61 pages • 2 hours read
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Content Warning: This section of the guide discusses suicide.
Sibylla Newman is the novel’s central character and a figure of complexity. She is a highly intelligent and educated woman with a deep passion for classical literature, languages, and intellectual pursuits. She is an American living in the UK, which positions her as a cultural outsider searching fruitlessly for belonging and permanency. Sibylla lands a position at a publishing house, enabling her to prolong her stay in Britain. However, her life takes a challenging turn when she engages in a romantic encounter with Val Peters, resulting in her pregnancy with Ludo.
One of the central themes that defines Sibylla is her commitment to Intellectual Pursuit and Genius as she cultivates the talents of her son, Ludo. Her role as a mother is unique and unconventional, as she dedicates herself to providing Ludo with an extraordinary education. Sibylla embodies the idea that intellectual exploration is a transformative force. Ludo’s perception of his mother oscillates, describing her as “beautiful. When she’s excited” (387) and when she is bored, she looks like “someone who’s got two weeks to live” (387). Similarly, Liberace describes her as being “so quiet” one minute and then all of a sudden “there’s no stopping” her (71).
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