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The Line of Beauty Hardcover – October 5, 2004
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Winner of the 2004 Man Booker Prize and a finalist for the Lambda Literary Award and the NBCC award. From Alan Hollinghurst, the acclaimed author of The Sparsholt Affair, The Line of Beauty is a sweeping novel about class, sex, and money during four extraordinary years of change and tragedy.
In the summer of 1983, twenty-year-old Nick Guest moves into an attic room in the Notting Hill home of the Feddens: conservative Member of Parliament Gerald, his wealthy wife Rachel, and their two children, Toby―whom Nick had idolized at Oxford―and Catherine, who is highly critical of her family's assumptions and ambitions.
As the boom years of the eighties unfold, Nick, an innocent in the world of politics and money, finds his life altered by the rising fortunes of this glamorous family. His two vividly contrasting love affairs, one with a young black clerk and one with a Lebanese millionaire, dramatize the dangers and rewards of his own private pursuit of beauty, a pursuit as compelling to Nick as the desire for power and riches among his friends. Richly textured, emotionally charged, disarmingly comic, this is a major work by one of our finest writers.
- Print length400 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherBloomsbury USA
- Publication dateOctober 5, 2004
- Dimensions6.02 x 1.48 x 10.18 inches
- ISBN-101582345082
- ISBN-13978-1582345086
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Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
Interview with Alan Hollinghurst
Alan Hollinghurst's extraordinarily rich novel The Line of Beauty. has garnered a new level of acclaim for the author after winning the 2004 Man Booker Prize. Hollinghurst speaks about his work in our interview.
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From The New Yorker
Copyright © 2005 The New Yorker
From Bookmarks Magazine
What emerges is a remarkable psychological portrait of an era. Theres the obsequious Nick, who cant deal with power around him, his benumbed lovers, smarmy politicians, and coke dealers. In his previous novels Hollinghurst all but ignored women; here, they come into their own. Rachel possesses a "velvety graciousness lined with steel," Catherine represents the conscience of the decade, and Margaret Thatcher hovers on the sidelines, threatening to make a highly anticipated cameo any moment (New York Times Book Review).
The "pointillist attention to detail makes every character fascinating" (Miami Herald). The characters richnessor, rich vacuitycomplements Hollinghursts exquisite prose and lavish set details; in one scene, Nick comments on art from his drug dealers car. But critics couched a few minor complaints amid their effusive praise. Hollinghursts homosexuals are all oversensitive, lonely, doomed, and engage in graphic sex. Some critics found the lengthy discourses on culture tedious. Finally, Nicks four-year lodging at the Freddens, with his secret affairs, often belies reality. Small criticisms, reallythis book is deserving of the Booker.
Copyright © 2004 Phillips & Nelson Media, Inc.
From Booklist
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Review
“A magnificent comedy of manners. Hollinghurst's alertness to the tiniest social and tonal shifts never slackens...[an] outstanding novel.” ―New York Times Book Review
“If you value style, wit and social satire in your reading, don't miss this elegant and passionate novel.” ―Washington Post
“His most tender and powerful novel to date. A.” ―Entertainment Weekly
“Each sentence in this book rings as perfect and true as a Schubert sonata.” ―Hartford Courant
“The Line of Beauty is itself a thing of beauty-an elegant and seductive novel.” ―Philadelphia City Paper
“It really is his finest novel to date.” ―Geoff Dyer
“A rueful, snapshot-accurate portrait of this era.” ―Seattle Times
“[A] masterpiece with a skillfully rendered social panorama, a Proustian alertness to social nuance and a stylistic precision that recalls [James].” ―Newsday
“The most exquisitely written book I've read in years. Witty observations about politics, society, and family open like little revelations on every page.” ―Christian Science Monitor
“Almost perfectly written novel...This novel has the air of a classic.” ―Publishers Weekly, starred review
“In the tradition of Henry James, Hollinghurst has artfully crafted a piquant satire of privilege and sexuality in all its forms.” ―Genre Magazine
“The best English novel of the year so far is Alan Hollinghurst's The Line of Beauty.” ―Zadie Smith, Guardian (UK)
“Like reading gossip in beautifully made sentences with extraordinary insights into motive and nuance, allowing all the time for comedy.” ―Colm Toibin, Guardian (UK)
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Bloomsbury USA; First Edition (October 5, 2004)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 400 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1582345082
- ISBN-13 : 978-1582345086
- Item Weight : 1.82 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.02 x 1.48 x 10.18 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #60,075 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- Customer Reviews:
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the writing style nice, enviable, and a comedy of manners. They also describe the writing quality as brilliant and the book as a work of art. However, some find the storyline pompous and not engaging. Opinions are mixed on the content, with some finding it fascinating and satisfying, while others say it's decadent and thinly plotted. Customers also have mixed feelings about the characters, with others finding them believable and off-putting.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the writing style nice, revealing, and lively. They also appreciate the author's witty intelligence and comedy of manners.
"...Hollinghurst's latest novel, winner of the Booker Prize, is a beautifully written, richly nuanced work and certainly the best of his four novels...." Read more
"...I can see how Hollinghurst's witty intelligence and lively writing, along with the notion that the novel somehow tells us something about the..." Read more
"...Every page captures a subtle perception, in language both richly evocative and breathtakingly concise...." Read more
"...and wait it out before making a final decision- is that while the writing is great, so far the story seems uninteresting and the author uses far too..." Read more
Customers find the writing quality brilliant, complete, and entertaining. They also say the author has enviable powers of observation.
"...a beautifully written, richly nuanced work and certainly the best of his four novels...." Read more
"...Hollinghurst's style is undoubtedly smart and brilliant, but it's also a bit mannered, and he falls back on a few mannerisms, attribute a..." Read more
"...It's a brilliant book, not for those with aversion to blunt, overt gay sex scenes." Read more
"...Important and wonderful book.Highly recommend." Read more
Customers find the book a work of art and an experience they don't want to end. They also appreciate the clever scenes.
"...novel, winner of the Booker Prize, is a beautifully written, richly nuanced work and certainly the best of his four novels...." Read more
"...Hollinghurst's style is undoubtedly smart and brilliant, but it's also a bit mannered, and he falls back on a few mannerisms, attribute a..." Read more
"...It is beautifully written, the language is gorgeous and it is rich with detail...." Read more
"...Nick basically is a respectable looking, safe, but hidden sexual companion, no more acknowledged than the anonymous rent boys...." Read more
Customers are mixed about the content. Some find the story fascinating, memorable, and observant. They appreciate the insight into life, the class system, and politics in England during the 1980s. Others however, find the book decadent, seedy, and self-indulgent.
"...There are referenes, some quite funny, all through the novel to the writer and to many of his novels...." Read more
"...So most of the novel is fairly thinly plotted, and depends on Hollinghurst detailing far too extensively such pleasures as Nick's cocaine binges..." Read more
"...Don't be put off by the novel of manners feel of it, because this is subversive, and in its subversion is its emotional depth...." Read more
"...The story was fascinating and character development most satisfying. It also showed the promiscuity of the ruling class...." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the characters in the book. Some find the interplay between the characters believable, while others say the central character is off-putting.
"...about the project, especially given that the protagonist is a rather annoying wannabe who drifts through the story with his face pressed against the..." Read more
"...It's a hard book to like, for that reason. But the characters are so clearly drawn, (even if they are rather shallow, unworthy characters) that..." Read more
"...Overly descriptive with lots of different characters interacting...." Read more
"...Exceedingly well-written, each character comes across as uniquely human, with even the most despicable Tory MP avoiding too overt a semblance of..." Read more
Customers find the storyline pompous, tiresome, and irrelevant. They also mention that the end is intense enough but melodramatic.
"...The end is intense enough, but rather melodramatic...." Read more
"...(much sexier, although the plot is creaky and the language not as sublime), did not conform and did not win...." Read more
"...decision- is that while the writing is great, so far the story seems uninteresting and the author uses far too much detail and description than is..." Read more
"...But there's not much to the book at all. It's BRIDESHEAD REVISITED on a much smaller scale... in every sense of the phrase." Read more
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This novel obviously is a tribute to Henry James. Nick is doing graduate studies on the style of James. There are referenes, some quite funny, all through the novel to the writer and to many of his novels. There is a clever scene, for example, when Nick and Wani do a line of coke (beauty?) on a book of James criticism. In a passage reminiscent of James' indirectness on the death of Poe, ("The extremity of personal absence had just overtaken him") Nick wonders how James would have described a certain character's healthy member: "If he [James] had fingered so archly at beards and baldness, the fine paired saliences of his own appearance. . . Nick said, 'Oh, it was. . . of a dimension.'" Just as in James' novels-- Ezra Pound is quoted as saying THE SPOILS OF POYNTON was a novel about furniture-- style and class are important to these characters. The sitting arrangements at fancy dinners mean everything. This novel, however, is more more than a brittle look at money and manners among the wealthy. It is ultimately about betrayal, sickness and death, the cynicism associated with political ambition and the tragedy of wrong choices. Nick is ultimately brought low; his tragic flaw is that he chooses the wrong people for his extended family.
A master of language, Hollinghurst can describe a character or create a mood with one or two words: A piano tuner is a cardiganed sadist. Wani is simply a "closeted cokehead". A woman has blonde hair in expensive confusion. Nick's calves and thighs ache with "guilty vigour". Rachel's dark hair has "candid streaks of grey". The author also writes paragraph after paragraph of beautiful, insightful prose. Take the example of Nick as a gay man not being honest with his parents, whom he isn't very kind to: "And Nick thought, really the poor old things, they do as well as they can; but for a minute he almost blamed them for not knowing he was going to Europe with Wani, and for making him tell them a plan so heavy with hidden meaning. It wasn't their fault that they didn't know-- Nick couldn't tell them things, and so everything he said and did took on the nature of a surprise, big or little but somehow never wholly benign, since they were aftershocks of the original surprise, that he was, as his mother said, a whatsit." Finally, even though there have been dozens of novels written about AIDS and we who are living have long since gotten past the hopelessness of the early years of the epidemic, Hollinghurst is able to recreate the utter horror we experienced on hearing of the first deaths of our friends and loved ones.
This is a fine novel indeed. It's a shame that in many bookstores, at least in the United States, it will be stocked in the "gay" section or "alternative lifestyles", whatever that means. Of course Ian McEwan's novels are never found in the "straight novel" section; neither is THE SON ALSO RISES to be found on the "Caucasian male novel" shelf. Maybe Shakespeare's Puck was right for saying what fools we mortals be.
Top reviews from other countries
That aside it is a fabulous book with exquisite writing.
Nick, a recent graduate, has through his charm and Oxford connections, managed to create an arrangement where he lives very comfortably in the home of the rich and flamboyant Feddens. In return, he keeps a protective eye on the mentally ill (spoiled?) daughter and provides wit, snobbish knowledge and social lubrication at various events.
Gerald, the father in the Fedden household, is an ambitious (but lazy?) Tory MP, a businessman with some inherited wealth which is dwarfed by the wealth he married into. The extended family and social circle includes Lords, Ladies, Dukes and super-rich businesspeople of dubious integrity; all have a highly developed sense of greedy entitlement. It is the mid-1980s, Thatcher is at her prime, and everything is great for the Feddens and their associates who all adore the “Lady” (some of the older men in sexually inappropriate ways).
The genius of the book is that Nick by contrast is politically neutral and from a modest middle-class background. He is amongst “them” but in no way part of them. He is the perfect observer of the machinations of the politically and economically powerful in the British 1980s. To fully exploit Nick’s observational position the book is written in the 3rd person but from Nick’s point of view, so alongside his great dialogue, we are also privy to Nick’s wonderful unspoken sarcastic snobbish wit and observations.
The book has two subtle tensions running through it.
Firstly, despite the fact most people love him, Nick really is a freeloader. I could not help feeling he was always on the edge of being thrown out once he ceased to be useful or became a liability (or they simply noticed he was a freeloader not of their class).
Secondly, Nick is gay, promiscuous, and it is the 1980s. It really shouldn’t be a spoiler to say the spectre of AIDS becomes increasingly evident. It starts as a very gentle scratch with mere brief references to the health of secondary characters but grows in horror and edges closer to Nick.
The book concludes with how these twin tensions resolve themselves. The ultimate conclusion is very subtle (I re-read the last two pages several times and I am still not certain I know the conclusion). The plot is not the highlight feature, what made this book so engrossing to me was the “fly on the wall” observations Nick provides the reader with of the inner workings of an elite I knew existed but had no way in to see them at home. The palette of people Nick observes for us is wide, some are socially conservative while others are socially liberal (the Feddens embrace his sexuality while others display explicit homophobia), there is even a glimpse at a soft side of Thatcher (made with considerable literary licence) which does humanise a class of people I cannot like.
For me, this was a walk down memory lane. I was in my twenties at the time and a left-wing political activist with many gay friends, some of whom did not survive. To view my enemies as humans was a healthy perspective for me. Although I will always hate what they did, it is refreshing to see some of them were just lucky victims of their background in the same way others were unlucky victims of theirs; however some of them were, and remain, scum through and through.
Per quanto riguarda la THATCHER mi pare invece che l'autore si sia proprio sbagliato: ha messo ordine e disciplina nella società e nell'economia inglese.






