The Arms of the Infinite

Elizabeth Smart and George Barker

By Christopher Barker
Categories: Literature & Language Studies, Auto/biography & Memoir, Gender & Sexuality Studies, Women’s Studies
Publisher: Wilfrid Laurier University Press
Paperback : 9781554582709, 258 pages, November 2010
Ebook (PDF) : 9781554583072, 258 pages, November 2010
Ebook (EPUB) : 9781554583256, 258 pages, November 2010

Table of contents

Table of Contents for
The Arms of the Infinite: George Barker and Elizabeth Smart by Christopher Barker

Acknowledgments

Index of Persons Appearing

1986

1947

1913

1951

1952

1964

Notes

Bibliography

Index of Names

Description

The Arms of the Infinite takes the reader inside the minds of author Christopher Barker’s parents, writer Elizabeth Smart (By Grand Central Station I Sat Down and Wept) and poet George Barker. From their first fateful meeting and subsequent elopement, Barker candidly reveals their obsessive, passionate, and volatile love affair.

He writes evocatively of his unconventional upbringing with his siblings in a shack in Ireland and, later, a rambling, falling-down house in Essex. Interesting and charismatic figures from the literary and art worlds are regular visitors, and the book is full of fascinating cameos and anecdotes.

North American rights only.

Reviews

``Photographer and writer Christopher Barker is the son of Canadian writer Elizabeth Smart and British poet George Barker—names not so familiar to American readers, which in the case of Smart is unfortunate, since her 1945 prose-poem By Grand Central Station I Sat Down and Wept is a raw, throbbing nerve-ending of a love story, brilliantly constructed and managed. Smart's novel related the beginning of her exceedingly complicated and lifelong affair with the hard-drinking, hard-living George, who was married when the affair began, and then divorced, and the married again—all while still involved with Smart.... The most wrenching part of The Arms of the Infinite is the author's analysis of the fate of his sister, Rose, whose life, for their mother, became a ‘a birth too far’ from any support not already given over to sustaining Barker and supporting three other children. An alcoholic and heroin addict, she died from the tragically inevitable collapse of her liver—as well as a confluence of metaphors too numerous to list here—and the book ends, not with the deaths of writers Elizabeth Smart and George Barker, but with a photo of Rose, young and beautiful, and her daughter, Claudia. It is the image of passion's sacrifice that has the last word here, and fittingly.''

- Sharon Mesmer

``This book is enormously loving and forgiving: a really honest tribute to his creative and wayward parents; an important record of their turbulent times and now one of my favourite books.''

- Fiona Green

``One of the pleasures of this memoir is to see how the work of Elizabeth Smart still thrives; it is heartening to witness Christopher Barker consort with his mother's words and add a cool quantity of his own, finally getting a word in, one might say, in a conversation that cancelled the children too many times.''

- Andrew O'Hagan

``Barker's memoir is a heartbreaking and loving portrait of his parents and their stormy relationship.... A lively and lovely memoir.... There are things a child can tell you that a biographer can't, and this book provides an excellent counterpoint to Toronto writer Rosemary Sullivan's biography By Heart: Elizabeth Smart, a Life (1991), Kim Echlin's lovely Elizabeth Smart: A Fugue Essay on Women and Creativity (Toronto, ON: Women's Press, 2004), and Smart's own writing.''

- Rob McLennan

``A moving account of a man returning to his child self, trying to understand his absconding father, and of an adult searching to forgive.''

- Rosemary Sullivan