This website collects cookies to deliver better user experience, you agree to the Privacy Policy.
Accept
Sign In
The Texas Reporter
  • Home
  • Trending
  • Texas
  • World
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Business
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Real Estate
  • Crypto & NFTs
  • Tech
  • Lifestyle
    • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Travel
    • Fashion
    • Books
    • Arts
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
Reading: Book Review: ‘Pure Colour,’ by Sheila Heti
Share
The Texas ReporterThe Texas Reporter
Font ResizerAa
Search
  • Home
  • Trending
  • Texas
  • World
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Business
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Real Estate
  • Crypto & NFTs
  • Tech
  • Lifestyle
    • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Travel
    • Fashion
    • Books
    • Arts
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© The Texas Reporter. All Rights Reserved.
Lifestyle

Book Review: ‘Pure Colour,’ by Sheila Heti

Editorial Board
Editorial Board Published February 7, 2022
Share
Book Review: ‘Pure Colour,’ by Sheila Heti
SHARE

PURE COLOUR
By Sheila Heti
216 pages. Farrar, Straus & Giroux. $26.

Sheila Heti’s new novel, “Pure Colour,” is about a young woman who turns into a leaf. “Unrequited love’s a bore,” Billie Holiday sang. So, it turns out, is photosynthesis.

The young woman’s name is Mira. Her transformation is disorienting, to us if not her. One moment the reader is consuming shot after shot of Heti’s strong, familiar brand of espresso. The next we’re sipping as if out of Meret Oppenheim’s fur-lined teacup at MoMA.

“Pure Colour” has an intricate philosophical superstructure. Mira, who early in the novel works in a lamp store and attends a prestigious school for art critics — the first sign that this book is a fable — is clearly living in end times.

The heat is grievous. (“Seasons had become postmodern.”) The internet has splintered comity. (“There was so much more hate than any of us had the capacity to understand.”) Everything seems dirty, sad and wrong. The colors are leaching from things.

Two relationships sustain Mira. One is with Annie, who lives above a bookstore. They’ve just met, but Mira is so attracted to her that she feels “her rib cage was being pried apart.” Heti has long been a devastating writer about sexual magnetism, her prose as sensitive as the tip of a conductor’s baton.

The other relationship is with her father. When he dies, she’s bereft. His spirit passes into her. She joins him in the leaf where they are, to borrow Milton’s phrase, imparadised in one another’s arms. This relationship is vaguely, the author implies, sexual as well.

This all takes place in the first draft of civilization. In preparation for the second draft, “hoping to get it more right this time,” Heti writes, “God appears, splits and manifests as three critics in the sky.”

The three critics in the sky are not, sadly, Peter Schjeldahl, Deborah Solomon and Jerry Saltz. Instead, there is “a large bird who critiques from above, a large fish who critiques from the middle and a large bear who critiques while cradling creation in its arms.”

Where is Heti going with this? It’s complicated. “Pure Colour” runs its readers along a borderline of substance and hallucination. You sense her doing several things at once.

One, she is making room to talk about ideas that interest her — the mystery of consciousness, ego versus the true self, inklings of the divine, the nature of criticism, the kibbitzing mind versus what Emerson called “the wise silence.”

Two, she is niftily confounding expectations. Heti’s recent novels, “Motherhood” and “How Should a Person Be?,” have been placed in a box labeled, drearily, autofiction. “Pure Colour” breaks that box. This is a writer who — for the moment, at any rate — wishes to be less rather than more understood.

Does the novel work? Not entirely, not for this reader. “Pure Colour” is awfully earnest at times. It’s static as well; very little, beyond the big, Gregor Samsa-like reveal, happens.

Heti’s detractors could probably put a bottle in the middle of a table and entertain themselves reading lines out of context in suave, poetaster voices. Here come the warm jets: “Mira wonders if leaves exist in the human heart”; “What is the actual distance of love?”; “In a leaf, there is no question of betrayal.”

And yet, she has a way of turning metaphysics to her advantage. There are moments in this novel that might remind you of the scene in “The Real Thing,” the Tom Stoppard play, when a character shakes a souvenir snow globe and a snowstorm fills the entire stage. Just like that, there’s magic.

Like Iris Murdoch’s novels, Heti’s are philosophically intense, although Heti’s work is pared down where Murdoch’s was Rabelaisian. Heti owns a sharp ax. In “Pure Colour” the wood chips that fall are as interesting as the sculpture that gets made.

Heti is interested in charisma and beauty, the utter unfairness of them. “A person can waste their whole life, without even meaning to, all because another person has a really great face,” she writes. “Did God think of this when he was making the world?”

She can compact political and class antagonisms into small fists of meaning. Thus this sentence, which starts sweetly before delivering its sting: “At least God had given the sunrise — to those of us who lived on a cliff.”

As in the recent work of Patricia Lockwood, Lauren Oyler and Jia Tolentino, among others, there are many felicities of perception about lives spent online.

“Pure Colour” is not helplessly, organically, healingly funny, as were some of Heti’s earlier novels. But there are moments. There is a fed-up sense that the world has simply become, for lack of a better word, gross.

Global warming feels like “a bad older brother sitting on your face.” The dust in the air? “We walk through our days in the dust of the dead. Two minutes out of the shower and already we are filthy. It is too disgusting to discuss.”

The novelist Peter De Vries, asked about his literary ambition, once replied that he wanted a mass readership, one large enough for his elite audience to despise.

In recent years, Heti has been approaching that kind of vast audience. There’s no blaming her for wishing, with a novel like “Pure Colour,” to be more elusive.

TAGGED:Lifestyle
Share This Article
Twitter Email Copy Link Print
Previous Article Lamar Jackson, Ravens more popular in Virginia than Washington, Lids sales show Lamar Jackson, Ravens more popular in Virginia than Washington, Lids sales show
Next Article Former NBA player Ty Lawson arrested after multiple altercations in Spain Former NBA player Ty Lawson arrested after multiple altercations in Spain

Editor's Pick

Sizzling Lady Summer time Begins within the Bathe—Right here’s Learn how to Prep Your Pores and skin

Sizzling Lady Summer time Begins within the Bathe—Right here’s Learn how to Prep Your Pores and skin

We might obtain a portion of gross sales if you buy a product by a hyperlink on this article. Most…

By Editorial Board 8 Min Read
Alpine’s Sizzling Hatch EV Has a Constructed-In, ‘Gran Turismo’ Model Driving Teacher

One other win over its Renault 5 sibling is a multi-link rear…

3 Min Read
Louis Vuitton Is Dropping a New Perfume As a result of It’s Sizzling | FashionBeans

We independently consider all beneficial services and products. Any services or products…

2 Min Read

Latest

Debut Novel The Revenant’s Mark Blends Revolutionary War History with Dark Fantasy in a Haunting Tale of Resurrection and Reckoning

Debut Novel The Revenant’s Mark Blends Revolutionary War History with Dark Fantasy in a Haunting Tale of Resurrection and Reckoning

LITTLETON, CO — Wesley C. Martin, a former U.S. Marine…

July 19, 2025

GARI Emerges as a Global Leader in Research Mentorship and Scholarly InnovationAustin, Texas

As global higher education continues to…

July 19, 2025

“A Family’s Fight to Reclaim Their Legacy”

Introduction: For generations, the Wright family…

July 9, 2025

AR Global Inc CEO Kason Roberts Donates to Support Kerrville Storm Victims, Mobilizes Team for Restoration Efforts

Kerrville, Texas — In the aftermath…

July 9, 2025

Bitcoin Tops $109,000 After Senate Passes Trump’s ‘Big Beautiful Bill’ – “The Defiant”

The crypto market posted modest good…

July 9, 2025

You Might Also Like

Deliver Again Boredom—The Case For a ‘90s-Impressed Summer season
Lifestyle

Deliver Again Boredom—The Case For a ‘90s-Impressed Summer season

This story is a part of The EDIT: Summer season Challenge. Our quarterly journal celebrates the rituals, recipes, and rhythms…

15 Min Read
Wholesome Dinners in 30 Minutes or Much less—Recipes That Are Saving Our Weeknights
Lifestyle

Wholesome Dinners in 30 Minutes or Much less—Recipes That Are Saving Our Weeknights

With regards to fast, wholesome dinner concepts, I’m normally on the hunt for one thing of the assembly-only selection. This…

16 Min Read
Nutritionist-Accepted Dietary supplements for Each Part of Your Cycle
Lifestyle

Nutritionist-Accepted Dietary supplements for Each Part of Your Cycle

We could obtain a portion of gross sales if you buy a product by way of a hyperlink on this…

13 Min Read
Sizzling Lady Summer time Begins within the Bathe—Right here’s Learn how to Prep Your Pores and skin
Lifestyle

From Crimson Mild to Chilly Remedy—These Are the Skincare Rituals Insiders Swear By

We could obtain a portion of gross sales if you are going to buy a product via a hyperlink on…

7 Min Read
The Texas Reporter

About Us

Welcome to The Texas Reporter, a newspaper based in Houston, Texas that covers a wide range of topics for our readers. At The Texas Reporter, we are dedicated to providing our readers with the latest news and information from around the world, with a focus on issues that are important to the people of Texas.

Company

  • About Us
  • Newsroom Policies & Standards
  • Diversity & Inclusion
  • Careers
  • Media & Community Relations
  • WP Creative Group
  • Accessibility Statement

Contact Us

  • Contact Us
  • Contact Customer Care
  • Advertise
  • Licensing & Syndication
  • Request a Correction
  • Contact the Newsroom
  • Send a News Tip
  • Report a Vulnerability

Term of Use

  • Digital Products Terms of Sale
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Settings
  • Submissions & Discussion Policy
  • RSS Terms of Service
  • Ad Choices

© The Texas Reporter. All Rights Reserved.

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?