By Alan Hollinghurst, 2011
The thread that ties them together is Cecil, a charismatic and
somewhat creepy young man in the first story who dies a war hero and minor poet.
His relatives and numerous others reflect on his life at each point in the 20th
century as his poetry becomes famous, then a cliché, then a source for popular
and academic re-examination, and finally the subject of an obscure book search.
The connection to Cecil’s story becomes very thin and disputed by the end, which
is probably the post-modern point of the book. In fact, the sections dealing
with the biographer become almost comic as he puts his interpretation on very
little evidence, while other characters actively strive to maintain their
preferred interpretation. So, while giving these glimpses of gay life, Hollinghurst
is also pointing out how subjective they are, and how they cannot be read
simply from our current viewpoint.
While the glamour of Cecil’s privileged background is
initially attractive, Paul in the later episodes is to me the most interesting
character. He comes from a poor, working class town where homosexuality would
be scandalous in the 1950s, and it’s interesting to see how he lives his life in
his bedsitting room and banking job, but works his way into the gay literary
elite of the TLS. (The picture Hollinghurst gives of the inner TLS culture seems
satirically apt.) Paul is the only central character who is not from an affluent
background and he seems to struggle with his identity, both as a gay man and as
a literary fringe dweller. Class consciousness remains embedded in English
society through all the changes of the 20th century. It merely has
different expressions at different points.
The title refers to a poem by Tennyson in which a stranger, looking
at things in a new way, discovers anew something that had been lost. In the novel,
the characters in each of the vignettes look on the subject and see it in a new
way from their own contemporary perspective.
Not a lot happens in any of the vignettes. In a way, they
reminded me of the way Henry James writes a scene – the interest is on the changing
psychological relationships of the characters more than it is on anything they
actually do. The characters have a lot going on internally, from their
perspectives at different times and in their different relationships to homosexuality.
The early scenes at the Two Acres cottage also reminded me of the domestic middle-class
scenes that E.M. Forster described in some of his novels. Ironically, it all
ends with a bookseller’s agent looking for saleable clues and finding none. The
legend of the charismatic Cecil fades away, much like the gardened cottage that
he memorialized in his most famous poem, left a crumbling site for
re-development in the final scenes.
As I recall in his previous novels, Hollinghurst writes in the
voice of a detached, ironic observer. This allows him a satirical and at times
comic tone, although I find the detachment blocks any real engagement with the
characters or the limited story line. The short length of each of the segments keeps
the book moving, but it also limits a reader’s engagement. There was enough
interest for me in the varied scenes of gay lives, but I think it would have
been quite tedious to follow any of the characters on their own.
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