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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The family circle,
By
This review is from: Friends and Relations (Paperback)
FRIENDS AND RELATIONS has been for quite some time, unfairly, the ugly stepchild among Elizabeth Bowen's novels, and it remains one of the very few (as of this writing) no longer in print. Much of this may have to do with its somewhat generic sounding title, which might seem to betray a kind of writer's desperation as to what to call a novel, although it is actually stingingly appropriate. The main concern of this shorter but extremely complex novel is how our love relationships are forever complicated and even betrayed by the other ties in our lives with our friends and relations. The earlier part of the novel, showing the odd entanglements among four families--the Studdards, Tilneys, Meggatts, and Thirdmans--, proceeds mostly as what might be Bowen's funniest social comedy, held among her usual milieux (drawing rooms, tearooms, and girls' boarding-school dormitories) and peopled by her usual coterie of memorable upper middle-class characters: cool hostesses, brittle mothers, penetrating children, and gauche teenagers. But the final third of the novel veers nearly into the realm of tragedy when Edward Tilney and his sister-in-law Janet Meggatt admit their secret love to themselves and one another, and threaten to rip apart their families and friends alike.
John Halperin has rightly compared this section of the novel to Henry James's THE GOLDEN BOWL, wherein two other wealthy couples become tragically entangled by the illicit love of one husband for a relation who is not his wife. Although Bowen does not manage to flesh out her central two couples (Edward and Laurel, Rodney and Janet) to the degree that James does the four central characters of his famous novel--or even to the degree she fills out her minor characters in this novel--, the ethical and stylistic complexity of FRIENDS AND RELATIONS makes it almost as fine as Bowen's masterpieces, THE DEATH OF THE HEART and TO THE NORTH.
3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Complications of marriage and affairs,
This review is from: Friends and Relations (Paperback)
Friends and Relations is written in three parts. The first part being the sudden marriage of the two Studdart girls, Laurel the youngest who has managed to find Edward Tilney. The book begins at their wedding and the speculation that Janet was to have been the one who Edward married. The wedding scenes are wonderfully written - gentle, humourous. Janet then goes off to find herself a husband and although this is early in the 1920's and men are scarce she succeeds well finding Rodney Meggatt almost immediately and marrying soon after. However there are complications - Rodney's uncle (for whom Rodney is the heir) once had an affair with Edward's mother, Lady Elfrida. The complication of manners and what is right must be gone through in excruciating detail. In the meantime there is the presence of precocious social climber, 15 year old Theodora.The second part brings us back to the story ten years later and the relative happiness and contentness of the two familys - the Tilneys and the Meggatts - and the problem when Edward finally realises that his mother, Lady Elfrida, and Rodney's uncle Considine meet again. Having to face up to his own demons which are finally revealed in the third part of the book. I find Bowen a really nice to read although at times somewhat obscure. There is quite an Austen-esque style about her writing at times and she is lightly comic. However I did find it hard to relate to the characters who seem so far removed from my reality. Making such a fuss about one's mother meeting the man she had an affair with years ago and so on. There was a great deal of lack of emotion at what should have been passionate, emotional moments too. Its a short little book, but a nice read on a wet afternoon. |
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Friends and Relations by Elizabeth Bowen (Hardcover - July 9, 1951)
Used & New from: $34.33
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