The Line of Beauty: Difference between revisions
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==Literary significance and criticism== |
==Literary significance and criticism== |
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Hollinghurst wrote part of the novel at the [[Yaddo]] colony.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Alan Hollinghurst and the Vitality of Influence|last=Johnson|first=Allan|publisher=Palgrave Macmillan|year=2014|isbn= |
Hollinghurst wrote part of the novel at the [[Yaddo]] colony.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Alan Hollinghurst and the Vitality of Influence|last=Johnson|first=Allan|publisher=Palgrave Macmillan|year=2014|isbn=978-1349472505|location=London|pages=86}}</ref> |
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The book won the 2004 [[Booker Prize]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.themanbookerprize.com/prize/books/44 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110717053954/http://www.themanbookerprize.com/prize/books/44 |archive-date=17 July 2011 |access-date=6 February 2015 |title=The Man Booker Prize: ''The Line of Beauty''}}</ref><ref name="Advocate">{{cite news |title=Alan Hollinghurst wins prestigious Booker Prize |url=http://www.advocate.com/arts-entertainment/entertainment-news/2004/10/21/alan-hollinghurst-wins-prestigious-booker-prize |work=[[The Advocate (LGBT magazine)|The Advocate]] |date=21 October 2004 |quote=Out British author Alan Hollinghurst has won the Booker Prize... |access-date=8 February 2015 }}</ref> In 2019, the novel was ranked 38th on ''[[The Guardian]]'''s list of the 100 best books of the 21st century.<ref>{{cite web |title=The 100 best books of the 21st century |url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2019/sep/21/best-books-of-the-21st-century |website=The Guardian |access-date=22 September 2019}}</ref> |
The book won the 2004 [[Booker Prize]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.themanbookerprize.com/prize/books/44 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110717053954/http://www.themanbookerprize.com/prize/books/44 |archive-date=17 July 2011 |access-date=6 February 2015 |title=The Man Booker Prize: ''The Line of Beauty''}}</ref><ref name="Advocate">{{cite news |title=Alan Hollinghurst wins prestigious Booker Prize |url=http://www.advocate.com/arts-entertainment/entertainment-news/2004/10/21/alan-hollinghurst-wins-prestigious-booker-prize |work=[[The Advocate (LGBT magazine)|The Advocate]] |date=21 October 2004 |quote=Out British author Alan Hollinghurst has won the Booker Prize... |access-date=8 February 2015 }}</ref> In 2019, the novel was ranked 38th on ''[[The Guardian]]'''s list of the 100 best books of the 21st century.<ref>{{cite web |title=The 100 best books of the 21st century |url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2019/sep/21/best-books-of-the-21st-century |website=The Guardian |access-date=22 September 2019}}</ref> |
Revision as of 08:01, 23 February 2022
Author | Alan Hollinghurst |
---|---|
Language | English |
Genre | |
Published | 2004 (Picador Books) |
Publication place | UK |
Media type | Print (Paperback and Hardback) |
Pages | 400 pp |
ISBN | 0-330-48321-8 |
OCLC | 263634123 |
The Line of Beauty is a 2004 Man Booker Prize-winning novel by Alan Hollinghurst.
Plot
The novel is set in Britain in three parts, taking place in 1983, 1986 and 1987. The story surrounds the young gay protagonist, Nick Guest. Nick is middle-class and from the fictional market town of Barwick in Northamptonshire; he has graduated from Worcester College, Oxford with a First in English and is to begin postgraduate studies at University College London. Many of the significant characters in the novel are Nick's male contemporaries from Oxford.
The book explores the tension between Nick's intimate relationship with the Fedden family, in whose parties and holidays he participates, and the realities of his sexuality and gay life, which the Feddens accept only to the extent of never mentioning it. It explores themes of hypocrisy, privilege, materialism, and homosexuality, with the emerging AIDS crisis forming a backdrop to the book's conclusion.
"The Love Chord" (1983)
The novel begins in the summer of 1983, shortly after Margaret Thatcher's second victory in the general election. Nick moves into the luxurious Notting Hill home of the Sloane Ranger Fedden family. The son of the house, Toby, is his Oxford University classmate on whom he has a secret crush. Nick's stay is meant to last for a short time while Toby and his parents—Rachel, the daughter of an extremely wealthy Rothschild-like Jewish family, and Gerald, a successful businessman and just-elected Conservative MP for Barwick—are at their holiday home in France. Left at home with Nick is the Feddens' daughter Catherine whom the Feddens are reluctant to leave on her own because of her history of self-harming. Nick helps Cat through a crisis when she considers cutting herself, and when her parents return they suggest he stay on indefinitely, since Cat has become attached to him and Toby is moving into his own place.
Nick dates Leo Charles, a black man from Willesden in his late 20s, whom he meets through a lonely hearts column. As Leo lives with his religious mother and Nick feels restricted in the Fedden household the two conduct their sexual affair almost entirely outside in public parks and side streets.
Leo also introduces Nick to Pete, his middle-aged former lover who runs an antiques shop, like Nick's father, and who is sickly.
"To Whom Do You Beautifully Belong?" (1986)
Having never moved out Nick is now a permanent member of the Fedden household. He spends most of his time with Wani Ouradi, one of his Oxford contemporaries, the son of a rich Lebanese businessman. Despite the fact that Nick is openly gay, Wani seemingly appears to have a female fiancée and remains closeted, so their relationship is a closely kept secret. Though Nick is finishing up his doctorate on Henry James, he spends most of his time living a decadent lifestyle of drugs and sex with Wani who lavishes him with money and expensive gifts. To cover their relationship Wani pretends Nick is helping him write a screenplay of The Spoils of Poynton as well as helping him establish Ogee, a luxury magazine Wani wants to create.
Nick discovers by accident that Gerald is having an affair with his assistant, Penny, which disturbs his view of the Feddens.
Catherine has now been diagnosed as being bipolar and is on lithium, which helps to control her mood swings. She realizes that Nick is having an affair with Wani when the two of them spend time at the Feddens French country home and urges him to be careful after her godfather dies of AIDS.
A party is thrown for Rachel and Gerald's 25th wedding anniversary. Nick meets Margaret Thatcher for the first time and, high on coke, asks her to dance, which she accepts.
"The End of the Street" (1987)
In 1987 on election day Nick goes to vote and does not vote for the Conservative candidate but a member of the Green party. He is visited by Leo's sister at the Ogee office where he learns that Leo died a few weeks before of AIDS and his sister is trying to warn all his former lovers. Nick spends election night at home alone with Catherine. Nick watches as his former gay university friend Polly is elected an MP at 28 and Gerald barely scrapes back in his seat.
He later has a working lunch with two possible gay film investors. Wani arrives late. He has AIDS and is wasting away. Wani offers to leave Nick some property that he owns as it will ensure Nick's financial security for the rest of his life. He also warns Nick that a scandal over improperly managed funds will soon be breaking around Gerald.
Going home Nick finds that the scandal has already broken. A boisterous Cat, now overly energetic thanks to her medication, has Nick drive her to a location where they find Penny and Gerald together. The story of their affair forces Gerald to resign as an MP and causes resentment between Rachel and Nick, where Rachel blames Nick for her own lack of responsibility regarding Cat, and further contends Nick never truly understood that his role was to take care of Catherine, not indulge her.
Shortly after, the press (who have been camped outside the Feddens' home), publish a story on Wani and Nick, causing greater scandal. The Feddens use Nick as a scapegoat for their own grossly irresponsible lifestyle. As a result Nick moves out after Gerald accuses him of attaching himself to the family and then wrecking them because of his homosexuality.
Nick goes to live with Wani and views the first and final issue of Ogee. He goes back to the Feddens' house, knowing that they are absent for a wedding and runs into Penny who reveals that she is going to continue her affair with Gerald. Nick leaves the Feddens' house for a final time and muses on the HIV test he is having done the next day and imagines that the results will be positive.
Title
The title of the book refers to the Line of Beauty — the double "S" of the ogee shape, a shape which "swings both ways". William Hogarth, in his 1753 book The Analysis of Beauty, describes how beauty itself is embodied in the shape,[1] which protagonist Nick Guest uses to describe Wani's body. In contrast, other characters describe lines of cocaine as "beautiful".
Major themes
The book touches upon the emergence of HIV/AIDS, as well as the relationship between politics and homosexuality, and its ambivalent acceptance within the 1980s Conservative Party and mainstream society. The book also considers heterosexual hypocrisy regarding homosexual promiscuity. Finally, an underlying theme is the nature of beauty. Nick is attracted to physical beauty in art and in men. However, he pays a price for his choices: his beautiful lover Wani is a self-hating homosexual, and the Feddens' home (in which Nick Guest remains a guest) is filled with both exquisite art and vile hypocrisy. The novel also deals with the "coming out" experience of Nick and of gay men in general.
The novel explores the question of whether a gay man can remain apolitical in a homophobic society. Nick's dance with Margaret Thatcher has overtones of a dance with the devil.
The book refers frequently to the life and works of Henry James.
Literary significance and criticism
Hollinghurst wrote part of the novel at the Yaddo colony.[2]
The book won the 2004 Booker Prize.[3][4] In 2019, the novel was ranked 38th on The Guardian's list of the 100 best books of the 21st century.[5]
Hollinghurst has received praise for his portrayal of life among the privileged governing classes during the early to middle 1980s.[6] The novel has been compared to Anthony Powell's A Dance to the Music of Time,[7] with special regard to Powell's character Nicholas Jenkins.[8] The protagonist has also been likened to Nick Carraway in F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby.[9] James Wood, writing for The New Republic, praised the novel, calling it "an ample and sophisticated delight, charged with hundreds of delicate impressions and insights, and scores of vital and lovely sentences", although he criticized the ending as a "somewhat trite and anachronistic vision of the homosexual as a figure always doomed to be unhoused and exiled from happiness, solitary and lonely, without family or friends, always nostalgic for a bosom that has always, if only secretly, rejected him."[10]
Margaret Thatcher's appearance has been compared to that of Kurtz in Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness;[8] Sir Maurice Tipper and his wife have been compared to Evelyn Waugh characters.[8]
Television adaptation
In 2006, a three-part television adaptation was broadcast by the BBC and later released on DVD throughout the world. Dan Stevens plays Nick Guest with Oliver Coleman in the role of Toby Fedden. Alice Krige plays Toby's mother, while Tim McInnerny plays Toby's father.
References
- ^ Bloomsbury Publishing, paperback edition, 176
- ^ Johnson, Allan (2014). Alan Hollinghurst and the Vitality of Influence. London: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 86. ISBN 978-1349472505.
- ^ "The Man Booker Prize: The Line of Beauty". Archived from the original on 17 July 2011. Retrieved 6 February 2015.
- ^ "Alan Hollinghurst wins prestigious Booker Prize". The Advocate. 21 October 2004. Retrieved 8 February 2015.
Out British author Alan Hollinghurst has won the Booker Prize...
- ^ "The 100 best books of the 21st century". The Guardian. Retrieved 22 September 2019.
- ^ BBC NEWS | Entertainment | Arts | Hollinghurst takes Booker Prize
- ^ Alfred Hickling, 'Between the lines', The Guardian, 10 April 2004
- ^ a b c Anthony Quinn, 'The Last Good Summer', New York Times, 31 October 2004
- ^ 'The last summer', The Telegraph, 28 March 2004[dead link]
- ^ Wood, James (13 December 2004). "The Ogee Curve". The New Republic.
External links
- Video of an interview on The Line of Beauty with Alan Hollinghurst, top right hand corner
- Review from The Guardian
- Review from The Telegraph[dead link]
- Review from the New York Times
- Review from the Washington Post
- Review from the San Francisco Chronicle
- Review from the Boston Globe
- Review from the Seattle Times
- Review from the Christian Science Monitor
- Review from The Age
- 'All the Glitters', review in the Oxonian Review
- The Line of Beauty (miniseries) at IMDb