Territorial Rights

Territorial Rights

First edition (UK)
Author Muriel Spark
Cover artist John Alcorn[1]
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Publisher Macmillan (UK)
Coward, McCann & Geoghegan (US)
Publication date
1979
Media type Print
Pages 240
ISBN 0-333-25458-9

Territorial Rights is a novel by Scottish author Muriel Spark published in 1979.

Plot Introduction

Art history student Robert Leaver has fled from his lover Curran to Venice to study the Santa Maria Formosa. In Venice he meets up with his new love Lina, a Social-realist artist and Bulgarian defector. Lina is searching for the grave of her father Victor, suspected of being involved in the poisoning of King Boris and who was killed by Bulgarian Royalists. Curran follows Robert to Venice and warns him that Lina is being followed by the Bulgarian secret service. Robert also meets his father Arnold a retired headmaster, who is on holiday with his mistress. Arnold's wife Anthea suspects his affair and has employed the services of a Birmingham detective agency to investigate his infidelities, the agency's Venice operative Violet de Winter, an old friend of Curran's is put on the case. Anthea's best friend Grace determines to take a holiday to Venice with her companion Leo to find the truth.

Robert then disappears and a blackmail note is sent to Curren over his and Violet's involvement in Victor's death...

Reception

Edmund White in the The New York Times was very positive, "Once in a while a book comes along that is beautifully put together and effortlessly entertaining; Muriel Spark's Territorial Rights is such a novel. To declare it a great book would be to burden it with an ambition it has lightly rejected, but it is the sort of elegant diversion we can enjoy and esteem. It is a hilarious account of political and romantic intrigue in Venice.[2] and Kirkus Reviews concludes "Occasionally hilarious, sometimes poignant (with Robert's mum back in England), but more often merely the ultimate in offbeat charm — a polished yet subdued Spark-ler from a one-of-a-kind talent."[3]

However other reviews were scathing, with Edith Milton in the New York Magazine complaining that Spark's characters were "so completely passionless that that one does not for one minute suppose that their sexual and temperamental gyrations could be caused by anything deeper than the demand of the narrative. And those are horrendously complicated, though the plot is not intended to convince...Spark works on this dark landscape with the fever of farce, desperate to keep her plot and characters going...Experimenting with the disease of pettiness, the novel itself finally comes down with a fatal case".[4]

Publication history

[5]

References

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