LITTLE FISH



The City of Lists
by Brigid Rose

£8.99 paperback Crocus Books (2009)
ISBN 13: 9780946745975 | ISBN 10: 0946745978

Interview with Brigid at Aberystwyth University Book Festival

interview_brigid_rose

To buy The City of Lists,
click here

To read an
interview with Brigid in Leftlion, click here

To read Brigid's short story 'The Speaker',
click here

Reviews

Gangaji, author of A Diamond in Your Pocket

“For me the novel portrays the nightmare of bondage in such a heart rending way.
The forces that work to keep our spirit under control can be found in any time, past-present-future. The call to freedom and the internal and external obstacles to that call are the same throughout time. As heart breaking as the book was for me, I was left inspired by the possibility that whatever the circumstances, we can take responsibility for discovering where freedom is.  Even in the face of grave danger, we can leave the deadening security of the false promises of controlling and being controlled. We can dare to fly home.”

The City of Lists by Brigid Rose reviewed by Martin Nathanael

I found this a most gripping book – the most unusual novel I have ever read. For one thing, it includes the dove-tailing of time sequences, later events preceding the events leading up to them, which at first I found strange; however, as the story unfolded I became more relaxed about this – it seemed to be an unspoken way of drawing out how threads underpin our inner motives and the actions which naturally follow.
I shuddered at the picture of a society in which the powers to be, blinded by their own narrow consciousness, ruthlessly sought to prevent any citizen from awakening to their own greater nature.

I would like to let the author, Brigid Rose, speak for herself about how this, her first novel, which won a prize, came to be written:

“In writing the novel I was greatly inspired by the teachings of Eckhart Tolle, and also by other teachers of non-duality such as Gangaji. I was particularly struck by a sentence in Eckhart Tolle’s The Power of Now. The sentence begins, 'As the egoic mode of consciousness and all the social, political and economic structures it created, enter their final stage of collapse...' This made me think about the future and imagine what it would be like if a ‘consciousness revolution’ actually occurred on a wide scale in society. I imagined the powers-that-be trying to retain control of people who were becoming transformed by spiritual teachings like Eckhart’s and by teachers' transmissions of stillness. I imagined that those in authority might try to clamp down on those practices that quietened the ego; banning teachings, retreats, gatherings etc to prevent society's old, out-dated structures from collapsing
But then I also imagined that perhaps no government could really prevent such a peaceful inner revolution from taking place and so in the story a very frightened person - the shy, contemplative Valentine - stumbles unexpectedly one day into an ego-less state. This is the first sign that the revolution cannot be stopped despite the clamp-down. Through Valentine’s intense fear and suffering, and also through his ‘ripeness’ for liberation, his sense of self falls away; just what the authorities are trying to prevent. Although some quite terrible things have happened to Valentine by the end of the story, I wanted to show that no matter what is occurring on the external level, he still experiences and is engulfed by an overwhelming sense of peace.
The Eased in the novel is a play on the East. The word has become distorted and changed over the hundred or so years that have intervened between now and the book’s narrative - a bit like Chinese whispers. Through ignorance of preceding history due to the imposed censorship by the authorities, the word has become distorted from East to Eased. The ‘teachings from the Eased’ that the novel refers to are the eastern philosophical and spiritual ideas that have come to the West especially since the 1960s.”

Brigid’s novel challenges us to consider the possibility that inner freedom can be realised even in the midst of the most appalling social straitjacket which is itself a symptom of the fear of freedom itself.