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The Sacred And Profane Love Machine
The Sacred And Profane Love Machine
Apr 5, 2026 8:19 PM

Author:Iris Murdoch,Elaine Feinstein

The Sacred And Profane Love Machine

Montague Small, an obsessive writer of detective thrillers, mourns his lately dead wife, who may or may not have been unfaithful to him. His attempts at meditation are a failure. He detests his fictional detective. His interest in his neighbour's difficulties and his neighbour's wife appear to be his only consolations after all. The neighbour, Blaise Gavender, is an amateur psychotherapist who has seen through himself. Has Blaise the courage to change his life and become an honest man? What is honesty in any case? Blaise's wife Harriet lives for love, love of her husband, love of her son. She if fond of Monty too. Emily McHugh is quite another matter. She too lives for love: for love and justice and revenge, aided and incited by her ambiguous friend Constance Pinn. Emily's son Luca, a very disturbed child, becomes the subject of a tug of war between two possessive women. Edgar Demornay, a distinguished scholar, also blunders into the fray; he adores Monty and falls in love with Monty's women. A deed of violence finally solves many problems. This is a story of different loves; and of how a man may need two women in such a way that he can be happy with neither. Sacred and profane love are related opposites; the one enjoyed renders the other necessary, so that the ever unsatisfied heart swings constantly to and fro.

Reviews

These lectures are astonishing for their lucidity and power

—— Wall Street Journal

Berlin at his best: forceful without being bombastic, energetic without exaggerating, erudite without showing off

—— Peter Watson , Times Higher Educational Supplement

This is one of the most important books on the history of ideas in Berlin's oeuvre... Extremely compelling

—— Mark Lilla, University of Chicago

Tom Sharpe is the funniest novelist writing today

—— Philip Howard , The Times

This exuberant novel will cheer all those who dislike bureaucracy

—— Daily Telegraph

Farcical in the best sense: Blott on the Landscape is as tense and compelling as any good detective novel

—— The Times

This first novel is undeniably rich: a tale woven around the importance of faith, whether in imaginary friends or undiscovered treasures, and the strength of family

—— The Times

The year's most impressive debut

—— John Carey , Sunday Times

Like Donna Tartt’s "The Secret History" or a good film noir . . . Jane’s low-key narration has just the right tone to keep readers hooked

—— People magazine

The strength of 'The Lake of Dead Languages' is a silken prose that lures the reader into Goodman’s . . . story of murder, suicide . . . revenge, and madness

—— The Washington Post Book World

Part suspense, part coming-of-age, and all-enthralling . . . A book that needs the roar of a fire to ward off its psychic chill

—— The Denver Post
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