cover image Veronica, Or, the Two Nations

Veronica, Or, the Two Nations

David Caute. Arcade Publishing, $19.95 (318pp) ISBN 978-1-55970-101-3

British author Caute ( News from Nowhere ) steeps his stunning novel of sexual politics in literary allusions. The title echoes Victorian statesman/novelist Benjamin Disraeli's Sybil: Or the Two Nations (which describes the working class pitted against aristocrats) and later applies to a scandal-monger's expose of Caute's protagonist. Michael Parsons falls ``instantly in love'' with his South African cousin Veronica when she comes to London in 1939 to live with his family. By the time his parents die in WW II, he knows that V is his half-sister. He justifies his passion via entries in his journal that record historical incidents of sibling incest and its endurance as a classic theme, copiously citing the Jacobean tragedy 'Tis a Pity She's a Whore and Ibsen's Ghosts . Determined to destroy his rival, V's American soldier fiance, Mike stoops to deceit and trickery. When V is hurt in a bomb raid and becomes dependent on barbiturates, her inhibitions abate and her mind deteriorates. Mike tenderly cares for her as their love flowers. Years later, Mike, now a Tory cabinet minister under Thatcher, is hounded by journalist Bert Frame, a slum-born bully--the two again personifying the ``two nations '' of Britain's social classes. The abundant details of British politics may elude some readers, but Caute melds pointed satire and eloquent pathos to produce a memorable tale. (Sept.)