Skip navigation
London Review of Books London Review Bookshop

Search the LRB

All the words
Exact phrase

advanced search

SUBSCRIBER REGISTRATION

Subscribers to the LRB currently get free access to the full content of the magazine in an online edition. If you are a subscriber and would like to register for online access click here

If you are already registered you can log in from our login page

If you would like further information about subscribing to the LRB click here.

London Review Bookshop

Suspicion of Sentiment subscriber-only content

Benjamin Markovits

  • Hateship, Friendship, Courtship, Loveship, Marriage by Alice Munro

‘It was love she sickened at,’ Alice Munro wrote in The Beggar Maid. ‘It was the enslavement, the self-abasement, the self-deception.’ If that’s her attitude it doesn’t promise much romance for her latest collection, despite its title; and in fact the book describes not so much love as the subtle changes in loyalty and disposition of which sexual love is only one (and not the most important) example. Munro once said that ‘the whole state of being in love is one that I haven’t written about nearly as much as I want to.’ Though this book may seem to be another attempt at it, she prefers to talk around her subject, linking her stories through something slightly different. ‘What on earth is this feeling that somehow things have to connect or . . . have to be part of a larger whole?’ she asked on another occasion. She is most interested in moments of insight and the difficulties her characters (never mind their author) face in trying to connect them. Love deceives partly because it requires constancy, in both senses of the word, to an individual and a state of mind. It’s no accident that Munro prefers short stories to novels.

subscriber-only content Subscribers to the print edition can log in to view the entire article. For information about subscribing to the London Review of Books click here. This article is available for purchase online. Buy this article.

Benjamin Markovits’s most recent novel, A Quiet Adjustment, about Byron’s wife, is published by Faber.

LRB cover artwork

From the archive

Red makes wrong
Mark Ford on Harry Mathews

Daisy packs her bags
Zachary Leader: The Road to West Egg

Touches of the Real
David Simpson on Stephen Greenblatt

In the Gaudy Supermarket
Terry Eagleton on Gayatri Spivak

Writing about Shakespeare
Frank Kermode has his say