or
                               discussed  more  than  once,  and  even  has  a  whole
                               chapter  named  after  it.  Yet  this  is  no  pale
 Michael Tomlinson MP         melodramatic  imitation  of  the  great  Russian  writer,
 Michael.tomlinson.mp@parliament.uk
 holds regular surgeries       rather a searching dialogue with him. Thus Tartt takes
 in the constituency.  For     01202 624216   one  of  the  central  themes  of  The  Idiot  –  the  way in
 details of forthcoming   www.michaeltomlinson.org.uk   which  good  acts  can  unintentionally  result  in  evil
 surgeries or to make an         consequences – and turns it on its head, having one
                               of  her  characters  ask  whether  conversely  evil  can
 appointment, please   @Michael4MDNP   lead to good. She then proceeds to answer this potentially explosive question by
 contact his office.   showing through the events of a totally convincing plot how that could indeed
       be the case. The Goldfinch met with a divided response from the Group. Those of
       us  who  liked  it  felt  that  Tarrt  has  produced  a  modern  masterpiece  to  rival
       Fabritius’s’s exquisite painting; others were not so convinced.

 When you respond to advertisers, do please tell them you saw   Wives and Daughters  -  Elizabeth Gaskell
 their advert in this magazine  -  it helps them monitor the   In  January  we  moved  from  the  darker  depths  of  The  Goldfinch  to  the  sunny
 effectiveness of their advert and helps us generate more   uplands of Elizabeth Gaskell’s Wives and Daughters (1861). Lucid, elegant prose,
       infused  with  gentle  irony;  rounded,  likeable  characters;  mockery  of  the  English
 advertising revenue!!   caste system; exposure of provincial convention and hypocrisy: what was not to
       like?  Delightful  set  scenes  such  as  the  Easter  Ball,  where  one’s  social  status  is

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