The second novel of Lawrence Durrell’s “Alexandria Quartet” (which otherwise in order comprised Justine, Mountolive, and Clea), Balthazar – as well as the latter two novels – was never adapted for film, unlike the first volume of the series.
Though the cover artist of this 1961 edition of Balthazar is unknown, that anonymous person would s e e m to have been the same individual who created the cover of the other three 1961 Cardinal Edition Quartet novels: For each of the four books, a woman’s face – sometimes veiled; sometimes not – occupies most of the cover, while at the lower left appears a mosque and minaret. Each of the four novels also has its own distinguishing background color: Justine in pale yellow, Balthazar in blue, Mountolive in violet, and Clea in Brown.
He was at that time deeply immersed in the novel he was writing,
and as always he found that his ordinary life,
in a distorted sort of way,
was beginning to follow the curvature of his book.
He explained this by saying that any concentration of the will displaces life
(Archimedes’ bath-water) and gives it bias in motion.
Reality, be believed, was always trying to copy the imagination of man, from which it derived.
You will see from this that he was a serious fellow underneath much of his clowning
and had quite comprehensive beliefs and ideas.
But also, he had been drinking rather heavily that day as he always did when he was working.
Between books he never touched a drop.
Riding beside her in the great car, someone beautiful,
dark and painted with great eyes like the prow of some Aegean ship,
he had the sensation that his book was being rapidly passed underneath his life,
as if under a sheet of paper containing the iron filings of temporal events,
as a magnet is in that commonplace experiment one does at school:
and somehow setting up a copying magnetic field. (pp. 106-107)
Alexandria Quartet, at Wikipedia
International Lawrence Durrell Society
P.S.!… Here’s the cover – with a prominent and rather distracting bend in the lower right corner (ugh!) – that originally featured as the main image of this post. As you can see above, the cover image is now from a different, undamaged copy of Durrell’s book.
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