Ian "Marvin" Graye's Reviews > The Lover

The Lover by Marguerite Duras
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Desire

The first time ever I saw your face was on the ferry.

I had my head buried in a copy of the South China Morning Post. My father had said, if I read it every day, I would learn about the world around us, and his boy would become a man. Only then would I be ready to take over the family business after him.

He was right, in his way. I was thin and soft and naïve, even though I had just returned from two years in Paris. I was still a boy, at 28. I’m sure I would have continued as a boy, unless I had met you.

I had slept with many girls in Paris, and I bedded plenty more after you, before I married my wife, a virgin until our wedding night. But I didn't sleep with any of these girls out of love or even desire. I fucked them because I could. They came to me eager to be fucked, and we all knew the reason, my family’s wealth and increasing prominence in Saigon. They all came to me, because they wanted something that my father had.

My father was not an egotistical man. He did not display pride or shame. He did everything out of duty, even make money, buy property, run a department store and build wealth. But when it came to the girls I slept with (not you), and he always found out about them, he took some delight in my sexual activity. No matter how attractive each one was, he knew that by sleeping with them, I was actually disqualifying them from the race to be my wife and share his wealth. Everyone I slept with narrowed it down to the one I would eventually marry.

I looked up from the Post, some article on inflation, and I saw you taking a seat opposite me. I gazed at you longer than I should have.

Everything about you was wrong. You were Caucasian, white, 15 ½ years old, slim, you were wearing a flowing dress that alternately swayed in the breeze or clung to your body, outlining and highlighting your petite breasts. And you were wearing a man’s fedora and gold shoes.

Once I took all of this in, I tried to resume reading the Post. I was looking down at the page, but I couldn’t distinguish a single word, I was thinking of you and I was shaking. Like a boy.

Later the same week, we happened to be on the same ferry again. I didn’t see you on board, but when my father’s driver (until recently, when he retired, my driver) opened the door to the limousine, I noticed that you were standing near the waterline, apparently deciding what you would do next.

I went up to you, determined to offer you a ride in my car, I mean my father’s car. You were apprehensive at first, but I reassured you of my good faith, and you decided to accept. It helped that I was shaking the whole way through our brief discussion.

While we were talking, we stood side on, so that my driver could see both of us, the sides of our faces and the hints of nervous smiles. Something must have touched him, unless he did it out of a sense of duty to my father, for he took a photo of us that day.

He gave it to me when he retired 10 years ago. I have carried it with me, in my wallet, every day since then. Until today, I haven’t pulled it out and looked at it again. I didn’t need to. That moment, in my eyes, has been engraved in my mind for fifty years. The only difference is that the image confirms that I was there, that it wasn’t all in my imagination, you can see both of us. The image is true, and so now is my memory. Only I’m not sure whether I ever wanted to be reminded.

It’s not that the photo reminds me of a time when I was a boy. After all, it was you who made me a man, not reading the Post.

Like my father before me, I am a man of duty. I have faithfully taken care of my wife, my family, my family’s business. Everything has grown under my watchful and caring eye. I have done the right thing, and I will die a contented man, if contentment is what I am looking for.

No, what that photo and that moment remind me of is my capacity for desire. It is something I eliminated from my field of vision after we parted company, at my parents’ insistence, and you returned to Paris, I thought, with your mother.

I already knew the rudimentary mechanics of sex when we stood before each other, a skinny Chinese boy and a skinny French girl, in my bedroom for the first time. As I had done before, I was shaking. Even my tentative erection looked as if it might shake off and fall to the floor. It’s funny now, but it wasn’t funny then.

Until I met you, I had been lonely. I was even lonelier after I had met you, because of the obsessive love I had for you.

You said, “I’d rather you didn’t love me, but if you do, I’d like you to do as you usually do with women.”

I asked, “Is that what you want?”

You nodded. Still I knew that you would never love me, that you could never love me.

I said, “You’ve come here with me as you might have gone anywhere with anyone.”

You replied, “I can’t say, so far I’ve never gone into a bedroom with anyone.”

You begged me, again, to do what I usually did with the women I brought to my room.

I did my best to comply. Although you were a virgin, I made love to you the way you directed me to. It was different to how I normally did it, well there was one difference, I wept while we made love.

The driver soon learned about you, and so did my father. He could tell I felt differently about you, that I wasn’t disqualifying you, that I wanted to marry this white girl, even though you would never love me in return.

He made his position very clear.

“I will not let my son marry this little white whore from Sadec.”

I tried to obliterate his attitude from my thinking. But it must have affected me subliminally.

In bed, as we fucked more and more passionately, I would call out, “My whore, my slut, you are my only love.” And you and I and my cum and your juices and our sweat would be swept up in a torrent of desire.

For a long time, it seemed as if that torrent would never stop. I didn’t know where the waters sprang from, but I definitely didn’t know where they were heading.

My father did, and so he built a dam that would contain the flow, and one day the torrent just stopped.

Loving you had made me a man, he knew that, as I did, and although we disagreed wildly, I was reconciled to my future in the family business.

As my father loosened his grip on the reins and handed them over to me, I expanded to two and then eventually five department stores, and then years later with such a solid foundation, I started investing in shopping centres in Australia, until my family became the largest private holder of retail real estate in the country.

Like my father, I am not an egotistical man or a proud one. I do this because of duty. But there was a moment when I contented myself with a smile.

I had just signed a contract to purchase a centre in Australia for A$30 million. I signed a cheque for a A$3M deposit and gave it to the Vendor’s lawyer. A youngish fellow, he decided to phone my banker and ask whether I had sufficient funds in my account to clear the cheque. The banker asked what the total sale price was. The lawyer answered, and my banker laughed. “There are enough funds in this account to pay the entire sale price in cash.”

The lawyer turned to me, squeamishly, and declared that we had a deal. I said, “I was under the impression we had a deal before you phoned my bank.”

I enquired after that lawyer once. It turned out he had married one of my property managers and was now running a coffee shop, ironically in one of my centres.

I have two daughters. They run our portfolio, and they do a more professional job of it than either I or my father ever did.

Perhaps, my father was better at taking risks than they are, but to be honest they are pretty good at it. I am proud of them, and he would be too. They have married well, and have given me four beautiful grandchildren.

As I said, I have carried our photo in my wallet for many years, ever since I learned of its existence.

Any other man in my position would possibly say that they had everything that they had ever desired.

For me, that is true, except in one sense that I have tried to overlook for fifty years.

I once desired you, that skinny white French girl in the fedora. I desired you with an intensity that I cannot find words to describe.

I have tried to rationalise and deny that desire. I’ve tried to convince myself that I only ever desired you once. And that is actually the truth. I did only desire you once, but that one occasion has lasted fifty years.

Now that I am about to die, or think I am, and my family will soon gather around me to say their farewells, I must take a match to this photo and set it alight, like you once set me alight, and perhaps, I will never know, perhaps I also set you alight, if not for as long.

My favourite nurse just brought me an ashtray and a cigarette lighter.

It took me two or three attempts to burn this image. It didn’t seem to want to go.

But now it is finished and there are only ashes in the tray, and my failing memory, and when I die and it too goes, there will be nothing left of our desire.


 photo IMAG1670_zps4845f1d3.jpg

Mural at the Pawpaw Cafe attached to the Brisbane Restaurant "Green Papaya"
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Reading Progress

February 24, 2011 – Shelved
February 14, 2013 – Started Reading
February 15, 2013 – Shelved as: read-2013
February 15, 2013 – Shelved as: reviews
February 15, 2013 – Shelved as: reviews-4-stars
February 15, 2013 – Shelved as: frogs
February 16, 2013 – Finished Reading
August 4, 2013 – Shelved as: re-read

Comments Showing 1-50 of 59 (59 new)


Rowena I watched the movie years ago. I've been meaning to read this one for a while now.


message 2: by Ian (new) - rated it 4 stars

Ian "Marvin" Graye I'm about half-way through. It's beautiful. I'm wondering about fictionalising my review. But I'm not sure.


Rowena That would make for some interesting reading! Do you know whether the novel is semi-autobiographical?


message 4: by Ian (new) - rated it 4 stars

Ian "Marvin" Graye I think "semi-" is an understatement.


Rowena Ah, she's the female Radiguet then.


message 6: by Ian (new) - rated it 4 stars

Ian "Marvin" Graye Except she lived to see her beauty ravaged.


Praj You brought a wide smile on my face. Can't wait for your review:D


message 8: by Ian (new) - rated it 4 stars

Ian "Marvin" Graye Praj wrote: "You brought a wide smile on my face. Can't wait for your review:D"

Praj, you must have a look at my "erotica" shelf. I think you were on sabbatical when I wrote it all. It's more fun with erotica than erotica though.

The Lover will be more serious. Then there's "About Last Night" in My Writings.


message 9: by Praj (last edited Feb 15, 2013 10:52AM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Praj i sure will:). Ian, i'm looking forward for your poetic appraisal on Duras.


Jeffrey Keeten Very POWERFUL writing Ian! Even without the Pharaoh's mask.


message 11: by Ian (new) - rated it 4 stars

Ian "Marvin" Graye Thanks, Jeffrey. Some books are just too hard to review!


message 12: by Ian (new) - rated it 4 stars

Ian "Marvin" Graye Meriam wrote: "Great Review!"

Thanks, Meriam.


message 13: by [deleted user] (new)

i adore duras, thanks!


Garima Great review Ian! You're on a roll lately with review writing.


Rowena Brilliant review! And I really love the wall mural too.


message 16: by Ian (last edited Feb 17, 2013 07:41PM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Ian "Marvin" Graye Rowena wrote: "Brilliant review! And I really love the wall mural too."

Thanks, Rowena, I took the photo an hour ago at lunch. I love the vibrant colours.


Rowena Yes, it's beautiful. I wouldn't mind a painting like that.


Rowena p.s- When are you going to write a book, Ian? :)


message 19: by Steve (new)

Steve While fiction inspired by a book is a rather oblique statement about it, I still like it. Very creative, Ian.


message 20: by Ian (new) - rated it 4 stars

Ian "Marvin" Graye Thanks, Steve, I thought I could reveal more about the book by showing you how the reading experience felt than telling you how it felt.


message 21: by Lawyer (new)

Lawyer Excellent. Simply excellent. I've a first American edition on the shelf. It's time to pull it off and read it. As always, thanks for your review.


message 22: by Ian (new) - rated it 4 stars

Ian "Marvin" Graye Mike wrote: "Excellent. Simply excellent. I've a first American edition on the shelf. It's time to pull it off and read it. As always, thanks for your review."

Thanks, Mike. It's very short and impressionistic and pleasurable.


s.penkevich Rowena wrote: "p.s- When are you going to write a book, Ian? :)"

I agree! Your reviews alone could be bestsellers!


message 24: by Ian (new) - rated it 4 stars

Ian "Marvin" Graye s.penkevich wrote: "Rowena wrote: "p.s- When are you going to write a book, Ian? :)"

I agree! Your reviews alone could be bestsellers!"


Haha. Bestseller? Didn't you see my GR Quotient? 25!

http://www.goodreads.com/user_status/...


Rowena I am leaving some of your reviews to read after I've read the books. It's more fun that way :)


message 26: by Ian (new) - rated it 4 stars

Ian "Marvin" Graye Rowena wrote: "I am leaving some of your reviews to read after I've read the books. It's more fun that way :)"

Haha. More fun for whom? I'm into instant gratification. Besides you might realise that I make up all of my reviews.


message 27: by Ted (new)

Ted I have to admit I don't comprehend these "reviews" of yours Ian. It seems like they are your own retelling of the story in the novel? Is that what they are supposed to be? In which case they really have nothing to do with what a conventional book review is, but rather are the reviewer's tag-along take on what the author has done?

I'm not trying to be critical here, but simply trying to explain why I don't see much in these reviews that speaks to me. I guess I'm too old and too conventional.


message 28: by Ian (last edited Feb 18, 2013 04:44PM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Ian "Marvin" Graye Thanks, Ted. They're just a vehicle for me to play with your mind ;)

The novel is told in the first person and deals with a particular time and place. I just took an important character whose soul wasn't revealed much, and adopted his persona, sometimes in a different time and place, occasionally overlapping with the action of the book.

It is definitely not meant to be a retelling of the same story, though occasionally it might constitute a different perspective a la Rashomon.

Some of the dialogue comes from the actual novel.

If I ever do enough of them, I might pull them into a book of stories that I might or might not call "Passengers".

Here are some other Passengers:

American Psycho:

http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...

Whores for Gloria:

http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...

Mrs Dalloway:

http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...

The Company She Keeps:

http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...

But Beautiful: A Book About Jazz:

http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...

Fifty Shades of Grey:

http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...


message 29: by Ian (last edited Feb 18, 2013 04:47PM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Ian "Marvin" Graye As for whether it's a "review", does it really matter, it's an homage, and if I can draw attention to a book and interest you in it enough to read it via the homage, then I hope I have achieved some good.


message 30: by Ian (last edited Feb 18, 2013 05:00PM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Ian "Marvin" Graye In the absence of a YouTube video of "Three Dead Passengers", here's:

Dave Graney - "Night of the Wolverine":

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Aqfhis...

This is who I would be if I wasn't me:

Dave Graney - "My Schtick Weighs a Ton":

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f0JXYt...

"Know what I mean?"


message 31: by Ted (last edited Feb 18, 2013 05:07PM) (new)

Ted Okay, thanks for all the informative comments Ian. I'll try to keep a proper perspective! :)

I'm willing for my mind to be played with ... up to a point of course.


message 32: by Ian (new) - rated it 4 stars

Ian "Marvin" Graye Enjoy!


message 33: by Traveller (last edited Feb 19, 2013 04:27AM) (new) - added it

Traveller I hope i haven't just read a spoiler...- i stopped about three-quarters of the way through, just in case..

..which is not to say that review is not a well-written story, of course, but should i rather come back to it after i had read the novel?


message 34: by Traveller (last edited Feb 19, 2013 05:05AM) (new) - added it

Traveller Ian wrote: "Thanks, Ted. They're just a vehicle for me to play with your mind ;)

The novel is told in the first person and deals with a particular time and place. I just took an important character whose soul..."


Oh, duh...- it would help if i read the entire thread first before piping up, huh? Sorry. I do apologise, Mr Ian. Me and my spoiler-phobia.


message 35: by Lynne (last edited Feb 24, 2013 03:39AM) (new) - added it

Lynne King What a fabulous review Ian.

I studied Marguerite Duras under "Cinema/Literature" when I was studying for my degree in French Studies. I loved the films and books both for "India Song" (mesmerising music) and "Horishima Mon Amour".

I've also got an excellent biography by her in French entitled "Marguerite Duras" by Laure Adler. I love to see all these books mentioned that I already own. It pleases me no end to see that people have my taste in certain books.


message 36: by Ian (new) - rated it 4 stars

Ian "Marvin" Graye Lynne wrote: "What a fabulous review Ian."

Thanks for your kind words, Lynne. If you don't already know it, I hope you like this song:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3dJ9I1...


message 37: by Lynne (new) - added it

Lynne King Thanks Ian for including India Song interpreted by Richard Jobson. I personally don't like it. I can hear the India Song that I knew in the background and I found the music from the film both divine and also haunting.

I'm sure that lots of people will like this interpretation but I prefer the film. Question of choice that's all.


message 38: by Lynne (new) - added it

Lynne King Ian, I looked at your review again this evening. You have such a style about you. I'm touched but also envious... Life is good isn't it?

I wonder what you are thinking now?

Did you ever read the diaries of Anais Nin?


message 39: by Ian (last edited Apr 01, 2013 08:53PM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Ian "Marvin" Graye Thanks, Lynne, I read your post when I was on my walk this morning, but couldn't reply on my phone.

I was writing this in my head at the time:

http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...

I finished reading the book yesterday, looked around for something short to read and chose "A Spy in the House of Love". How did you know?

I've decided not to start with it. I've read one Nin many years ago, but I've recently bought just about everything and want to read it chronologically.

I also want to "channel" her writing.


message 40: by Lynne (new) - added it

Lynne King I was looking at her diaries yesterday Ian and I have a "A Spy in the House of Love" to the right of them on the bookshelf. It's a Penguin classic that I dated 28 November 1988 and would you believe that I have never read it. I will rectify that and begin it tonight.


message 41: by Ian (new) - rated it 4 stars

Ian "Marvin" Graye I've started:

Waste Of Timelessness And Other Early Stories by Anaïs Nin


Samadrita Loved your fictionalized review, Ian. But it would have been wonderful to read a dissertation-type review of this since I consider you my GR Eng lit professor and always wait for your thorough dissection of a story and explanations. :)


message 43: by Ian (new) - rated it 4 stars

Ian "Marvin" Graye Samadrita wrote: "Loved your fictionalized review, Ian. But it would have been wonderful to read a dissertation-type review of this since I consider you my GR Eng lit professor and always wait for your thorough dissection of a story and explanations. :) "

Haha, thanks. My omission creates an ideal opportunity for you to fill the gap ;)


Samadrita Ian wrote: "My omission creates an ideal opportunity for you to fill the gap ;) "

The gap created by your omission can only be filled by your wisdom, Ian. :)


message 45: by Ian (new) - rated it 4 stars

Ian "Marvin" Graye Samadrita wrote: "Ian wrote: "My omission creates an ideal opportunity for you to fill the gap ;) "

The gap created by your omission can only be filled by your wisdom, Ian. :)"


Haha, perhaps I should retire grayeciously and let you win this argument.


Samadrita Ian wrote: "Haha, perhaps I should retire grayeciously and let you win this argument. "

And I will be grayeteful if you do.


message 47: by Ian (new) - rated it 4 stars

Ian "Marvin" Graye Um...um..I am speechless...I don't know what to say next, so I won't say anything.


Stacey This is you? Or Duras? Either way, it is beautiful.


message 49: by Ian (new) - rated it 4 stars

Ian "Marvin" Graye Thanks, Stacey. The novel is very impressionistic and these are some of the impressions it inspired in me. Duras turned me into a "passenger" on her journey.


Stacey Well, I particularly love "There are only ashes in the tray, and my failing memory, and when I die and it too goes there will be nothing left of our desire."


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