SPOILERS GALORE
Virgil, If I have made it sound wonderful then maybe I should take up writing blurbs for the back covers of books.
But, seriously, my first reaction was the same disappointment as yours, noting the excellent prose style but wondering where the story was, and what all the hullabaloo was about (Booker Prize winner etc).
There is no doubt, it seems to me, that it is a different kind of book -- at least complex, quite possibly difficult, and certainly not easy to read -- and that it requires a certain devotion to make it yield up its secrets. In fact, I think it is more complex and difficult than comparable others I have read from Nabokov, Virginia Woolf, James Joyce and William Faulkner. So I think it is pretty high up on the scale of difficulty/obscurity.
Furthermore, I have the suspicion that Banville set out to make it complicated by deliberately employing more literary techniques than I have yet seen in any single other work. And I'll ennumerate.
1. It is certainly stream-of-consciousness, very extremely so I would say, with largely random transitions from one remembered episode to another and nothing near a linear evolution of the story.
2. We are at twice-remove from the basic plot, as we try to see the basic plot through the eyes of a bewildered first-person narrator who is himself trying to see the basic plot of his life.
3. If we distinguish time-line from narrative, then the beginning and end of the time-line are both to be found in the middle of the narrative in the book.
4. And, likewise, the beginning and end of the narrative are both from the middle of the time-line. So it is difficult to grab onto either end of the narrative or the plot.
5. The plot is about Max's frame of mind, a rather more elusive and ephemeral thing than the conclusion to an event- or character-driven story.
6. If one surmises that it is Max's quest for the meaning of his life -- because that is essentially the question he asks at one point -- then one might expect some sort of epiphany or insightful wisdom to be extracted by Max from a review of his life. One does get the review of episodes of his life, but one looks in vain for that sort of epiphany.
7. Instead, as near as I can tell, Max's epiphany is simply an accurate view of what his life has been like, with no lessons or wisdom distilled from it. So one can spend the entire book looking for the wrong sort of ah-ha moment, as I did for the longest time.
And that is all clearly the author's deliberate doing, as if he wished to put together a tour-de-force of total literary misdirection using all the techniques at his disposal. If there is a simpler way to see the book, I would be overjoyed to hear it, because these items only reflect in essence the obstacles that I found in trying to finally come to some sort of sensible understanding of The Sea. Others might certainly see it differently, and more clearly, and have an easier time of it.
So finally, yes I can easily agree that one can have a difficult time reading it. I too am one of those who did.![]()




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(I take it you weren't being ironic. 