It's a slow-ish news day here at TEV, which is just as well because I'm now in something like the seventh week of promising my agent that I'll deliver my rewrite in "two or three weeks". (But this time I really do mean it!) So that has my attention today, anyway. The few bits that seem worth passing on begin with this Telegraph profile of Alan Hollinghurst, whose new novel The Line of Beauty ...
is also his finest, a wonderfully subtle tragicomedy of manners and mores – and a vindication of his dilatory procedure. Historically, it picks up where his scorching debut, The Swimming-Pool Library (1988), concluded in 1983, the "last good summer" before Aids began its devastating swathe. Nicholas Guest, shy and bookish and just down from Oxford, becomes a lodger in the baronial west London home of his college friend Toby Fedden, whose father, Gerald, is a bumptious Tory MP and a rising star of the Thatcher government.
I read more than half of The Line of Beauty today with the intent of attending your reading at the NY LBGT Center. On such a miserable night, the trip from Brooklyn was just too much. I'm sorry I didn't get the chance to hear you read. I wonder which passage you read?
The novel was extremely vivid for me although I know little about that world. I spent my 20s in the San Francisco of the 70s.
Naming the main character Guest reminded me of Vanity Fair's Beck Sharp. Nick was truly a guest in his own life and I'm impressed that everything wasn't tied up with a nice bow at the end. I also thought of Tom Wolfe's Vanity of the Gods and the upperclass world.
If you have the time, I'd enjoy corresponding with you. There was a mischievous glint in your eyes in the dust jacket photo. Very intriguing and you're an attractive man as well.
Cheers
Posted by: David Cawley | December 10, 2004 at 08:59 PM
Oops! I meant Bonfire of the Vanities. That's what comes of writing late at night.
Very vivid novel. Characters and settings still resonating.
Posted by: David Cawley | December 11, 2004 at 04:35 AM