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Prayer-Cushions of the Flesh (1997)

di Robert Irwin

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984276,423 (3.4)6
The author of The Arabian Nightmare spins "a wryly subversive and darkly erotic fable" (The Sunday Times).   The virginal hero of the tale, Prince Orkhan, escapes from the Cage of the Imperial Harem, in which the sons of the sultan are imprisoned, and finds himself hailed by the Harem's concubines as their new Sultan. He is immediately caught up in the excesses and perversions of the Harem. But evil flourishes in a bed of boredom and, after allowing the viper to drink at the Tavern of the Perfume-Makers, Orkhan enters a maze of complicated relationships, all orchestrated by the devotees of the Prayer-Cushion movement. Temptation, seduction, storytelling, and magic are used to lure the Sultan towards a climax that is designed to be both ecstatic and fatal.   Prayer-Cushions of the Flesh is a masterful blend of historical fact, dark humor, and robust fantasy.   "The novel sets a furious pace, flitting from one odd room and liaison to the next, giving Orkhan (and the reader) little time to puzzle out exactly who's in charge. Part erotica, part serious political exploration, this book will titillate some readers and befuddle others." --Publishers Weekly  … (altro)
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Zolang het lot van Orkhan nog een mysterie is, krijgt Irwin nog wat krediet. De hoofdstukken zijn kort, de bladspiegel is ruim. Ik weet dat ik in dat geval wel eens wat te voortvarend lees, en hier en daar een afslag mis. Maar met iedere sluier, iedere deur, ieder hoofdstuk wordt het mysterie minder en krijgt het verhaal minder ‘body’, tot het uiteindelijk uitmondt in een vrijblijvend theaterstukje waarin de personages, net zoals de acteurs in bovengenoemd filmpje, hopeloos ten onder gaan. Het is een tussendoortje, – dat met een paar duizend woorden meer verder had kunnen reiken ( )
  razorsoccamremembers | Jan 29, 2016 |
This is the sort of slim, unserious novella that a charitable critic might call a jeu d'esprit and a less charitable one a complete waste of time. The style has been aptly summarised by a previous reviewer as ‘Orientalist porn’, and sure enough the whole thing feels like an extended riff on a Jean-Léon Gérôme painting, perhaps The Grand Bath at Bursa (1885).

The setting is the closed world of the imperial harem in Ottoman İstanbul. Orkhan, a relative of the sultan, has spent his life locked away in a cage: finally one day he is released, and hailed by the harem girls as their new ruler. But he quickly realises that there is something more sinister going on behind all the sensuous luxury on display, and there's every chance he might not make it out alive.

The approach is episodic and hallucinogenic, with poor Orkhan stumbling tumescently from one steam-room to the next, desperately trying to assert his authority over a series of horny concubines, bored laundry girls and mystic priestesses, who always seem to know a lot more than he does. There is a dwarf, there is crocodile sex, there is a voluptuous fortune-teller who practises ‘phallomancy’ and ‘vulvascopy’. There are Arabian Nights-style anecdotes, such as when the harem develops an infestation of those Persian fairies known as peris:

They would clamber into the stocking tops of the concubines and ride about in this manner. They used to tiptoe into the girls' knickers and snuggle there for warmth and soft comfort…and, of course, the girls liked them being there for they would receive feathery tickles from the little creatures nestling in their underwear.

Like sexy crabs.

Irwin is probably the world's foremost expert on the Thousand and One Nights and has written several scholarly works on it; there are doubtless more references here that I'm picking up on, although I spotted quite a few. The scene where Orkhan is instructed on what to call the parts of a woman's body (culminating in ‘the Tavern of the Perfume-Makers’) is unmistakably modelled on the well-known Tale of the Porter and the Young Girls (where if I remember rightly the same anatomical area is called ‘the khan of Abu Mansur’).

It's all quite playful and tongue-in-cheek, but you have to wonder what exactly the purpose is. (‘No purpose at all,’ one character says tellingly, ‘save my pleasure in the stringing of words together and in the telling of it. Must everything have a purpose?’) If there is a message, it has something to do with turning away from so-called higher concerns and concentrating on more accessible, earthly pleasures:

Foolish people think that the ultimate mystery of life resides in the spirit. The wise know that it is found nowhere save in the flesh.

This doesn't put me off Irwin: he's a very interesting and rather neglected writer with some clever ideas. However, this is definitely a minor work – though diverting enough for the few hours it takes to read it. ( )
1 vota Widsith | Sep 17, 2013 |
This speedy little novel (which nevertheless takes plenty of time to smell the roses) seems almost like a tale for The Arabian Nights written by Franz Kafka. The cover blurb justifiably brags of its inclusion of "sex with men, women, fairies and alligators." The protagonist is an Ottoman imperial prince, and the story gives an account of his first few days of interacting with women, after having been imprisoned for his whole life with his brothers.

Given the peculiar tone of the ending, I couldn't help but wonder about the ways it might be interpreted as a fable, or even an allegory.
1 vota paradoxosalpha | Dec 8, 2009 |
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The women lay heaped like pack-ice round the walls of the Cage. As Orkhan sat shivering in the courtyard, he imagined the ladies of the Harem at ease beyond the Cage's walls.
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The author of The Arabian Nightmare spins "a wryly subversive and darkly erotic fable" (The Sunday Times).   The virginal hero of the tale, Prince Orkhan, escapes from the Cage of the Imperial Harem, in which the sons of the sultan are imprisoned, and finds himself hailed by the Harem's concubines as their new Sultan. He is immediately caught up in the excesses and perversions of the Harem. But evil flourishes in a bed of boredom and, after allowing the viper to drink at the Tavern of the Perfume-Makers, Orkhan enters a maze of complicated relationships, all orchestrated by the devotees of the Prayer-Cushion movement. Temptation, seduction, storytelling, and magic are used to lure the Sultan towards a climax that is designed to be both ecstatic and fatal.   Prayer-Cushions of the Flesh is a masterful blend of historical fact, dark humor, and robust fantasy.   "The novel sets a furious pace, flitting from one odd room and liaison to the next, giving Orkhan (and the reader) little time to puzzle out exactly who's in charge. Part erotica, part serious political exploration, this book will titillate some readers and befuddle others." --Publishers Weekly  

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