Brighton hotel room @ Hangover Square exhibition, University of Brighton Gallery, 5-27 May 2012 |
There was a Hangover Square exhibition at University of Brighton Gallery that ran from 5th-27th May 2012. Keith, Tristan, Hamish and Nigel attended this exhibition.
Nigel Jones, Laura Wilson and Peter Guttridge
@ The Life and Work of Patrick Hamilton discussion, Sallis Benney Theatre, University of Brighton, Sussex, England on Friday 11th May 2012 |
Nigel had also provided an Imagined Soundtrack to the novel that predominantly featured music from the period when the book was written.
Nigel explained that he had wanted to read "Hangover Square" for sometime having developed a fascination with the English literature of the 1930s and 1940s. Patrick Hamilton was a name that came up frequently in the context of key writers of the period. His connection with Hove made Patrick Hamilton even more appealing.
"Hangover Square" was written at the peak of Patrick Hamilton's fame - which was by this time considerable. Like all Patrick Hamilton's novels, the story is in part inspired by incidents from Patrick Hamilton's life. Like the protagonist and narrator George Harvey Bone, Hamilton's life was becoming saturated in alcohol; and like Bone he too was obsessed by an unattainable woman, in Hamilton's case she was actress Geraldine Fitzgerald. Fitzgerald is the inspiration for Netta and in a sense could be Hamilton's revenge on her given the unflattering portrait ("She was completely, indeed sinisterly devoid of all those qualities which her face and body externally proclaimed her to have - pensiveness, grace, warmth, agility, beauty ... Her thoughts resembled those of a fish.."). In a nice touch, the film magazine in Netta's flat in the Hangover Square exhibition had a photo of Geraldine Fitzgerald on the cover.
Where the book really succeeded for Nigel was in its evocation of London as war looms. The book was written under the shadow of seemingly unstoppable advance of Germany and Nazism. The novel searches for a human metaphor to express the sickness that Hamilton perceived in this period. As a Marxist he identified the petty bourgeoisie from which Netta and Peter had sprung as the enemy. Peter, and the stranger who comes down to Brighton with Netta and Peter, are both fascists. The Hangover Square exhibition evoked a scene from the visit to Brighton really powerfully. Whilst standing in a recreation of Bone's Brighton hotel room the participant listens to an extended section from this part of the novel. Most powerfully, the part where Bone cannot sleep as he listens to Netta and the stranger talking before making love. Torture for poor old Bone and the prelude to another schizophrenic episode where he resolves, again, to kill Netta and Peter.
The spectre of the forthcoming war, and discussions of fascism, and nods towards contemporary cinema (e.g going to the cinema to see a Tarzan film with Johnny Weismuller and Maureen O'Sullivan on the day Germany invade Poland) all added to the magic for Nigel, the book being full of such wonderful period detail.
Geraldine Fitzgerald on the cover of Film Weekly @ the Hangover Square exhibition, University of Brighton Gallery, 5-27 May 2012 |
Brighton hotel room @ the Hangover Square exhibition, University of Brighton Gallery, 5-27 May 2012 |
Nigel really enjoys good quality London fiction (he's almost finished another classic London novel from the same period "London Belongs To Me" by Norman Collins) and declared that "Hangover Square" is "right up there with the best". As the back of his edition states "you can almost smell the gin". By the end of the book Nigel felt he'd been in and out of a succession of smoky, shabby Earls Court boozers with George and his unsavoury companions. Netta, the book's femme fatale, is a wonderful fictional creation - beguiling but also totally self-serving.
The perspectives from various different characters enriched Nigel's experience. Even a very minor character such as the young man Bone meets towards the end gives an illuminating and detached perspective of George and his companions.
Nigel found it a very moving book. The reader quickly realises that George has to forget Netta and move on. He knows it too. Yet he just can't escape her. A true lost soul. Nigel felt almost as happy as George after his successful round of golf in Brighton that gives him a glimpse of how life could be away from Netta and her boozy coterie.
It ends in the only way it could. All said, Nigel thought it was a masterpiece. 10/10
Nigel has subsequently read "Through A Glass Darkly" a biography of Patrick Hamilton by Nigel Jones; the Gorse Trilogy; and "The Slaves Of Solitude". He stated there's more to follow. He might even mention some of them here.
A burgeoning Patrick Hamilton collection |
Keith described "Hangover Square" as "a good book" and "a very human tale". He thought all the relationships were dependent on getting something from the other person.
For Keith, what made the book so extraordinary was the total authenticity of the characters. It doesn't deal in great universal truths, other than unfulfilled potential and unrequited love, but it does deal in the minutiae of ordinary everyday life, and does so brilliantly. Netta is a hateful villain, but also fully realised and her willing victim, the hapless George, is heartbreakingly credible. 7/10
Quote @ the Hangover Square exhibition, University of Brighton Gallery, 5-27 May 2012 |
Tristan wished he hadn't been to the exhibition before finishing the book as he came across a spoiler that undermined his enjoyment of the book.
Tristan liked the natural style and really enjoyed reading about Brighton and London in the 1930s. He was less enthralled by the protracted ending. That said, Tristan saw Netta as an evil like Nazism itself, and that Bone's longing for her is actually a longing for freedom and peace, which she will never allow him.
Tristan thought Hamilton's descriptions of Netta were brilliant, for example "resembled those of a fish - something seen floating in a tank, brooding, self-absorbed, frigid, moving… Netta Longdon thought of everything in a curiously dull, brutish way… She was completely, indeed sinisterly, devoid of all those qualities which her face and body externally proclaimed her to have - pensiveness, grace, warmth, agility, beauty." Alas, as Tristan observed, her thuggish brain is exalted, not by the pitiful George Bone, but the Mosley-ite Peter. 7/10
Brighton hotel room @ Hangover Square exhibition, University of Brighton Gallery, 5-27 May 2012 |
Hamish was very enthusiastic and described the atmosphere of the book as "absolutely fantastic". He thought there was "great detail in both the book and the exhibition".
Hamish saw parallels between George's concessions and Chamberlain's policy of appeasement. Despite the ever present homicidal tendencies exacerbated by George's illness the sympathy of the reader is always with George. Hamish's sympathy was further underlined as it became clearer that Netta and Peter were closet fascists who are keen on Chamberlain's accommodation with Hitler. At the novel's conclusion George finally kills them both on the day, in 1939, that Germany invades Poland. Even the character's name - George - seemed to evoke England's patron saint. A great observation and a lavish 8.5/10.
Robin texted a rating of 8/10. The overall Hove Book Group rating was therefore also 8/10.
Nigel, Hamish, Tristan and Keith had all also watched a BBC4 adaptation of Patrick Hamilton's "Twenty Thousand Streets Under The Sky" trilogy on DVD. Three interlinked stories centred around a pub in Euston.
In a world of smoky pubs and foggy lamplights, down-at-heel workers and forlorn lovers, the story focuses on The Midnight Bell, a bar off the Euston Road, and observes the impossibility of love between three protagonists.
Bob, the pub’s barman, is infatuated with penniless prostitute Jenny, believing that he can rescue her through his rapidly diminishing savings. Barmaid Ella, while attracting the attentions of an older, wealthier man, casts lovelorn glances at her colleague. Meanwhile, Jenny, forced onto the streets through poverty, has little time for such niceties, as she casts her flirtatious eyes about in search of custom. This “spellbinding” (The Times) drama observes the struggles of ordinary lives lived close to the poverty line, and the torments and drives of unrequited love, ambition and disappointment.
Keith declared it not his thing but OK. Tristan thought it was a classic. Hamish enjoyed it as did Nigel. All agreed that it was a good compliment to "Hangover Square".
And so another convivial evening drew to a close and Hove's finest drifted into the cool Summer's night.
Next time out the Hove Book Group will be discussing "Blindness" by José Saramago.
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I really enjoyed reading your post, and our own book club is meeting tomorrow evening to disucuss Hangover Square. I hope the others enjoy the book as much as I have. It reminded me of Graham Greene's Brighton Rock. Thank you :-)
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