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The Vintner's Luck

The Vintner's Luck is a romantic fantasy novel by New Zealand author Elizabeth Knox, first published in 1998. It was her fourth full-length novel, and her first book published outside New Zealand.[1] The novel charts the relationship between a French winemaker (the vintner of the title), Sobran Jodeau, and an angel, Xas, who first visits Jodeau on a midsummer's eve in 1808, when he is 18 years old, and again each year on the same day. The novel won several prestigious awards including the Deutz Medal for Fiction at the 1999 Montana New Zealand Book Awards and the inaugural Tasmania Pacific Region Prize for best novel. It was adapted into a 2009 film.

The Vintner's Luck
Cover of first edition (Victoria University Press)
AuthorElizabeth Knox
CountryNew Zealand
LanguageEnglish
GenreFantasy, romance
Set inBurgundy, France in the 19th century
PublisherVictoria University Press (NZ), Chatto & Windus and Vintage Books (UK), Farrar, Straus and Giroux and Picador (US)
Publication date
1998
Pages241
AwardsDeutz Medal for Fiction at the Montana New Zealand Book Awards
ISBN9780864733429 (1st edition, Victoria University Press)
Followed byThe Angel's Cut 

Plot Edit

 
Pinot noir grapes – the variety of Sobran and Céleste's nuptial wine, which Sobran shared with Xas at their second meeting

The novel chronicles the life of a peasant winemaker, Sobran Jodeau, and his long and enduring relationship with the angel Xas over 55 years. It opens with 18-year-old Jodeau, drunk and unhappy in love, on the ridge of the sloping hills of his family's vineyard in Burgundy. Jodeau stumbles upon what he initially thinks is a statue, but which turns out to be the angel Xas. Xas is described as physically beautiful, and appearing as a young man with white wings and whiter skin, smelling of snow. Jodeau believes that Xas is his guardian angel, and Xas promises to toast his marriage the following year.

Xas thereafter visits Jodeau in the same place, once a year, with each annual visit constituting a chapter of the book, and their relationship develops. Each chapter title bears the year and the name of a different stage in the wine-making process. The first chapter is titled "1808 Vin Bourru (new wine)". The second chapter, "1809 Vin de coucher (nuptial wine)", records Jodeau's marriage to Céleste against parental opposition, and the birth of their daughter. As time goes on, Jodeau joins the French army and travels to Moscow with his best friend Baptiste Kalmann as part of the Napoleonic Wars, inherits the family vineyards after his father's death and becomes prosperous. At each annual visit he and Xas discuss Jodeau's life and family, and events in the village (including the murder of two local girls), and Xas gives Jodeau brief details about the afterlife and of his relationship with God and Lucifer; he appears to embody a mysterious treaty between the two.

Over time, Jodeau falls in love with Xas, but after learning that Xas is a fallen angel, feels conflicted. He develops a closer relationship with Aurora de Valday, the widowed niece of a local nobleman, and she learns of his relationship with Xas. One visit Xas is wounded by Lucifer, and "given" to Jodeau.

The final meeting between Jodeau and Xas is in the chapter "1863 Vinifie (to turn into wine)". An epilogue, from the perspective of the immortal Xas, is set in 1997.

Background and publication Edit

 
Author Elizabeth Knox, 2012

In the mid 1990s Knox was working part-time and parenting, and felt she had little time to sit down and think about a new novel.[2] She began writing after having a fever dream while ill with pneumonia, in which an angel began to tell her "the story of the most important relationship in his life, which was the story of his friendship with a French winemaker last century".[3] She described it as being like a film.[3] On waking, she wrote the novel's first 100 pages.[2][4][5] Although Knox's first few novels had been critically well-received, they had not found commercial success; she has said that on reading over what she had written, she knew it would be a bestseller.[6][3][5]

Knox had never been to Burgundy nor had any experience with the wine-making process. In order to write the book, she researched wine-making in New Zealand and Burgundy, as well as historical wine-making. She found minor details, such as the exact usage of steam engines used to pump out mines, hardest to research. She has said, however, that she was more concerned with creativity than research, particularly given that the book features an angel: "All I had to do was make it seem real."[5] She also invented the internal theology for the novel, including the nature of heaven and hell and of angels. She described herself as a "very Christian atheist", who "thinks about religion and human beings' place in the universe".[5] The fictional Clos Jodeau, where much of the book takes place, is described in the book as being on a hill near real-life Aluze, in Burgundy, and near the river Saône.

The novel was first published in New Zealand by Victoria University Press in 1998. It was published in the United States by Farrar, Straus and Giroux and in the United Kingdom by Chatto & Windus, in 1999, followed by Vintage Books in 2000. Victoria University Press published a limited edition hardback edition in 2008 to celebrate the novel's tenth anniversary and a "VUP Classic" edition in 2019.[7][8] It has been published in German, Dutch, Norwegian, Spanish, French, Hebrew, Italian and Korean.[9] Although the word "vintner" generally means wine merchant, Knox chose the title because Californian winemakers call themselves vintners. She was aware that vigneron (French for winemaker) would have been the correct term, but felt that "The Vigneron's Luck" would have been "a mouthful".[10]

At the time of its publication, it was unusual for New Zealand fiction to be set outside of New Zealand and to involve elements of magical realism and fantasy.[11][2] Knox has said she has always wanted to expand the meaning of New Zealand literature, and that she decided she "could just widen the brief of what a New Zealand writer might be".[2] Knox described the novel's genre as fantasy, rather than magical realism.[12] She has also said that she sees her fantasy work as "a fantastic naturalism, a fantastic element in a world that is very real, and so the fantastic things have to be very real too".[13]

Reception Edit

 
A view of Aluze, the real life village nearest to the fictional Clos Jodeau, from a nearby hillside

The Vintner's Luck won Knox widespread critical acclaim, and it raised her profile within New Zealand and overseas.[14] The novel sold very well in New Zealand, Australia and Britain (where it featured on The Guardian's bestseller list for three weeks).[5] In New Zealand it sold over 60,000 copies, and in 2018, readers of The Spinoff voted it to be the best New Zealand novel of the last 50 years.[15]

The book received mixed reviews in the United States, with critics agreeing that the book had "flashes of brilliance" but disagreeing about its consistency, according to Slate's Eliza Truitt.[16] Several reviews praised Knox's prose style but were less positive about the human characters in the book. Richard Bernstein in The New York Times praised the book's opening for its "spare stylish precision" and said that "Ms. Knox displays considerable talent throughout", but felt that the book lost momentum, concluding that "Ms. Knox clearly can fabricate a strange tale, but in this one she has not succeeded in exploiting the interesting possibilities present at the beginning".[17] In the LA Times, Richard Eder wrote that "The Vintner's Luck, for all its virtues, has a disconcerting hollowness to it" and identified the problem as an inherent emptiness in the concept of angels. On the other hand, he was impressed by her depiction of Xas: "she never falls into the trap of making him human. Xas is always the Other, and the author exquisitely imagines him that way".[18]

Nina Auerbach, writing in The New York Times Book Review two months after Bernstein's review, said that "Xas is one of the best angels since William Blake's" and that even sceptics would be convinced "since Knox creates so vivid a realm for him, at once orthodox and iconoclastic, mysterious and translucent." However, Auerbach found the human characters comparatively forgettable, writing: "Her original, often astonishingly vivid novel would have been better still if its earth were as credible as its heaven and hell".[19] Kirkus Reviews described the book as a "wonderfully imaginative tale"; although "arguably overplotted", Knox's "ferocious display of inventive power redeems and enlivens even the book's more extravagant convolutions". The conclusion was that the novel was "one-of-a-kind".[20] Publishers Weekly found the structure, plot twists and alternative universe of the novel intriguing, but ultimately felt that readers would be left "impressed but not totally enthusiastic".[21] The Guardian's Isobel Montgomery praised the "angelic writing and inspired structure", but concluded that "the divine and the everyday do not quite mesh into a satisfying whole".[22]

In The Independent, James Urquhart was positive, summing up his review in this way: "Beautifully written, The Vintner's Luck possesses a complex bouquet of conceits and ideas but it is the simplicity of Elizabeth Knox's writing that in the end draws out the savour of human experience and compassion."[23] Megan Harlan in Entertainment Weekly gave the novel an A− grade, concluding: "Daringly exploring the spiritual worth of sensual pleasure, New Zealand writer Elizabeth Knox’s imaginative, imagistic tale soars."[24] Actress Emma Thompson read The Vintner's Luck while preparing to play an angel in Mike Nichols' miniseries Angels of America and chose it as one of her favourite books for O, The Oprah Magazine in 2003, saying it was "the best story I've read in the past few years".[25]

Awards Edit

The Vintner's Luck won three awards at the 1999 Montana New Zealand Book Awards: the Deutz Medal for Fiction (New Zealand's most prestigious literary prize[26]), the Readers' Choice award, and the Booksellers' Choice award.[27] The judging panel said it was "an astonishing feat of imaginative story-telling".[12] In the same year it was longlisted for the prestigious Orange Prize for Fiction (now the Women's Prize for Fiction).[28] In 2002 it received the inaugural A$40,000 Tasmania Pacific Region Prize, then Australasia's richest literary prize.[6][29]

In 2000, not long after the publication of The Vintner's Luck, Knox received one of the five inaugural Arts Foundation of New Zealand Laureate Awards.[26] Bill Manhire, one of the members of the awarding panel, related this to the book, saying that "Knox's achievement is already considerable with the break-through success of The Vintner's Luck" and that the judging panel believed "she is about to become a major international writer".[30]

Sequel Edit

Knox had planned to write a sequel after finishing the novel, but after it became a bestseller, felt she "couldn't possibly do that again". She only felt sufficiently confident to tackle the sequel after the success of her Dreamhunter Duet young-adult novels in 2005 and 2007. In 2009, after a difficult year for her family, she said: "I know it's taking a long time but the living I do in between each book, and lessons I learn, I apply to Xas in learning how to be human. And there's been a lot of learning this year."[4]

The sequel, The Angel's Cut, was published in 2009.[31] The story follows the tale of Xas after the events of the first book and is set in 1930s Hollywood. Jose Borghino, writing for News.com.au, said that like the first book, it "contemplates the big questions", and that "it's the passion, exuberance and irrational joy of being human that Xas (and Knox) plump for every time".[32] Emma Hagestadt in The Independent said "Knox's evocation of Thirties California is dreamy, and her characters, interestingly warped".[33] At the time Knox said that she was intending to write a third book in the series, The Angel's Reserve, set in contemporary times.[4][34]

Adaptation Edit

The development of a film adaptation of the novel was announced in 2003, to be directed and co-written by New Zealand director Niki Caro. Caro was at the time promoting her successful film Whale Rider; having just learned that the novel's option was available for purchase, she visited Knox's home doorstep with flowers and suggested that she purchase the option. At that time, Knox said she was confident Caro would do the novel justice.[35]

In 2009 the adaptation was released, under the title The Vintner's Luck. It was almost universally panned at the 34th Annual Toronto International Film Festival.[36] Knox was disappointed at the direction the movie took as she felt Caro "took out what the book was actually about", referring to the romantic relationship between Sobran and Xas which was a core aspect of the novel.[37] Her sister Sara, who is gay, was also upset about the film version.[38] After Knox's bad experience with the film, she pulled out of a potential film contract with New Zealand filmmaker Jonathan King for her young adult fantasy series, The Dreamhunter Duet.[4][39]

In a 2016 article for the Academy of New Zealand Literature, David Larsen discussed the relationship of the film to the novel. He noted that the screenplay opened with the main character, Sobran Jodeau, on his deathbed, and frames the story as a flashback. This approach, Larsen suggested, distorts the story into a single linear quest for the great wine that Jodeau will drink before he dies. He also criticised Caro's approach to the sexual relationships in the film, particularly that between Xas and Sobran: "In the book this is either the great love of Sobran’s life, or one of them; the fact that the answer could be given either way tells you something about the nuanced complexity of the writing." In the film Xas asks Sobran to cut off his wings, rather than them being forcibly removed by Lucifer. Larsen noted that this appeared to have homophobic subtext but that this may have been due to the difficulties in the film's production process.[40]

References Edit

  1. ^ "Elizabeth Knox - Biography". Penguin Books (UK). Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d Adam, Pip. "Machines for Pleasure: An Interview with Elizabeth Knox". The Pantograph Punch. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  3. ^ a b c Morgan, Joyce (6 April 2001). "Author's dream run: book, prize and a film". Sydney Morning Herald. p. 19. ProQuest 363828099. Retrieved 25 April 2021.
  4. ^ a b c d Noonan, Kathleen (30 October 2009). "Year of hell for writer Elizabeth Knox". The Courier-Mail. Retrieved 22 March 2021.
  5. ^ a b c d e Moiser-Gerbaud, Tama (1 August 1999). "An angel and her fable". Sunday Star-Times. p. F1.
  6. ^ a b Sharp, Iain (8 April 2001). "Toasting Vintner". Sunday Star-Times. p. F2.
  7. ^ "The Vintner's Luck: VUP Classic". Victoria University Press. Retrieved 2 April 2021.
  8. ^ "The Vintner's Luck (Tenth Anniversary Edition)". Victoria University Press. Retrieved 2 April 2021.
  9. ^ "Formats and editions of The vintner's luck". WorldCat. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
  10. ^ Haden, Frank (26 November 2005). "Americans blamed for book's name". The Press. p. D17.
  11. ^ Stafford, Jane (31 October 2019). "Books of the Week: Elizabeth Knox, fantastically". Newsroom. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  12. ^ a b Hunter, Martin (28 July 1999). "Vintner's Luck wins the bubbly". The Dominion Post. p. 1.
  13. ^ Osborne, Susan (1 January 2009). "The Vintner's Luck". Bloomsbury Essential Guide for Reading Groups. A&C Black. pp. 107–110. ISBN 978-1-4081-0357-9. Retrieved 2 April 2021.
  14. ^ "Knox, Elizabeth". Read NZ Te Pou Muramura. from the original on 17 November 2020.
  15. ^ "Winner of our great book prize announced as Elizabeth Knox is proved most popular author of all times". The Spinoff. 24 April 2018. Retrieved 10 February 2021.
  16. ^ Truitt, Eliza (31 December 1998). "Summary Judgement". Slate. Retrieved 2 April 2021.
  17. ^ Bernstein, Richard (23 December 1998). "BOOKS OF THE TIMES; A Randy Angel Meddles, Literally, in Earthly Affairs". The New York Times. Retrieved 2 April 2021.
  18. ^ Eder, Richard (27 December 1998). "Wings of Desire". Retrieved 2 April 2021.
  19. ^ Auerbach, Nina (21 February 1999). "He's No Clarence". The New York Times. Retrieved 22 March 2021.
  20. ^ "The Vintner's Luck by Elizabeth Knox". Kirkus Reviews. 1 November 1998. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  21. ^ "Fiction Book Review: The Vintner's Luck". Publishers Weekly. 11 November 1998.
  22. ^ Montgomery, Isobel (11 March 2000). "Paperback fiction, 11 March". The Guardian. Retrieved 11 January 2018.
  23. ^ Urquhart, James (17 April 1999). "Wine, women and aggrieved angels". The Independent. Archived from the original on 20 June 2022. Retrieved 2 April 2021.
  24. ^ Harlan, Megan (8 January 1999). "The Vintner's Luck". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 2 April 2021.
  25. ^ Thompson, Emma (November 2003). "Emma Thompson's Books That Made A Difference". O, the Oprah Magazine. 4 (11): 218. ISSN 1531-3247. Retrieved 2 April 2021.
  26. ^ a b "Elizabeth Knox". The Arts Foundation Te Tumu Toi. New Zealand Arts Foundation. Retrieved 11 January 2018.
  27. ^ "Past Winners: 1999". New Zealand Book Awards Trust. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
  28. ^ "Women's Prize for Fiction: THE VINTNER'S LUCK". Women's Prize for Fiction. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
  29. ^ Fitzgerald, Michael (16 April 2001). "A Time Traveler on Imagination's Wings With faith and fantasy, a New Zealander transports readers around the globe". Time. Retrieved 2 April 2021.
  30. ^ "Knox, Elizabeth". Read NZ Te Pou Muramura. Retrieved 2 April 2021.
  31. ^ Knox, Elizabeth (2009). The angel's cut. Wellington [N.Z.]: Victoria University Press. ISBN 978-0-8647-3600-0.
  32. ^ Borghino, Jose (17 August 2009). "Lustful angel in love with human flaws". News.com.au. Retrieved 2 April 2021.
  33. ^ Hagestadt, Emma (22 October 2011). "The Angel's Cut, By Elizabeth Knox". The Independent. Archived from the original on 20 June 2022. Retrieved 2 April 2021.
  34. ^ Linnell, Christine (12 October 2009). "Elizabeth Knox on The Angel's Cut". The Lumière Reader. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
  35. ^ Cardy, Tom (4 July 2003). "Vintner's Luck to get Whale Rider touch". The Dominion Post. p. A1.
  36. ^ Davison, Isaac (16 September 2009). "Vintner's Luck movie gets critical panning". The New Zealand Herald. from the original on 22 October 2012. Retrieved 21 September 2009.
  37. ^ Fitzsimons, Tom (19 October 2009). "Author cried over Vintner's Luck film". The Dominion Post. from the original on 26 May 2010. Retrieved 6 April 2010.
  38. ^ Broun, Britton; Chapman, Katie (20 October 2009). "Gay romance gloss-over upsets author's sister". The Dominion Post. from the original on 30 November 2009. Retrieved 6 April 2010.
  39. ^ Hunter, Kathy (20 October 2005). . LeafSalon. Archived from the original on 19 July 2011. Retrieved 6 April 2010.
  40. ^ Larsen, David (10 October 2016). "High Fidelity?". Academy of New Zealand Literature. Retrieved 2 April 2021.

External links Edit

  • The first chapter of the novel, "1808 Vin Bourre (new wine)", extract published on the New York Times website (1999)

vintner, luck, this, article, about, 1998, novel, elizabeth, knox, 2009, film, adaptation, film, romantic, fantasy, novel, zealand, author, elizabeth, knox, first, published, 1998, fourth, full, length, novel, first, book, published, outside, zealand, novel, c. This article is about the 1998 novel by Elizabeth Knox For the 2009 film adaptation see The Vintner s Luck film The Vintner s Luck is a romantic fantasy novel by New Zealand author Elizabeth Knox first published in 1998 It was her fourth full length novel and her first book published outside New Zealand 1 The novel charts the relationship between a French winemaker the vintner of the title Sobran Jodeau and an angel Xas who first visits Jodeau on a midsummer s eve in 1808 when he is 18 years old and again each year on the same day The novel won several prestigious awards including the Deutz Medal for Fiction at the 1999 Montana New Zealand Book Awards and the inaugural Tasmania Pacific Region Prize for best novel It was adapted into a 2009 film The Vintner s LuckCover of first edition Victoria University Press AuthorElizabeth KnoxCountryNew ZealandLanguageEnglishGenreFantasy romanceSet inBurgundy France in the 19th centuryPublisherVictoria University Press NZ Chatto amp Windus and Vintage Books UK Farrar Straus and Giroux and Picador US Publication date1998Pages241AwardsDeutz Medal for Fiction at the Montana New Zealand Book AwardsISBN9780864733429 1st edition Victoria University Press Followed byThe Angel s Cut Contents 1 Plot 2 Background and publication 3 Reception 3 1 Awards 4 Sequel 5 Adaptation 6 References 7 External linksPlot Edit nbsp Pinot noir grapes the variety of Sobran and Celeste s nuptial wine which Sobran shared with Xas at their second meetingThe novel chronicles the life of a peasant winemaker Sobran Jodeau and his long and enduring relationship with the angel Xas over 55 years It opens with 18 year old Jodeau drunk and unhappy in love on the ridge of the sloping hills of his family s vineyard in Burgundy Jodeau stumbles upon what he initially thinks is a statue but which turns out to be the angel Xas Xas is described as physically beautiful and appearing as a young man with white wings and whiter skin smelling of snow Jodeau believes that Xas is his guardian angel and Xas promises to toast his marriage the following year Xas thereafter visits Jodeau in the same place once a year with each annual visit constituting a chapter of the book and their relationship develops Each chapter title bears the year and the name of a different stage in the wine making process The first chapter is titled 1808 Vin Bourru new wine The second chapter 1809 Vin de coucher nuptial wine records Jodeau s marriage to Celeste against parental opposition and the birth of their daughter As time goes on Jodeau joins the French army and travels to Moscow with his best friend Baptiste Kalmann as part of the Napoleonic Wars inherits the family vineyards after his father s death and becomes prosperous At each annual visit he and Xas discuss Jodeau s life and family and events in the village including the murder of two local girls and Xas gives Jodeau brief details about the afterlife and of his relationship with God and Lucifer he appears to embody a mysterious treaty between the two Over time Jodeau falls in love with Xas but after learning that Xas is a fallen angel feels conflicted He develops a closer relationship with Aurora de Valday the widowed niece of a local nobleman and she learns of his relationship with Xas One visit Xas is wounded by Lucifer and given to Jodeau The final meeting between Jodeau and Xas is in the chapter 1863 Vinifie to turn into wine An epilogue from the perspective of the immortal Xas is set in 1997 Background and publication Edit nbsp Author Elizabeth Knox 2012In the mid 1990s Knox was working part time and parenting and felt she had little time to sit down and think about a new novel 2 She began writing after having a fever dream while ill with pneumonia in which an angel began to tell her the story of the most important relationship in his life which was the story of his friendship with a French winemaker last century 3 She described it as being like a film 3 On waking she wrote the novel s first 100 pages 2 4 5 Although Knox s first few novels had been critically well received they had not found commercial success she has said that on reading over what she had written she knew it would be a bestseller 6 3 5 Knox had never been to Burgundy nor had any experience with the wine making process In order to write the book she researched wine making in New Zealand and Burgundy as well as historical wine making She found minor details such as the exact usage of steam engines used to pump out mines hardest to research She has said however that she was more concerned with creativity than research particularly given that the book features an angel All I had to do was make it seem real 5 She also invented the internal theology for the novel including the nature of heaven and hell and of angels She described herself as a very Christian atheist who thinks about religion and human beings place in the universe 5 The fictional Clos Jodeau where much of the book takes place is described in the book as being on a hill near real life Aluze in Burgundy and near the river Saone The novel was first published in New Zealand by Victoria University Press in 1998 It was published in the United States by Farrar Straus and Giroux and in the United Kingdom by Chatto amp Windus in 1999 followed by Vintage Books in 2000 Victoria University Press published a limited edition hardback edition in 2008 to celebrate the novel s tenth anniversary and a VUP Classic edition in 2019 7 8 It has been published in German Dutch Norwegian Spanish French Hebrew Italian and Korean 9 Although the word vintner generally means wine merchant Knox chose the title because Californian winemakers call themselves vintners She was aware that vigneron French for winemaker would have been the correct term but felt that The Vigneron s Luck would have been a mouthful 10 At the time of its publication it was unusual for New Zealand fiction to be set outside of New Zealand and to involve elements of magical realism and fantasy 11 2 Knox has said she has always wanted to expand the meaning of New Zealand literature and that she decided she could just widen the brief of what a New Zealand writer might be 2 Knox described the novel s genre as fantasy rather than magical realism 12 She has also said that she sees her fantasy work as a fantastic naturalism a fantastic element in a world that is very real and so the fantastic things have to be very real too 13 Reception Edit nbsp A view of Aluze the real life village nearest to the fictional Clos Jodeau from a nearby hillsideThe Vintner s Luck won Knox widespread critical acclaim and it raised her profile within New Zealand and overseas 14 The novel sold very well in New Zealand Australia and Britain where it featured on The Guardian s bestseller list for three weeks 5 In New Zealand it sold over 60 000 copies and in 2018 readers of The Spinoff voted it to be the best New Zealand novel of the last 50 years 15 The book received mixed reviews in the United States with critics agreeing that the book had flashes of brilliance but disagreeing about its consistency according to Slate s Eliza Truitt 16 Several reviews praised Knox s prose style but were less positive about the human characters in the book Richard Bernstein in The New York Times praised the book s opening for its spare stylish precision and said that Ms Knox displays considerable talent throughout but felt that the book lost momentum concluding that Ms Knox clearly can fabricate a strange tale but in this one she has not succeeded in exploiting the interesting possibilities present at the beginning 17 In the LA Times Richard Eder wrote that The Vintner s Luck for all its virtues has a disconcerting hollowness to it and identified the problem as an inherent emptiness in the concept of angels On the other hand he was impressed by her depiction of Xas she never falls into the trap of making him human Xas is always the Other and the author exquisitely imagines him that way 18 Nina Auerbach writing in The New York Times Book Review two months after Bernstein s review said that Xas is one of the best angels since William Blake s and that even sceptics would be convinced since Knox creates so vivid a realm for him at once orthodox and iconoclastic mysterious and translucent However Auerbach found the human characters comparatively forgettable writing Her original often astonishingly vivid novel would have been better still if its earth were as credible as its heaven and hell 19 Kirkus Reviews described the book as a wonderfully imaginative tale although arguably overplotted Knox s ferocious display of inventive power redeems and enlivens even the book s more extravagant convolutions The conclusion was that the novel was one of a kind 20 Publishers Weekly found the structure plot twists and alternative universe of the novel intriguing but ultimately felt that readers would be left impressed but not totally enthusiastic 21 The Guardian s Isobel Montgomery praised the angelic writing and inspired structure but concluded that the divine and the everyday do not quite mesh into a satisfying whole 22 In The Independent James Urquhart was positive summing up his review in this way Beautifully written The Vintner s Luck possesses a complex bouquet of conceits and ideas but it is the simplicity of Elizabeth Knox s writing that in the end draws out the savour of human experience and compassion 23 Megan Harlan in Entertainment Weekly gave the novel an A grade concluding Daringly exploring the spiritual worth of sensual pleasure New Zealand writer Elizabeth Knox s imaginative imagistic tale soars 24 Actress Emma Thompson read The Vintner s Luck while preparing to play an angel in Mike Nichols miniseries Angels of America and chose it as one of her favourite books for O The Oprah Magazine in 2003 saying it was the best story I ve read in the past few years 25 Awards Edit The Vintner s Luck won three awards at the 1999 Montana New Zealand Book Awards the Deutz Medal for Fiction New Zealand s most prestigious literary prize 26 the Readers Choice award and the Booksellers Choice award 27 The judging panel said it was an astonishing feat of imaginative story telling 12 In the same year it was longlisted for the prestigious Orange Prize for Fiction now the Women s Prize for Fiction 28 In 2002 it received the inaugural A 40 000 Tasmania Pacific Region Prize then Australasia s richest literary prize 6 29 In 2000 not long after the publication of The Vintner s Luck Knox received one of the five inaugural Arts Foundation of New Zealand Laureate Awards 26 Bill Manhire one of the members of the awarding panel related this to the book saying that Knox s achievement is already considerable with the break through success of The Vintner s Luck and that the judging panel believed she is about to become a major international writer 30 Sequel EditKnox had planned to write a sequel after finishing the novel but after it became a bestseller felt she couldn t possibly do that again She only felt sufficiently confident to tackle the sequel after the success of her Dreamhunter Duet young adult novels in 2005 and 2007 In 2009 after a difficult year for her family she said I know it s taking a long time but the living I do in between each book and lessons I learn I apply to Xas in learning how to be human And there s been a lot of learning this year 4 The sequel The Angel s Cut was published in 2009 31 The story follows the tale of Xas after the events of the first book and is set in 1930s Hollywood Jose Borghino writing for News com au said that like the first book it contemplates the big questions and that it s the passion exuberance and irrational joy of being human that Xas and Knox plump for every time 32 Emma Hagestadt in The Independent said Knox s evocation of Thirties California is dreamy and her characters interestingly warped 33 At the time Knox said that she was intending to write a third book in the series The Angel s Reserve set in contemporary times 4 34 Adaptation EditMain article The Vintner s Luck film The development of a film adaptation of the novel was announced in 2003 to be directed and co written by New Zealand director Niki Caro Caro was at the time promoting her successful film Whale Rider having just learned that the novel s option was available for purchase she visited Knox s home doorstep with flowers and suggested that she purchase the option At that time Knox said she was confident Caro would do the novel justice 35 In 2009 the adaptation was released under the title The Vintner s Luck It was almost universally panned at the 34th Annual Toronto International Film Festival 36 Knox was disappointed at the direction the movie took as she felt Caro took out what the book was actually about referring to the romantic relationship between Sobran and Xas which was a core aspect of the novel 37 Her sister Sara who is gay was also upset about the film version 38 After Knox s bad experience with the film she pulled out of a potential film contract with New Zealand filmmaker Jonathan King for her young adult fantasy series The Dreamhunter Duet 4 39 In a 2016 article for the Academy of New Zealand Literature David Larsen discussed the relationship of the film to the novel He noted that the screenplay opened with the main character Sobran Jodeau on his deathbed and frames the story as a flashback This approach Larsen suggested distorts the story into a single linear quest for the great wine that Jodeau will drink before he dies He also criticised Caro s approach to the sexual relationships in the film particularly that between Xas and Sobran In the book this is either the great love of Sobran s life or one of them the fact that the answer could be given either way tells you something about the nuanced complexity of the writing In the film Xas asks Sobran to cut off his wings rather than them being forcibly removed by Lucifer Larsen noted that this appeared to have homophobic subtext but that this may have been due to the difficulties in the film s production process 40 References Edit Elizabeth Knox Biography Penguin Books UK Retrieved 21 March 2021 a b c d Adam Pip Machines for Pleasure An Interview with Elizabeth Knox The Pantograph Punch Retrieved 30 March 2021 a b c Morgan Joyce 6 April 2001 Author s dream run book prize and a film Sydney Morning Herald p 19 ProQuest 363828099 Retrieved 25 April 2021 a b c d Noonan Kathleen 30 October 2009 Year of hell for writer Elizabeth Knox The Courier Mail Retrieved 22 March 2021 a b c d e Moiser Gerbaud Tama 1 August 1999 An angel and her fable Sunday Star Times p F1 a b Sharp Iain 8 April 2001 Toasting Vintner Sunday Star Times p F2 The Vintner s Luck VUP Classic Victoria University Press Retrieved 2 April 2021 The Vintner s Luck Tenth Anniversary Edition Victoria University Press Retrieved 2 April 2021 Formats and editions of The vintner s luck WorldCat Retrieved 31 March 2021 Haden Frank 26 November 2005 Americans blamed for book s name The Press p D17 Stafford Jane 31 October 2019 Books of the Week Elizabeth Knox fantastically Newsroom Retrieved 30 March 2021 a b Hunter Martin 28 July 1999 Vintner s Luck wins the bubbly The Dominion Post p 1 Osborne Susan 1 January 2009 The Vintner s Luck Bloomsbury Essential Guide for Reading Groups A amp C Black pp 107 110 ISBN 978 1 4081 0357 9 Retrieved 2 April 2021 Knox Elizabeth Read NZ Te Pou Muramura Archived from the original on 17 November 2020 Winner of our great book prize announced as Elizabeth Knox is proved most popular author of all times The Spinoff 24 April 2018 Retrieved 10 February 2021 Truitt Eliza 31 December 1998 Summary Judgement Slate Retrieved 2 April 2021 Bernstein Richard 23 December 1998 BOOKS OF THE TIMES A Randy Angel Meddles Literally in Earthly Affairs The New York Times Retrieved 2 April 2021 Eder Richard 27 December 1998 Wings of Desire Retrieved 2 April 2021 Auerbach Nina 21 February 1999 He s No Clarence The New York Times Retrieved 22 March 2021 The Vintner s Luck by Elizabeth Knox Kirkus Reviews 1 November 1998 Retrieved 21 March 2021 Fiction Book Review The Vintner s Luck Publishers Weekly 11 November 1998 Montgomery Isobel 11 March 2000 Paperback fiction 11 March The Guardian Retrieved 11 January 2018 Urquhart James 17 April 1999 Wine women and aggrieved angels The Independent Archived from the original on 20 June 2022 Retrieved 2 April 2021 Harlan Megan 8 January 1999 The Vintner s Luck Entertainment Weekly Retrieved 2 April 2021 Thompson Emma November 2003 Emma Thompson s Books That Made A Difference O the Oprah Magazine 4 11 218 ISSN 1531 3247 Retrieved 2 April 2021 a b Elizabeth Knox The Arts Foundation Te Tumu Toi New Zealand Arts Foundation Retrieved 11 January 2018 Past Winners 1999 New Zealand Book Awards Trust Retrieved 31 March 2021 Women s Prize for Fiction THE VINTNER S LUCK Women s Prize for Fiction Retrieved 31 March 2021 Fitzgerald Michael 16 April 2001 A Time Traveler on Imagination s Wings With faith and fantasy a New Zealander transports readers around the globe Time Retrieved 2 April 2021 Knox Elizabeth Read NZ Te Pou Muramura Retrieved 2 April 2021 Knox Elizabeth 2009 The angel s cut Wellington N Z Victoria University Press ISBN 978 0 8647 3600 0 Borghino Jose 17 August 2009 Lustful angel in love with human flaws News com au Retrieved 2 April 2021 Hagestadt Emma 22 October 2011 The Angel s Cut By Elizabeth Knox The Independent Archived from the original on 20 June 2022 Retrieved 2 April 2021 Linnell Christine 12 October 2009 Elizabeth Knox on The Angel s Cut The Lumiere Reader Retrieved 17 November 2020 Cardy Tom 4 July 2003 Vintner s Luck to get Whale Rider touch The Dominion Post p A1 Davison Isaac 16 September 2009 Vintner s Luck movie gets critical panning The New Zealand Herald Archived from the original on 22 October 2012 Retrieved 21 September 2009 Fitzsimons Tom 19 October 2009 Author cried over Vintner s Luck film The Dominion Post Archived from the original on 26 May 2010 Retrieved 6 April 2010 Broun Britton Chapman Katie 20 October 2009 Gay romance gloss over upsets author s sister The Dominion Post Archived from the original on 30 November 2009 Retrieved 6 April 2010 Hunter Kathy 20 October 2005 Elizabeth Knox interview LeafSalon Archived from the original on 19 July 2011 Retrieved 6 April 2010 Larsen David 10 October 2016 High Fidelity Academy of New Zealand Literature Retrieved 2 April 2021 External links EditThe first chapter of the novel 1808 Vin Bourre new wine extract published on the New York Times website 1999 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Vintner 27s Luck amp oldid 1173510791, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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