Welcome to EDP24 Forums | EDP24 Home | Forums | Sign in | Join | Settings
 

Print Search
Sort Posts:    
   14/01/2006, 9:01 PM
Jeff Taylor is not online. Last active: 02/09/2008 09:41:23 Jeff Taylor

Not Ranked
Joined on 04/11/2005
Wymondham, Norfolk
Posts 38
Hangover Square, Introduction in EDP SUNDAY, 14 January, 2006

 

 

Patrick Hamilton  lived, on and off,  on the North Norfolk Coast from the 1930’s until 1962 when he died aged 58 from liver cirrhosis while living in Sheringham.  John Betjeman called him one of the best English novelists’ but he is probably better known as the author of the plays Rope (1929) and Gaslight (1939) both of which were adapted for the screen by Alfred Hitchcock. In 1998 Julian Earwaker and Kathleen Becker in their fascinating book Literary Norfolk wrote that Hamilton’s novels ‘await discovery’. It didn’t take long.  Hangover Square this month’s Book Club choice was republished in Penguin Classics in 2001. Readers may have recently seen  the BBC adaptation of  Hamilton’s  trilogy Twenty Thousand Streets under the Sky which Random House republished in 2004. 

 

Hamilton’s novels often describe pub life, which was something he knew all too well,  and the effects on ordinary people of alcohol. Reviews of his work are scattered with mentions of ‘betrayed lives…self delusion…sexual infatuation… despair…obsession…. solitude and anonymity.’ Hangover Square, which is set in Earls Court in 1939,  is no exception to the rule. In it George Harvey Bone is hopelessly infatuated with Netta Longdon.  She and her drinking friends are   contemptuous of him. We first meet him walking along the cliffs at Hunstanton, having had Christmas dinner with his aunt and we  are immediately introduced  to his schizophrenia, his ‘dead moods’ during which  he  plans to kill Netta and her friends.

 

In the introduction to the recent Penguin Classic reprint of Hangover Square, which is taken from the original 1974 Penguin, J B Priestly gives away the ending to the story. Maybe I would have guessed what happens but I will never know. So you have been warned! I will tell you, however, to keep the date that the book is set in in mind. A recent literary study has made much of this.
   Report 
   25/01/2006, 4:04 PM
SophieJackson is not online. Last active: 17/01/2006 16:02:46 SophieJackson

Not Ranked
Joined on 23/11/2005
Posts 27
Hangover Square, Reviewed by Sophie Jackson

Hangover Square – Patrick Hamilton

 

Hangover Square is a grim tale about hopelessness and alcoholism. The main character, George Harvey Bone is struggling with his ‘dead’ moods, moments when he loses all rational sense and contemplates murder, he lurches from moments of miraculous hope when anything seems possible, to dreadful, despairing lows when there seems nothing left for him in this world. Ultimately he cannot rise above the terrible place he has sunk to.

    George is a weak man, tortured by inner demons. He is gullible, easily led, perhaps even naïve, too gentle and generous for the dark netherworld he has drifted into. Part of the problem are his strange ‘dead’ moods. In these ‘dead’ moments, George acts out his subconscious desires, he plots the demise of two of his supposed friends Netta and Peter who, in many ways, are not undeserving of this final fate. Detached from reality during these strange phases, George dreams of a way to free himself from the rot of Earls Court and to return to a place he was once happy. In these moments he almost believes such a thing is possible.

    Waking from these ‘dead’ moods he cannot remember what he thought or did during these lapses of his mind. Sometimes he loses a day, though more often it is a few hours. Disturbed, he comforts himself with the knowledge that he can’t have done anything wrong else the police would be after him, little knowing that during those forgotten spells he is in fact contemplating a terrible crime.

    But then that is what Hangover Square is about; facades. George has the outward appearance of being benign and gentle, whilst beneath his kind face and gullible sensibilities stirs an inner desire to kill. This is the ultimate façade because George himself is not aware of this internal inclination. Yet there are many other facades littered throughout the story. Netta who so torments George, originally beguiled him, pretending she was not a spoilt, self-centred and nasty woman who was only interested in poor George for his money, which in itself was a façade as George’s money was a fleeting windfall he won. Then there is Peter who wants to be wealthy and upper class, but in fact has no money and little prospects and, extending out from George’s circle of ‘friends’ there is the hotel manageress where he lives, who is all smiles to his face but behind his back wishes he would leave. London even bears a façade, though this one could be said to have been partially George’s own creation. He dreamt of doing well in London, but then he found the seedy pubs of Earls Court and the beautiful Netta, and he was lost for good.

    The only character in the book who does not bear a façade is the nameless white cat George befriends. In the end, this is the only other being he thinks of as he contemplates his own demise. For there is no happy ending to this story, though by the time you are halfway through the book you are not expecting one. The words seem to echo what perhaps the author was thinking about his own life because there is an almost angry tendency to ensure that George never rises from where he’s sunk to, shall never be whole again and in the end, despite an almost hopeful future appearing to be just round the corner, George destroys himself through murder and suicide. It seems Hamilton could not let George have his final victory.


   Report 
EDP24 Forums » EDP24 Features » EDP Book Club » Hangover Square, Reviewed by Sophie Jackson

Powered by Community Server, by Telligent Systems

Copyright © 2007 Archant Regional Limited. All rights reserved.
Terms and conditions