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Matters of Honor: A Novel
 
 
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Matters of Honor: A Novel [Paperback]

Louis Begley (Author)
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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Book Description

January 29, 2008
“Terrifically intelligent, moving, and entertaining.”
–The New York Sun


“With snappy dialogue [and] intelligent prose . . . Begley paints a memorable portrait of lasting friendship and of the strength required to step outside of the expectations that surround each of us.”
–Rocky Mountain News

At the beginning of the 1950s, three disparate young men are thrown together as roommates at Harvard College: Henry White, a Polish-Jewish refugee who survived World War II by hiding in Poland; Archibald P. Palmer III, an Army brat; and Sam Standish, ostensibly the scion of a fine New England family who has just learned that he was adopted at birth by parents he cannot respect. Each seeks to come to terms with his identity or to remake it altogether. Henry’s task is especially daunting: He is determined to live as an American, free of the shackles of his hideous past. But reinvention is a bargain with the devil, and over the years each will find that it comes at a high cost, challenging one’s honor and loyalty to parents, friends, and ultimately oneself.

“Absorbing . . . In full Henry James mode, Begley uses a lucid prose style to dispassionately eviscerate the upper classes even as he illuminates the true meaning of friendship.”
–Booklist

“The final moral crisis of Henry’s life [is] gorgeously evoked. . . . Begley’s analysis of class and anti-Semitism in America is often brilliant.”
–The Washington Post Book World

“A moving tale . . . [Begley’s] technique demands attention–and richly rewards it.”
–The New York Observer

“An elegant novel of enduring friendship.”
–Publishers Weekly (starred review)

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. The author of About Schmidt and Shipwreck, Begley returns with an elegant novel of enduring friendship. Sam Standish, the adopted son of an alcoholic banker, arrives at Harvard in the early 1950s in genteel poverty, but with an unexpected trust fund to finance his education. His roommates are the incongruously named Archibald P. Palmer III, an army brat who goes by Archie, and Henry White, a rough-edged, fiercely smart Jewish refugee (born Henryk Weiss in Poland). Sam, who achieves a measure of success as a literary novelist, narrates their 50 years of friendship. His opaque romantic life suggests he may be gay, but the heart of this tragedy of manners is Sam's compelling assessment of class and social cachet in America, and of the ambient anti-Semitism that nearly drives Henry crazy, as he makes and abandons a fortune. Archie drops out of the narrative after he dies in a drunken car accident months after the Kennedy assassination, but Sam and Henry reconnect many years after Henry's disappearance for one last reunion of old friends. It's a story covered by everyone from Cheever to Roth, but Begley finds new and wonderful nuances within it. (Jan. 29)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From Booklist

Begley continues his sojourn among the elite with this absorbing novel about the nature of identity and the costs of assimilation. The novel's narrator is Sam, whose murky parentage and alcoholic parents have tainted his standing among his status-conscious Harvard classmates in the early 1950s. His two roommates are also outsiders--Archie, the spoiled son of an army officer, has a taste for the high life, while the brilliant Henry, a Polish refugee whose family survived the war in hiding, must constantly negotiate the fraught terrain between his devoted parents and his anti-Semitic classmates. Sam and Archie are eager to help Henry fit in, carefully schooling him on manners, clothes, and the right connections. Over the next decades, through, Henry is the one who achieves the greatest worldly success, making his fortune as an international investment banker. But a career snag provokes a much larger crisis, and Henry cuts off all previous ties. In full Henry James mode, Begley uses a lucid prose style to dispassionately eviscerate the upper classes even as he illuminates the true meaning of friendship. Joanne Wilkinson
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Ballantine Books (January 29, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0345494342
  • ISBN-13: 978-0345494344
  • Product Dimensions: 5.1 x 0.7 x 8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 10.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,025,385 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars "I'm going to remake myself in the image I carry inside me.", May 25, 2007
This review is from: Matters of Honor (Hardcover)
This remark by Henry White, a Jewish survivor of World War II from Poland, could have been made just as easily by either of his two Harvard roommates. Sam Standish, the book's narrator, from Lenox, Massachusetts, is the adopted son of an old family, though his side of the family has little money and a dubious reputation. Archibald P. Palmer III, the third roommate, and son of an army man, has traveled the world and speaks many languages, and though he is not part of the "Chicago Palmers," he does not mind being considered one of them. The boys meet as freshmen in the 1950s, each determined to take advantage of Harvard's possibilities for forming new friendships, discovering new interests, and "connecting."

Through Sam, the narrator, we see the boys developing and dealing with the age-old issues of college boy-men. Henry, whose family has never been observantly Jewish, discovers prejudice because of his ethnic background. Archie cultivates the Latin-American ultra-rich, his facility in Spanish and his living experience in Argentina giving him entrée into a world that few non-Latinos can breach. Narrator Sam suffers a breakdown but turns his sensitivity and new insights to his own advantage by becoming a writer.

Begley traces the lives of these men separately and together from the age of eighteen through their seventies. The novel is a generational study, and the beginning is especially effective as the students each exceed their parents in education and opportunity. As the former roommates pursue careers, travel the world, lose touch and then connect again, often at funerals or weddings, Begley shows the personal resolution and growth of young people who, having outgrown their parents, recognize that they live in different worlds which their parents will probably never understand. As they age, in time, into their seventies, the reader recognizes their difficulties finding happiness, forming loving relationships, and developing the generosity of spirit which would enable them to enjoy life fully.

If the subject matter and themes sound a bit trite--anti-Jewish prejudice at an elite college, difficulties with parent-child relationships, aspirations to elevated social positions, thwarted love, maintaining a sense of honesty and honor while seeking success--well, they are, to some extent. Yet the novel is fun to read, and the picture of Harvard in the 1950s provides a glimpse of a world gone by. Though Sam often "tells about" the action, rather than recreating it (violating a cardinal "rule" of fiction-writing), the more than fifty-year chronology of this novel and the reappearing characters keep the reader's interest high. Begley, a formal, traditional writer, maintains his own sense of honor and never stoops to sensationalism. n Mary Whipple
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A good Bildungsroman, May 30, 2007
This review is from: Matters of Honor (Hardcover)
I was awaiting Louis Begley's latest impatiently, having relished in the pointed yet elegant prose of his past books. For the most part, it was worth the wait. The story of three, intermittently four 1950's Harvard buddies and their on- and off-campus antics did not seem all that engaging to me from the outset, but in true Begley style, he had me at the first few sentences. For anyone to make you actually like a bunch of preppies living off their parents' (and grandparents', and great-grandparents') deep pockets, whom you'd rather see with a "kick me"-note stuck on their navy-blue blazers, is some achievement; but to create a page-turner out of WASP routines, particularly in the middle part of the book, is high art. In fact, Begley could be writing about the Democratic Convention and it would still be beautiful. Readers may have been conditioned not to interpret novels as tinkered-on autobiographies, but it is hard to dismiss the the idea that Henryk Weiss/White's search for identity is, in large part, the story of Louis Begleiter/Begley's Americanization and temporary de-judification.

Ah, to be young and rich and admitted to Harvard in the days when undergrads still dressed and behaved! Like in his previous novels, we get a sniff of the rarefied air of high society, in a skilled mix of mockery and admiration. This time it's the picture of the jeunesse dorée and their delightfully old-fashioned college life that has us wishing our grandfathers had invested in J.P. Morgan stock at the right time. Of course there are skeletons in the polished dark-wood closets in the exclusive world exempt from material worries, the biggest being the nagging doubt about one's place in that world. The juxtaposition of narrator Sam's depression and Henry's self-negation as a Jew, having spent years in hiding during the Nazi occupation of Poland may seem cynical, but Begley manages to make both seem legitimate through all the gloss. Likewise, the extended monologues he inflicts upon the characters as narrative vehicles may be unrealistic in live conversation, but the read still flows perfectly.

There are imperfections to the novel, not the least of which is that the subject matter may be getting worn out. Proficient though Begley may be in portraying the American ersatz-aristocracy (and the real, old-world-deal), we have already had plenty of elite lawyers, novelists, subdued antisemitism, and francophonics in his previous novels, most notably The Man Who Was Late and Shipwreck, the precursor to Matters of Honor. Also, at some point one gets the impression that situations are being described and characters introduced merely for the sake of demonstrating ever more inside knowledge. This art pour l'art, as Begley would probably agree to name it, was plain irritating in the last fourth or so of the novel, when I was asked to care about an initially marginal character, an obscure Belgian count, obstinately pushed into center stage. Situational descriptions seem to be Begley's stronger side than that of characters, anyway. Take Sam Standish: Although presented from first-person-perspective and offered insight through various psychoanalytical sessions, he remains oddly distant The women, in particular, are sketchy at best. Their features are covered by neuroses, promiscuity or, as a contrast, saintly ladyship, but that is hardly news for Begley readers. Unlike in the previous works, sex is largely absent (still plenty of booze, though).

All in all, a satisfying, sophisticated book that makes me look forward to the next one in a couple of years. Hopefully there will be some more new ideas by then.
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12 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Cost of Assimilation, February 25, 2007
By 
Hendon Chubb "Garlic" (Connecticut and Provence) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Matters of Honor (Hardcover)
The novel charts the life of Henry Weiss, a Jew who survived the war in Nazi-occupied Poland, from his awkward arrival in Harvard through his rise to become an immensely able and successful partner in the Paris office of a "white-shoe" New York law firm, as seen by a writer friend who is the adopted child of a couple who are marginal members of the Lenox, Massachusetts squirearchy. Among its major themes are the experience and meaning of being an outsider and the complex relationship that can exist between parents and children. Begley pictures with equal skill the awkward life of young people in the fifties and the complexities of a legal opinion that is in its consequences the climax of the book. Of all of his books, this may be the deepest and most rewarding.
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New York, Sainte Terre, Tom Peabody, New Orleans, Jacques Blondet, Mount Auburn Street, Gregory Peck, New England, Henry White, Margot Henry, Madame Bernard, Wall Street, Park Avenue, Sarah Lawrence, Christmas Eve, May Standish, Cousin Jack, Freshman Union, Monsieur van Damme, Jim Hershey, Bunny Rollins, Dorchester Road, Monsieur White, Paris Henry, Brooks Brothers
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