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A Mind of Winter
A Mind of Winter
A Mind of Winter
Ebook364 pages5 hours

A Mind of Winter

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

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World War II haunts the lives and loves of three people, on three continents, in this novel by an author who “writes with wisdom and courage” (Ursula Hegi, author of Stones from the River).
 
Oscar is a mysterious Englishman who presides over Ellis Park, a sprawling mansion on Long Island’s North Shore. It is 1951; as the jazz bands play and the ever-present houseguests waft into the ballroom, the war seems much further away than a mere six years. But Oscar is tormented by his own questionable wartime dealings—and embroiled in a drama involving late-night meetings with an official, with whom he speaks German. He is also haunted by memories of Christine, his great love, who sailed to Shanghai after the war. He has no idea of the murky moral depths into which she has fallen.
 
Marilyn, meanwhile, has moved in to Ellis Park for the summer, and is working on a book of her wartime photography. She reminds Oscar of Christine—and he finds refuge late at night sitting beside her in the pristine photographic studio he built in a basement area, deep beneath the sumptuous, brightly lit rooms above. But he suspects that Marilyn has a secret, and this suspenseful literary page-turner unfolds through the point of view of all three characters, spanning three continents, telling a story of beliefs and self-deceptions, and the ways our lives are shaped by both history and art.
 
“In the years following WWII, the horrors of that war reverberate in the lives of the intertwined characters in [this] story of guilt, mistaken identity, and love . . . Nayman’s saga delves deeply into how even those not directly affected are forever changed by war.” —Booklist
 
“A marvelous book that sweeps across decades and around the world to reveal dark secrets locked tight within the human heart.” —Jed Horne, author of Breach of Faith

LanguageEnglish
PublisherAkashic Books
Release dateMay 1, 2012
ISBN9781617751165
A Mind of Winter
Author

Shira Nayman

Shira Nayman grew up in Australia. She has a master's degree in comparative literature and a doctorate in clinical psychology, and has worked as a psychologist and a marketing consultant. Her work has appeared in numerous publications, including The Atlantic Monthly, The Georgia Review, New England Review, and Boulevard. The recipient of two grants from the Australia Council for the Arts Literature Board, she lives in Brooklyn with her husband and two children.

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Reviews for A Mind of Winter

Rating: 3.3108108648648646 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

37 ratings30 reviews

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Beautifully written, an intense psychological mystery/journey. Covering the period of World War II and the decade after, the story moves back and forth in time, across continents, narrated in turn by three of the main characters. At least two of the characters appear to be running as fast as they can from their past lives. The mystery to be solved is who, what and how they will escape.The novel deals with hard to take subjects, but if the reader can persevere, the story is ultimately one of redemption and determination. A tough read, but a rewarding one.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I liked this book. I really didn't know what I was getting into when I started as the publisher's description of a "literary psychological thriller" gave me visions of something this is completely not. I was very smitten, though. The book is indeed literary and psychological but there is no thriller. There is a secret which is easily put together by the reader if not during, then certainly by the end of part one. I'd say the main theme here is misconceptions. Coming to your own conclusions about people and then acting upon those misconceptions without ever gathering the courage to face the truth until it's too late. This is historical fiction set a few years post WWII, 1951, to be precise with some flashbacks to war years. It's told from different narrative points of view that don't come together until the final part.First, we're introduced very briefly to Oscar. He has a problem and a secret. This is the mystery of the whole. Part One then takes us to Shanghai and is the story of Christine, opium and child prostitutes. She mentions Oscar occasionally. Part Two goes back to America and is the story of Marilyn, who is a regular visitor to Oscar's weekend country parties. Oscar is never the main character, though. Barnaby is.He plays a major role on Part One and Part Two, being the lover of both Christine and Marilyn. Part Three is Oscar's story which brings everything together.The psychological character portraits of these deeply disturbed people are what drives the book. The plot is interesting but I easily figured it all out before it unraveled. What kept me going after part one was to find out what happened to Christine since she doesn't come back until Oscar's story brings everything together again. This is a dense book and wasn't an easy read for me, meaning it was slow. Not because I got bogged down or anything but,honestly, I think because there are few chapter breaks. I didn't find the book exciting and yet I found it intense. Since it's nonlinear storytelling I wouldn't recommend it unless you're used to that type of narrating. Myself, I'd like to read her other works. One other novel and a collection of short stories.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Interesting psychological thriller. It was enjoyable but predictable. I love period pieces and this one does not disappoint..
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    It is 1951. Oscar, a mysterious millionaire (whose one true love, Christine, inexplicably abandoned him during the London Blitz), holds court at Ellis Park, his estate on Long Island, where one of his semi-permanent guests is Marilyn, a war photographer. The novel is narrated from the point of view of each of these three characters.Christine's story is narrated from Shanghai where her life took many an unfortunate turn after she left Oscar. Marilyn, working on a book of war photographs while at Oscar's estate, is haunted by what she saw during the bombardment of London and also behaves recklessly. Oscar comes under suspicion for his war-time activities about which he remains silent. A number of questions are the source of much of the suspense in the novel. Who exactly is Oscar? What did he do during the war? Why did Christine leave him so abruptly? How will Marilyn and her photographs "[Tease] the truth out of things" (300)? Only at the end does all become clear.Obviously the characters are scarred by the war. Each of them is trying to escape from the long shadow of war. Each of them constructs a new identity and history. Although Oscar in particular has "an elliptical quality" (183) with "disconcertingly different auras" (184), in some way each of the main characters stakes a "claim to life in artifice and illusion" (303). At one point Christine concludes "that innocence is not something you're born to, it's something you must construct with the scraps life throws you" (80). In the end, one of the characters makes it a mission to teach others " to shape their own lives. Not to be at the mercy of their circumstances" (318).Their perception of events and the selectivity of their memories determine the lives of these people, often in tragic ways. Of course, "Things are not always what they seem" (120). By not providing immediate answers to all the questions, the author places the reader in a position to misinterpret actions and conversations, just like the characters do. This approach is an effective way of conveying theme.The book is not flawless. Parts of Christine and Marilyn's stories are somewhat tedious. I found myself becoming impatient with Christine's constant self-destructive behaviour, and I didn't find the motivations eventually given for it to be sufficient. Likewise, Marilyn's way of punishing herself seems out of keeping with her guilt. (Of course I've never been in either of their situations.) There is some reliance on plot manipulation; several characters send cryptic messages to each other just so they can be re-connected.Nonetheless, I would recommend the book to those who enjoy interpretive fiction.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    "A Mind of Winter" is a story of a certain era (post WWII) as seen through the eyes of three main characters who have been touched by the war in some way: Oscar, a self-made man who became rich from the spoils of the war; Christine, Oscar's former lover who runs off to Shanghai and gets dragged down into drugs and prostitution; and Marilyn, an American war photographer who is still suffering the consequences of all she witnessed during the war. Another character, Barnaby, is also present throughout. He is Oscar's friend and a lover to both Christine and Marilyn at separate times.The story that ties these lives together is revealed only gradually, so gradually that at times the reader might get bored and just give up altogether. Also, although the author is a psychologist, her characters lack sufficient depth to make them sympathetic to the reader, and their actions are not easily understood. Barnaby in particular is a total cipher. Some answers and explanations are offered at the end of the book, but by that time I didn't really care what happened to anybody.Oscar's story is told with much more depth and detail. The story is really all about him and his mystery, and the other characters are just satellites that come into play to emphasize his centrality.In terms of the writing style, the author Shira Nayman clearly knows her way around words, but she seems just a bit too enamored of them. Much of her writing is too burdened down with dramatic coloring and a baroque profusion of ornamentation. The words seem to become more important than the story and its characters.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Interesting premise and an enjoyable read but I agree with another reviewer when they said that this story could do with a better editor. I found the language to be a little too flowery and over the top for such a gritty story.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The description of A Mind of Winter drew me in immediately because of its parallels to The Great Gatsby, one of my all-time favorite books. A Mind of Winter did not disappoint me.Anyone who reads any of my reviews knows that I love books that are told from different perspectives and that reveal a little bit of the story at a time through those differing perspectives, and that is what I found most satisfying about this novel. I liked the different ways the story was told, and I liked the progression of the information that was revealed. I would have liked to have known a little more about what happened to Christine between the end of what we learn about her and her beginning of the girls' school, but I think I was able to fill in the gaps well enough on my own. I do wish I had learned more about Barnaby, though; he could have used his own segment of the book, if I'd had my 'druthers.I find it interesting that the author takes a psychological perspective with the characters; it was quite obvious to me that she was trained to understand some of the ways in which the mind works. The psychology was not laborious or anything - it was seamlessly woven into the narrative, at least in my reading. Some of the prose was absolutely lovely as well.I'm sure the book could have been much longer, had the author filled in a lot of blanks that seem to have been left, but I feel like the story stood well enough on its own and didn't need the extra storytelling that could have bogged it down.I found myself really mulling over the relevance of the poem that served as the epigraph to the novel, because I recognized the phrase "a mind of winter" as soon as I really looked at the front of the book. The poem was an appropriate epigraph, I think, and really added something to my understanding of the novel.Overall, I quite enjoyed my reading of A Mind of Winter, though it was certainly not a quick read by any stretch. It took me a bit longer than I would have liked to get through it, but the reading was worth it in the end.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Serious minded novel that attempts to delve into the minds of its characters as they struggle to deal with surviving WW2. Maybe a bit too serious and overly complex in its weaving of multiple story lines. Held my interest for awhile but ultimately did not take me somewhere new.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I received this book as part of the Early Reviewers program. At the time writing this review, I've had a difficult time maintaining interest in the novel. Perhaps if I pick it up at a later time I will be able to finish it.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    A Mind of Winter was a very interesting read, but it really took until the ending to figure out how the three characters related to each other. Each character's section could almost be read as a standalone, and would have made for interesting linked novellas. Overall, it is rather evocative of other literary works yet still unique in its own right.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The title comes from a poem, "The Snow Man" by Wallace Stevens:One must have a mind of winterTo regard the frost and the boughsOf the pine-trees crusted with snow;As a Canadian I guess I could be said to, literally, have a mind of winter. The characters in this novel, though, aren't Canadian and quite a bit of the action takes place in warm climates. So their mind of winter is not literal, it is figurative. I'm still thinking about that and I suppose that is what the author, any author, wants when a reader reads their work.This is a beautifully written work about flawed people. First we meet Oscar, a rich man living on Long Island who is being investigated for war crimes. He mentions the other three main characters, Christine, Marilyn and Barnaby. Christine is in his past but he loves her still. Marilyn is in the present and she reminds him of Christine. Barnaby is also in the present and he and Marilyn become lovers. All of the novel takes place in the 1950's so everyone's war experiences are still very fresh in their minds. All four of the characters were in London during the war. Oscar worked in a brokerage house where he did very well; Christine was a teacher; Marilyn was a photographer; Barnaby worked in an office. Oscar and Christine met at a language school but neither of them met Marilyn then. It seems as if Christine and Barnaby knew each other in London but that's never explained very well.Christine is living in Shanghai in 1947 and she becomes addicted to opium. Barnaby is also living there doing something with the British consulate. Barnaby and Christine are lovers. However, when Christine runs out of money she disappears and Barnaby becomes quite frantic. It turns out Christine is a teacher to young Chinese girls in a high-class brothel run by Han Shu. Han Shu keeps Christine supplied with opium with the expected result that Christine becomes more dependent.In 1951 Oscar invites Barnaby to his Long Island mansion to recuperate from an illness he developed in Africa. Oscar also invites Marilyn and her husband, Simon, to the estate for a weekend. Marilyn is a welcome addition and she and Simon are welcomed back on successive weekends. During one of these Barnaby and Marilyn become lovers although Marilyn is still desperately in love with Simon.This book is essentially a mystery about whether Oscar is a war criminal but I think the other narratives overwhelm this storyline. I don't know that we really needed the part about Marilyn and Barnaby's love affair. To me that just muddies the waters.Would I read another book by Shira Nayman? Probably because the writing is beautiful and the characters were interesting. I would hope that as she keeps writing she will become better at paring a book down to the essentials.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This book is an ambitious story of three characters interwoven lives following the horrors of surviving WWII. However, the grandness of its scope cannot match its actual execution. The book only has 2 modes: overwrought exposition and intense rumination. Every new scene's setting needs to be painted in heavy layers of ambience and tone, though sometimes delivered in a rather poetic if often redundant language about light and shadows. Meanwhile, every character is overly burdened by their conscience. The first protagonist alone seemingly suffers from every possible existential crisis imaginable, from moral, sexual, romantic, narcotic, of identity, etc. I feel that the entire package is a bit heavy, but I could easily see some who prefer this type of pensive, introspective, romantic and historical literature.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I adored Shira Nayman's earlier work "Awake in the Dark: Stories" so I was looking forward to this work. I found it readable and entertaining but nowhere near as captivating as her first work.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Review based on ARC.I was initially intrigued by this book because its title and brief description made me think of reading a cozy psychological thriller. Fortunately, Nayman moves the reader seamlessly into an intriguing story. I say fortunately because there are portions of the book that don't move the reader along as effortlessly as others, but the initial intrigue of Oscar's situation drives the reader through those less exciting portions.You can read the basic description of the book in other reviews & on the book jacket, but very briefly, Nayman presents a story of mystery and intrigue through the perspectives of Oscar and two women in his life, Christine and Marilyn. Oscar may have committed some horrible crime and may be the victim of mistaken identities, or perhaps both. Christine is his love who has left upon discovery of his crime, and Marilyn is his companion, a war photographer who enjoys the life of his mansion and his parties (it is this part that seems to remind people of the Great Gatsby, though I find Nayman's portrayals more interesting).Oscar's incredibly brief introduction somewhat sets the stage for the reader to be pulled into the overall story. But the book truly starts with Christine, after she has left Oscar, after she has become addicted to Opium, and near her point of desperation. Nayman flits between past and present with ease, and I even thought at one point that the book, written by a lesser writer, would have left me confused and annoyed. Instead, Christine's tale is convincing and understood, artfully written and non-gratuitously told. I felt that Nayman was a little brilliant in her ability to present Christine so well, despite my discomfort with some of the subject matter (for you more sensitive readers, please know that this story involves various types of sexual assault, but Nayman does not gratuitously divulge the details).Then we are rather abruptly moved to Marilyn's main story. It is abrupt largely because it is so very different from where we are left at the end of Christine's "chapter." There is some darkness, but Marilyn is not currently staggering through the darkness, which is (essentially) where we left Christine. As others have stated, her portion is, overall, the least moving, but it serves its purpose in the book. I'm not yet sure if I would have preferred more depth into Marilyn's character, or a quicker foray... And we are finally reintroduced to Oscar. The discovery, the tied up loose ends, the conclusion... well I like satisfying ends. I know it's trendy to leave the reader frustrated, but I appreciate a writer who is willing to actually conclude a tale. It does not, of course, conclude the lives of the characters therein, but it leaves the reader with a sense of satisfaction. I appreciated Nayman's decision and felt she did a nice job of wrapping up this dark and anxious tale.Overall, a thoughtful read, a dark read. I recommend to people seeking something more challenging -- particularly more emotionally challenging.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    "A Mind of Winter is a page-turning, literary psychological thriller that unfolds over three continents." Well, the story does unfold over three continents, however as for being a page turner or psychological thriller, I did not get that from this book. Overall, I thought the book was well written and I did enjoy the characters, yet for me, this book did not grab my attention. It was easy to put down and hard to start back up. Don't get me wrong, while I was reading it I enjoyed it, but it was not a book I had to read 10 more pages or get to the next chapter or stay up all night reading.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I've put off reviewing this book for quite a while, and the characters are still on my mind. To me that means a well written story, memorable in many ways. First, I love the cover with its intriquing picture. The prologue is wonderful - how a mistaken identity has led to an accusation of a war crime. Then the stories of the two women and Oscar swirl around, not really connecting but still influencing each other. Yes, in retrospect, this was a very good book, and I will put it on my 'read again' list.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A Mind of Winter is a story of three lost people trying to make sense of the choices they made in the past. Secrets held by both Christine and Robert lead to misunderstandings that drive them apart. Marilyn is lost after her wartime photograph is published. She struggles to find a reason to continue her work and her marriage. Secrets pervade at Ellis Park that lead to misunderstandings, drama and more questions. All of these stories come together with an ending that is at least partly satisfying. Nayman makes good use of her understanding of the human mind as she brings their stories to us. I was compelled to continue reading to discover the secrets but at times found the buildup to be a little less than I expected. Nonetheless, it was an enjoyable book.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    In the wake of World War II, three characters struggle to figure out what about their relationships is real. One is a photographer, whose iconic photo of bombed out London captured the essence of that reality. Since then, she struggles to find the same understanding of the people around her, including her husband, her lover, and her host, one of the other characters. He has changed identities in an attempt to evade his wrongs while he seeks to find his roots. The third, his lost love, redeems her own bad past and subsequent bad choices once she realizes that things aren't always what they seem and that you can create a new reality for yourself. The storyline mostly flows on its own power. I kept wanting to know what happens but neither was it a page-turner. I wish the mysterious elements had either been stronger, or resolved sooner so the thoughts could go deeper in other ways.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    The book was extremely promising and had a great start, but the plot seemed off putting sometimes and was a bit difficult to get through. However, I do love the writing style and the characters.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    I must confess that I had rather high expectations for A Mind of Winter--perhaps too high for both a publisher and an author I had never heard of before the Early Reviewer group. The description of course brought to mind Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby (my all-time favorite book), with a dash of Evelyn Waugh and E. M. Forster stirred in. All in all, I found the book to be something of a misfire. I always found myself wanting to know more--more specific/sensory details, more/deeper characterization, more setting, even more scenes. I found that sometimes Nayman showed us things we perhaps didn't need to see, while she seemed to gloss over highly important scenes (for instance, there's no full-fleshed scene of Christine beginning to work with the girls Han Shu's manor, only a brief and coasting summary). At times I had trouble believing lines of dialogue, and from time to time the characters' internal thoughts seemed too sentimental/precious to the author (which I guess is another symptom of weak characterization). There were a few moments of a glowing clarity of real and beautiful style, but for the most part I found myself disappointed in this novel and the stories that it had to tell.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    This book got off to a very promising start for me. Nayman's initial narrator (Oscar) said something that gave me an instant feeling of connection. But, after only a few pages with this narrator, and just as things are starting to get interesting, we are abruptly thrust into a new time and place, and given a narrator (Christine) with whom I not only felt no connection, but couldn't even bring myself to be really interested in at all. I was so turned off by this section of the book, that I had a hard time feeling any investment in the the next section, even though I felt at least some connection with this third narrator (Marilyn). Both Christine and Marilyn hint at some dark secret from Oscar's past that they think they know, though both do it in such a jumpy, pseudo-tantalizing fashion that by the time we hear Oscar's voice again I was more relieved that all the games were coming to an end than actually interested in what the secret was.It's a shame that the story felt so herky-jerky, because I think that if Nayman had kept Oscar's voice as the sole narrator throughout the book her story would have had the emotional impact she was going for. Instead, by throwing in so many extraneous plot points and red herrings (Christine's opium addiction and Marilyn's conflicting feelings about her wartime photography, among others) she's declawed what could have been a powerful story.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    No, I don't think I liked this one, and could only give it a tepid recommendation.Here's why:* Of the main characters, Barnaby's story was not told.* Told first-person from three people, Marilyn and Christine had the same "voice." Thankfully, Oscar's voice was distinct.* Although set in 1951, the author seems to have rather placed it in the time period of Gatsby or today. (Did any Christmas tree lights have "tiny bulbs" in 1951?)* I didn't particularly like the characters. Having said that, Ms. Nayman does compose some beautiful sentences. It's too bad that so large a proportion of sentences had such a large proportion of adjectives. The "mystery" does keep the reader turning pages, but in the end disappoints.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A Mind of Winter is primarily about three main characters, Christine, Marilyn, and Oscar, and their lives in the years after World War II. Over 60 million people died in the war, and death plays an important role in the story. Oscar is haunted by the likely deaths of his family members at the hands of Nazis. Marilyn is haunted by the photo she has taken of a boy in London who has lost his entire family. Christine spends the first part of the book slowly killing herself, unsuccessfully, with opium addiction. The real story is about the connection between Oscar and Christine and how this story ties them all together. They had been lovers in London after Oscar went there to flee Nazi Germany. A chance discovery by Christine would lead to their separation and Oscar's meeting Marilyn. The nature of this discovery and what happened to Christine after she left Oscar is the ultimate payoff that keeps the reader interested in the novel. Overall, I enjoyed this novel. Most of the characters had some depth and most of the book was compelling enough to keep me reading. The middle section, however, did bog down a bit. The Barnaby character was very superficially drawn. I would have liked to have known more about his back story and how he fit into the lives of the characters outside of simply being someone who knew and loved them all and helped tie them together. Because of this, the middle section that focused almost entirely on Marilyn's relationship with him tended to bog down a bit. I got the sense that Nayman rushed through that section and didn't put as much time into it as the first and third sections of the book. She should have spent more time explaining why Barnaby was the way he was.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I won this book through LibraryThing Early Reviewers.It's different, well-written, mysterious, full of heavy atmosphere. There's a line near the end that Oscar asks: "What crime is there in self-preservation?" that encapsulates the novel's exploration. Three characters, Oscar, Marilyn, and Christine (plus Barnaby in everyone's background), are searching for their own way to deal with the circumstances they have been given. Drugs, sex, the blackmarket, are some of the options they explore in London, Shanghai, and Long Island (pre, during, and post- world war II).The novel is deep and intense, and could certainly be re-read and studied deeply to mine it for all of its nuances and themes. I liked it because it was unexpected and original.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This book is about choices. Oscar, Christine, Marilyn and Barnaby are all affected by the choices they make. Oscar by putting on a Nazi uniform to escape persecution, Christine by stopping Robert(Oscar) from telling his story, Marilyn by taking the photograph and Barnaby by being a playboy.The book as a whole kept me reading to the end, although there were parts that bogged down and were a bit of a struggle to get through. I found myself anticipating outcomes that did not emerge which made me want to continue just to see what the actual outcome was. It was satisfying in the end to have all the different stories explained.Overall a good read .
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I went into this book expecting (like apparently several others) it to be like Great Gatsby with some other things mixed in. It was similar, with drawn out characters and flowery language, but it didn't quite draw me in as much as I'd hoped. Kind of boring in parts, but not a terrible read overall.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Honestly, this book surprised me. The only way I can explain it is as a combination of The Great Gatspy and an Agatha Christie novel (minus the murder-mystery). The story itself reminds me of something very Gatspy-esque, whereas the scenes and details are something from Christie. The three sections of the book weave nicely together, although it isn't clear until somewhere in the middle of the second section as to where and how. Overall, the story is about memory, and not necessarily specific ones. And although I understand that the idea of memory is the main subject coursing through the pages, I found myself confused at more than one occasion with the jumping from present to past without any notice (although I guess that was the point). By the end of the story I could understand the meaning behind it, but before it just made me slightly confused. A good read though, for those who enjoyed The Great Gatspy especially.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A psychological affair narrated by 3 characters (Oscar, Marilyn and Christine) that are tied together by a fourth (Barnaby). All three carry a personal life experience that has defined them beyond each’s understanding until time and their inter-personal relationships between each other exposes to each the gravity of their past. Although there is a traditional storyline told here, the real story is how each deals with their past, how it impacts the decisions they make, and ultimately the path they find themselves on. So not what happened, but rather why it happened.Nayman’s writing keeps you very involved, keeping you guessing as she slowly exposes the pieces to the puzzle of each character’s history. I found the book very absorbing, wanting to turn the page to learn more about the source of Oscar, Maryland and Christine’s scares. This isn't a Happily Ever After ending, but instead something we'd expect in our own lives. I thoroughly enjoyed this book.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This novel is mostly set in 1951 and describes the paths it’s three main characters have taken in the war's aftermath. Christine, formerly a teacher at a girl's private school in England, has fled to Shanghai, ostensibly after uncovering a horrible secret about the first man she had ever let herself fall in love with. She is a gorgeous woman and used to having men bend over backwards to accommodate her, but Han Shu, the owner of the upscale bar she’s been frequenting decides her credit is no longer valid in his establishment, and Christine, who's come to the last of her meagre teacher-salary savings, is desperately in want of a means to earn a living. Her most pressing need is feeding the opium addiction which has taken over her life, and against her better judgment, she finds herself accepting a job from Han Shu, who hires her to give private instruction in a home he keeps in a run-down neighbourhood, presumably an establishment to help young orphaned girls. Meanwhile in Long Island, Oscar is a fabulously wealthy man with a sprawling domain on the beachfront, and a house which is always filled with guests. We know little about his past when the story begins, only that he’s an Englishman, that "Oscar" is an assumed identity and that he's never gotten over the aforementioned Christine. As the story evolves, we come to learn about his complicated past, how he built his fortune after the war, and what role Christine played in his life. One semi-permanent fixture in his home is Marilyn, a photographer who’s made a name for herself with the harrowing images captured in London during the war. She escapes from her Manhattan residence weekly to Oscar’s swank retreat to sort out her work and what she fears are too strong feelings for her husband to find some kind of solace in the arms of one of Oscar‘s friends.I rather enjoyed this complex and mysterious novel and the morally skewed individuals who people it, each with their own reasons to lie and deceive, each with their own share of light and shade. The settings she creates for them are convincing, and they are believable as complex, living, breathing characters, even though at times they seem almost too archetypal. The prose flowed easily, save for a few awkward moments when it seemed Nayman had tried too hard to reach for poetic imagery and came up short, but overall, and unlike many other reviewers, I found this to be a very good novel and well worth my while.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I received [A Mind of Winter] as a LT Early Reviewers book. To be honest, I wasn’t that excited about this book, but it turned out to be very enjoyable and I’m glad I read it. This novel takes place in the immediate aftermath of WWII. Oscar has moved to America and from the beginning it is made clear that he has changed his identity and that he is hiding something. His story, and his family’s, is gradually revealed along the way. His life is intertwined with two women. Christine is a British woman who he had a relationship with after meeting her through English language classes that she taught to people housed in an Internment Camp that Oscar (named Robert at the time) was part of. Christine leaves England abruptly after seeming to discover something evil in Robert’s past. She travels to Shanghai where she falls deeper and deeper into an opium addiction and seems to be lost. The other woman central to the book is Marilyn, a photographer whose war-time pictures affect Oscar deeply. She is struggling with her own demons, trying to come to terms with the real world behind her photographs. All of the characters in this book are haunting. The plot is interesting – exotic at times, but also familiar. There are nods to [The Great Gatsby] when Oscar moves to America and sets up a summer estate where he invites friends for the weekend, Marilyn included. The opulence and laziness of that setting definitely reminded me of [Fitzgerald’s] work. Where the book fails a bit is in the ending. With a book like this, I actually would have liked a few more loose ends to remain. The plot gets tied up a bit too nicely for my taste. I also thought that the characters could have been tied together more strongly – especially getting Marilyn into the main story – and the theme of coincidences could have been more flushed out. Overall, though, this was a pleasant surprise. There’s a good amount of suspense and it kept my interest to the end.

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A Mind of Winter - Shira Nayman

Acknowledgements

Warm thanks to Johnny Temple at Akashic, game-changer and visionary; also to Johanna Ingalls and the rest of Akashic’s team. I’m grateful as well to Erin Cox for finding this book its home. My deep gratitude and love go to my family: Lucas, Juliana and Louis, my mother Doreen, my late father Jack, sisters Michèle and Ilana, and brother Marc.

This project has been assisted by the Australian government through the Australia Council for the Arts, its arts funding and advisory body.

This is a work of fiction. All names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to real events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

Published by Akashic Books

© 2012 by Shira Nayman

eISBN-13: 978-1-61775-116-5

ISBN-13: 978-1-61775-103-5

Library of Congress Control Number: 2011960948

All rights reserved

First printing

Akashic Books

PO Box 1456

New York, NY 10009

info@akashicbooks.com

www.akashicbooks.com

To Michèle Nayman and Andrea Masters who helped me find this book

The Snow Man, by Wallace Stevens

One must have a mind of winter

To regard the frost and the boughs

Of the pine-trees crusted with snow;

And have been cold a long time

To regard the junipers shagged with ice,

The spruces rough in the distant glitter

Of the January sun; and not to think

Of any misery in the sound of the wind,

In the sound of a few leaves,

Which is the sound of the land

Full of the same wind

That is blowing in the same bare place

For the listener, who listens in the snow,

And, nothing himself, beholds

Nothing that is not there and the nothing that is.

CONTENTS

TITLE PAGE

COPYRIGHT PAGE

PROLOGUE: Oscar

PART I: Christine

CHAPTER ONE

CHAPTER TWO

CHAPTER THREE

PART II: Marilyn

CHAPTER FOUR

CHAPTER FIVE

CHAPTER SIX

PART III: Oscar

CHAPTER SEVEN

CHAPTER EIGHT

CHAPTER NINE

CHAPTER TEN

CHAPTER ELEVEN

PROLOGUE

Oscar

The North Shore of Long Island. Late Summer, 1951.

Ido not fail to see the irony in it—being taken, once again, for someone else. Of course, the circumstances this time could not be more different.

Anyone who has traveled much knows the curiosity of catching sight on a foreign street of someone you’re certain you know, or knew long ago. It’s not a vague similarity of features that seizes your attention but something specific: the exact angle of the protruding teeth, the way the lips pull back with the smile to reveal too much gum; or the elongation of a forehead, the hairline too even. Of all people, you wonder, what could your schoolteacher from decades ago, with his inimitable gait, be doing here? Though you know that by now the teacher, who was old then, must surely be dead. You conclude there must be a finite number of physicalities, of shapes of jaws and brows, of ways a limp can set in or a mouthful of teeth can crowd. You don’t however imagine this to be true, too, of you—that your form is a composite of human parts that, meted out to an unknown individual somewhere else, have achieved a similar effect: that in a distant country you will never visit, a person you once knew will think that a stranger he sights on the street is you.

Or, as in my present troubling case, that the specifics of my own features would evoke so precisely, so insistently—in the eyes not of one person, if my visitor is to believed, but of several—the exact image of someone else. And for this to have happened not once in my life, fluke enough, but twice? In two far-flung countries, involving a likeness to two different people—and me, leading two wholly disconnected lives?

I could not begin to defend myself against the present accusation. I would not presume even to try. My visitor has not been unfriendly: on the contrary. He maintains a posture of respect, bows when he greets me and again when he leaves. He is careful to phrase things in the interrogative, and makes liberal use of the words alleged and supposed and perhaps. He keeps impulse and enthusiasm at bay, prides himself on reaching conclusions through careful compilation of fact. A thoughtful and diligent young man; I bear him no malice.

His office appears to be sparing no expense in the investigation. He, too, is an immigrant. I cannot help noting how comfortable he seems; he carries himself as if he belongs.

Though I have not angled for such declarations, he has on several occasions assured me that no legal action will proceed unless they are absolutely certain—Beyond, as he put it, breaking into American idiom, the shadow of a doubt. I am impressed by the sense of security I have in being an American citizen.

Never once has he asked if the accusations are true. This makes me feel oddly safe—as if he were not a representative of the prosecutor but, rather, my lawyer. This is unfortunate. For one thing, it contributes to a sense of myself as a criminal. It is also likely to put me off guard.

It was clear from the moment I opened the door that evening, three weeks ago, to find Wallace standing there with the stranger, that something sinister was afoot. For Wallace to disturb me at that late hour—11:48 p.m., I checked my wristwatch when I heard the tap on the door—was unprecedented. And then, there was the grimness I sensed beneath Wallace’s professional reserve, as if he could see some danger barreling toward me but was powerless to stop it.

When the young man, with his fastidious good looks and elegant attire, addressed me in German, I knew that Wallace’s fear had not been misplaced. These people know what they are doing: the ambush, the trump card played first, before their subject is even aware that a high-stakes game is under way. Instinctively, I knew I didn’t stand a chance; one cannot undo the reflexive indication of comprehension that surely shows in the face upon hearing one’s mother tongue. Pretending I did not speak German would have been pointless; I had sense enough to realize that.

Sitting behind my desk, looking across at the tapestry of the fox hunt which I’d bought from my antique dealer in London a few months before setting sail for New York, the sound of the German issuing from my own lips seemed like a violation. It was a Tuesday night, so there were virtually no houseguests about, except for Marilyn, who had only lately accepted my invitation to move in for the rest of the summer, and Barnaby, at the tail end of his recuperation. I was aware, however, of the danger—that someone might hear us, that someone might hear us speaking German. When I could no longer tolerate the strain, I switched to English, attempting as much nonchalance as the situation would allow. Thankfully, my visitor followed suit, without a remark.

Since then, it has become, for me, a bit of a game. My visitor begins each meeting by addressing me in German; I wait until an apt moment presents itself and then slip into English. I have perhaps invested this aspect of our meetings with too much significance, as if I am in danger only while speaking German, regaining a return to safety the moment the world is again cast in the language of my adopted country, the only language I have spoken—until my visitor first appeared three long weeks before today—since alighting on American soil almost six years ago.

The fact is, there may never again be, for me, safe ground of any kind. This realization infuses everything; it is as if someone has placed before me a screen of acrid smoke, sickening my senses and tainting the world I have so carefully pieced together. When I walk, now, in the gardens, the flowers appear remote, closed to me, as if I had done them, too, some wrong. The halls of my beloved house seem either painfully empty or painfully crowded: when I am alone, they echo with isolation; on weekends, when the guests abound, I feel A Mind Winter encroached upon. Even the woods, where I have always found peace, seem alive with disruption—the birdcalls too shrill, the leaf cover too dense, the occasional scuttlings underfoot now alive with threat. I feel ridiculous, and yet find myself creeping about in a state of diffuse fear, afraid that I will be bitten or stung, or else set upon by some official or artist I invited months ago from the vantage of my prior sportive, socializing self.

I have no intention, however, of canceling any of the planned festivities. It would likely draw attention, even suspicion. The only moments of equanimity I can still count on are my late-night visits to the basement studio where Marilyn is working on the catalog for her exhibition. I know it is a refuge for her too—from the goings-on of the house, from the strains of her marriage, and the affair I suspect she has embarked upon with Barnaby. As she works, I simply sit, and either read or think.

Marilyn reminded me of Christine from the moment we met—on the second-floor landing, I recall. Though opposite in coloring (Marilyn, dark; Christine, fair), there was something uncannily similar about their eyes: a distinctive quality of both vibrancy and distress, a vitality shot through with unease. Perhaps it was this likeness that made me feel immediately at home with Marilyn. I am not a person who readily makes attachments.

In any event, I find myself seeking Marilyn’s company more and more. Her simultaneous presence and distance is calming; she is both absorbed in her work and also aware of my troubled state, concerned while showing a deep respect for my privacy. Bless her.

And yet, being with Marilyn also makes me more keenly aware of the span of years during which I have willed Christine from my consciousness. I have come to realize, through Marilyn, that despite my efforts to devote myself single-mindedly to my new life—which is to say, life without Christine—Christine has in fact been there all along, stored, with care, in the attic of my soul.

It was with Christine that I crossed from purgatory and rejoined the living. I do not know why she chose to flee; perhaps I never will. This no longer torments me as it once did. I soothe myself with thoughts of Christine’s new life across the farthest ocean, in China: a culture that could not be more different from that of her native England. Surely she found the peace she was seeking—the peace that for some reason she was not able to find with me. I see her dressed in crisp cotton, engrossed in a book while sipping oolong tea in a stately, colonial club, relieved of the Shanghai heat by a giant wooden fan circling overhead. Her face, smoothed of its disquiet, now gives full play to her unusual beauty.

I dwell for long moments on such images: not to punish myself, but only that I might touch Christine protectively in my mind’s eye, that I might whisper on her image a blessing. A paltry blessing, to be sure, given its source, one that begs forgiveness at the same time as it bestows whatever sorry sparks of hope I have left in this heavy chest. It is all I have to give.

Did I have to lose her, so that she might find herself and flourish? Is this to be the case, too, with Marilyn?

We could not be more different from one another—Christine, Marilyn, and I. And yet, I see us as three comparable figures, up against the same squall. Only this too: I may be battling alongside them, but I am also the eye of the storm, the terrible, still center. Not merely one of the hurricane’s combatants, but somehow also its source, and therefore, as it happens, a void, which is to say, nothing at all.

That first meeting with the visitor seemed interminable, though it was probably no more than an hour. For the first half of it we were speaking at cross-purposes, a dark version of an Oscar Wilde comedy. All the time he was talking about the accusation, I simply assumed that I had been found out, that the visitor had come to discuss the paintings. Why would I not? Harboring such a secret—one that cuts to the quick of your being—can turn the world to a parliament of watchful eyes, and fill every unexpected situation with the threat of discovery.

When I finally realized my mistake, that this meeting had nothing to do with the selling of the paintings—that my visitor in fact appeared to have no inkling of that sorry excursion of mine into more than murky waters—I felt a rush of relief. This lasted the merest flash of a second, followed, as it had to be, by the understanding that what I stand accused of makes child’s play of those particular dealings of mine.

I stand accused of murder. A crime of war. A crime, to be precise, against Humanity.

PART I

Christine

Shanghai. Summer, 1947.

CHAPTER ONE

There were times, back home, when the beauty of things willfully withdrew. The grounds of the school where I taught would become suddenly aloof, the old stone paths confusing, the great leafy trees as distant as the hundred or more years they held aloft. Sitting on a bench in the sun, a chill would settle on my skin beneath the layers of my clothes. England, I remember thinking, looking out from my rooms at the slow gray drizzle that would hang for days in the air like a pinched complaint. It is England against which nature is closing herself off.

It was different here, the rain never drizzled; it released in ardent torrents from a thick sea-green sky. And the heat, always the heat.

Yes, it is true that the civil unrest was beginning to bleed into Shanghai—betrayals and shifting allegiances, warlords posturing threat, late-night clashes on the street that readily erupted into violence. Still, it seemed unthinkable that Mao’s thugs would prevail. I kept to the Foreign Quarter, which remained fairly free of disturbance. Compared with the nightly bombings I’d endured in London, along with the sense of constant danger from a fierce and unitary enemy, the situation in Shanghai seemed of a different order: scattered and avoidable. Besides, I had other things on my mind.

How could I describe the mornings? Before the first pipe, when along with my tea I savored the soft gnawing that felt akin to hunger but was really a condition of the spirit.

I sat in my room awaiting Barnaby—opened the window, breathed in the odor of stagnant pools and decaying timber. I crossed my arms on the sill and looked out onto the street. Here, in place of ancient trees, were saplings as spindly and spotted with sores as the children who hopped about in the alleys, and I thought I saw in them the same urchin cheer.

It had been dry all morning, long enough for a handful of misshapen birds to gather on the broken ledge of the building next door. Without warning, water splashed in bucketfuls from the sky; in a commotion of screeching and awkward flapping, the birds rose as one and disappeared over the roof. Glancing back down at the street, I sighted Barnaby rounding the corner, his collar raised—pointlessly, force of habit, I guessed—against the soaking rain. Before crossing the street, he paused; there was no traffic, save for a passengerless rickshaw being pulled slowly along, and two men on bicycles, crisscrossing the roadway to avoid potholes that had already turned to glossy black pools. Even through the downpour I could see that Barnaby, hands shoved into his pockets, the water splashing up around him, was frowning. This surprised me; I did not think of Barnaby as a man who was easily perturbed.

I knew what would ensue when Barnaby finally climbed the three flights to my room, knew the sequence as well as if I had just witnessed it played by actors on a stage. He would peel off his wet clothes, put on the silk bathrobe I kept for him behind the door of the water closet, and emerge looking fresh, his wet hair combed away from his face. He would look at me with amused eyes and spin me around the room to the beating sound of the rain, then sashay more slowly until we were no longer dancing but just swaying to and fro. (He was still there outside, looking down, now, at the ground.) By then, the discomfort would be spreading through my body, gripping my stomach, clutching my head. At the thought, my lips soured. Finally, he would reach for the pouch he had managed to keep dry and with steady hands, prepare the opium pipe that would pass between us. I would be aware of how briefly Barnaby would inhale, and the indulgence, by comparison, with which he would press me to linger when the pipe was in my hands.

Then I might glance out the window, only the sky would look suddenly vast, and Barnaby might lean down and kiss me, the acrid-smoke taste on his lips subtle and full as opening roses. His hands on my hips would tighten, and I would shut my eyes. My own lips would taste of ash, dusty and sweet, my own breath the breath of the pipe. The street outside would narrow to a straggly thin line, the casual charcoal stroke of an artist. In between kisses, we would now pass a cigarette, still swaying together, Barnaby’s hands moving slowly on my hips. The room would turn blue and then black with night though the hour would elongate, seem not to pass.

Still Barnaby stood there, out in the rain, the frown no longer visible. Finally, he crossed the street and disappeared into the doorway below, the entrance to the narrow green building where for more than a year I have had my lodgings.

When Barnaby opened the door, he moved through the room, stripped off his wet clothes, and changed into the blue robe. As we glided together, he bunched the material of my skirt in his hands, raising the hem halfway up my thighs. I glimpsed myself each time we passed the dressing glass that stood in the corner—the red flash of my skirt, my thigh a white blur; how curiously distant I felt from my reflection. From time to time, Barnaby spoke into my ear; the rich sound of his voice gave me pleasure, though I paid no attention to what he was saying.

The gnawing heightened unpleasantly; I held Barnaby with an urgency that made him also tighten his grasp on me. He rode my dress higher in his hands and reached under the lace of my camisole, pressing both hands so tightly around my waist that his fingers almost touched. He seemed to be waiting until the last possible moment before producing the pouch.

Darling, why don’t we set up the pipe— I said.

Barnaby’s hands glided upward under the front of my camisole. We slid to the floor. Barnaby’s robe fell open. With one hand, he unbuttoned my blouse, pausing over each one, the other hand still on my breast.

I attempted a small laugh. The pipe, I repeated softly.

Barnaby pulled away, looked at me appraisingly, then smiled. Of course, my sweet, I’d forgotten your greed.

He crossed to where his wet clothes were hanging on the coat rack and from an inner pocket, removed a small oilskin bag. Back beside me, he unfastened the pouch with what seemed like excruciating slowness—untying the leather thong, curling its ends into a loose knot.

Where is the pipe? Barnaby asked. I darted to the desk by the window and retrieved my small, cloisonné pipe. Outside, the sky held its cloud banks of sludge.

When I handed the pipe to Barnaby he placed his hand on the back of my neck and drew my face down to his. He pressed his lips over mine, and I had a peculiar sensation of collision, as if I were slamming up against steel. My efforts to mask my panic must have been successful for when we drew apart Barnaby still had a slow, dreamy face.

I don’t know which appetite to satisfy first, he said.

The devil’s choice, I said, forcing a smile. Waiting does this, I thought, looking at Barnaby through the pulsing red blurs at the corners of my eyes.

It’s so wonderful, before we smoke, he murmured.

Everything ached; where he nuzzled my breast it burned.

Time at a standstill. Gazing at Barnaby: frozen, distracted. For a moment I forgot him, I was thinking of somebody else. I was thinking of Robert. I’d heard he’d changed his name—how odd, that he would take on the name of his sad refugee friend from the Internment Center, Oskar, anglicizing it to Oscar. Of course, I can only think of him as Robert. Robert holding me, touching me, taking my spirit between his soothing palms. I closed my eyes. I might almost float there, I thought; I might almost float home.

Here, Christine— I opened my eyes. Not Robert, not home, but Barnaby, naked beneath his open robe, carefully handing me the pipe.

From the moment I set eyes on Archibald in the ship’s shabby dining room—which the crew, to their credit, had tried to spruce up with paper streamers and a few crystal pieces that had survived the war—I knew that Archibald and I would be friends. I drew a chair up to the crowded table, where Archibald was holding court among a group of fellow passengers, and soon found myself in the kind of lighthearted spirits I had not known since my university days.

Archibald was wily and clever, though never really serious, even when his talk turned lofty. This I knew from the inflamed joviality in his small, strangely pink eyes, and from the quizzical expression that never entirely abandoned his features. He was a strange fellow, at odds with himself, in a way that was stamped into his physical being. In contrast to the rest of his form—the thickened features of his face, whiskers like two gray scrubbing brushes at the sides of his jowls, the solid limbs arrayed awkwardly around his massive protruding center—Archibald’s hands were unaccountably beautiful. He must have known this for he kept them creamed and manicured and, on occasion, when mulling something over, would spread his fingers before him and regard them admiringly.

The mood on board was festive. Less than one short year since V-J Day, I found myself among people who, like myself, were eager to leave the drabness of wartime England behind. Archibald was the exception. He had only good things to say about his Beloved Motherland, as he called it. For reasons still unclear to me, Archibald had spent the war years in China. He had waited some months before booking his passage home. But, for all the expense and effort and anticipation of the journey, he had stayed in England a scant few weeks. No point hanging about, he said to me with a wink. Just wanted to lay eyes on the Dear Lady, make sure she was still intact.

The social life established on board continued uninterrupted once we were ashore. My first months in Shanghai were all parties and gay conversation. Archibald knew everybody—everybody who counted as far as expatriate society went. I soon discovered that my new friend had a deeper nature. We were sitting in the bar of the hotel where Archibald made his home, when he turned the conversation to his own early life.

I’ve always known I had a calling, he’d said. "Since I was a little boy. I wouldn’t have known what to name it but it was there, an irascible creature hanging around my neck wherever I went, wriggling and whining and giving me nasty little nips. Heavens, the days I spent wandering around Knightsbridge in a state. One thing frightened me: that the path, my North Star, when it finally revealed itself, would be unworthy—and please excuse the self-indulgence—of my largesse of spirit, of all the effort and duress."

A tear bulged from the corner of Archibald’s eye. His self-pity seemed absurd, yet I could feel the prickle of tears myself—was aware of how I, too, as a child, had a similar desperate intimation of my own destiny.

My severe trepidations were, alas, in the end, borne out, he continued. But by then, it was too late to alter my course. Archibald fixed me with a disturbing stare, his pinkish eyes suddenly hard. I say, how about an excursion? You must have heard about Han Shu’s café, on the Great Western Road. I’ve been meaning to take you there for some time. I have a feeling you and Han Shu will get along.

I immediately liked the smokey, dim bar, with its cushioned chairs, polished wood beams, and well-attired clientele. Unlike other expatriate nightspots, Han Shu’s café—more of a nightclub, really—had held its own throughout the war. Rumor had it that after the Japanese occupiers had brutalized Han Shu’s friend, a Dutchman and fellow club owner, for refusing to comply with their extortionist demands, Han Shu had done what was necessary to secure his own safety and prosperity.

When Han Shu appeared, well into the evening, he turned out to be surprisingly tall, and of an unusual build: muscular and pudgy, both. His hair was a slick black cap, oiled and parted, razor sharp down the middle, and he emanated a potent scent—part floral, part musk. A single detail marred his otherwise meticulous grooming: when Han Shu smiled, which he did unself-consciously and often, his glossy lips revealed a stunted forest of richly stained teeth.

A dear shipboard friend, Archibald said, by way of introduction, nodding to me. Han Shu eyed me approvingly. Meet Han Shu, a long-standing connoisseur of things British. And an important person in these parts.

A privilege, to meet such a beautiful woman. I am indeed most honored.

Han Shu took my hand in dough-soft fingers and gave a low bow. I had not before encountered such a large Chinese man. As he lingered, half bent over, I studied the girth of his back and noticed him taking me in. There it was again, that almost palpable sense of thrill rising from a man, directed at me, which had long ago ceased to interest me. I wondered absently why physical beauty should occasion such worship.

Archibald looked first at me and then at Han Shu, and I fancied I saw in his face a paternalistic glow. His next words seemed addressed to himself.

Yes. I’d like you to meet your spiritual guide.

The rains scrubbed the city clean. Even the mosquitoes festering in the pools that gathered along the streets seemed like emissaries of goodwill.

I had not expected to find Barnaby in Han Shu’s smoking room—in the same building as the café but secreted from the bar at the end of a long corridor. So it was a surprise to see his square-jawed face appear above the rice-paper screen of the booth where I was sitting among a small group of customers. I stiffened and drew slightly away from my new acquaintance, a middle-aged specimen with mustard-colored hair and startled eyes.

Why Barnaby, what a pleasant surprise! Meet Stephen—Stephen Stonehill, I said awkwardly. Stonehill, smiling excitedly, seemed at a loss for words. You will join us for a drink, I added, aware of the anxiety in my voice. We’re all going out for a drive later, in Stonehill’s car.

I smoothed the ripple of hair above my ear. Barnaby’s eyes followed the movement; their warmth felt like a caress.

I have a quick errand to run, I said quickly. Why don’t you two get acquainted.

I rose, lifting the hem of my dress, which I noticed was slightly frayed.

The corridor was almost completely dark; narrow glass shingles near the ceiling let in a greasy red glow. At the end of the hallway, by the front door, I recognized my contact, a thin Chinese man whose face was a plane of hard angles. Our business took barely a minute. Nodding curtly, the man left through the front door. He’d granted my request for an extension on the loan, but there was still the matter of finding fresh funds. I stood for a moment, alone, twisting my handkerchief in my hands, wondering how my savings, which had seemed so robust—surely enough to sustain me here for two years, possibly three—could have dwindled so rapidly. Archibald, I thought. He would help me figure out how to dig my way out of the mess I was in. I would visit him later at his hotel. Starting back down the corridor, I almost collided with Barnaby and hastily resumed my cheerful air.

You will come with us, won’t you? I said. Stonehill’s a bit simple, but he’s awfully nice.

You’re in trouble, aren’t you, Barnaby said.

Don’t be a silly boy, I replied brightly, linking my arm in his. We’re going to have a wonderful evening. We’ll go to the American Bar and dance. I’ll take turns, though I can assure you that every moment I’m dancing with Red, I’ll be thinking of you.

After a languid day spent with Barnaby, I readied myself for my nightly sortie to Han Shu’s café.

Let’s give it a miss tonight, Barnaby said. I’m rather bored with the place.

You’re not going to give me reason to call you a stick-inthe-mud. You, of all people.

Barnaby eyed me with

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