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review 2016-08-06 09:47
Of Human Bondage - Maeve Binchy,Benjamin DeMott,W. Somerset Maugham

This book chronicles the life of Phillip, from orphaned young boy to around thirty, set in the late 19th century and yet the story is so exquisitely told that a much longer period seemed to pass. Maugham tackles some weighty themes too, such as the meaning (or not) of life, class, death, gender, poverty, the relevance of 'moral' behaviour. There are very few books that I would consider starting again immediately, but with "Of Human Bondage", I could, safe in the knowledge that there would still be much to mull over within the text. Notwithstanding the beautiful use of language, at times the book seems quite profound and I found myself savouring some delightful passages. Certainly the themes retain a contemporary resonance and the tension between individual and wider social values continue to echo modern dilemmas. This was my first exposure to Maugham and yet this book has been elevated , on this one reading, to my personal shortlist of 'great' books. The plot appears simple and yet is intricate in the unfurling, the underlying issues are challenging and it is hard not to reflect on one's own capacity for rational behaviour. At the very least it is an interesting examination of aspects of the human condition, which everyone should have on their 'must read' list. I must read it again very soon! Simply a great read!

Source: www.goodreads.com/review/show/1521150490
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review 2016-03-17 00:37
Books of 1915 (Part Two)
Of Human Bondage - Maeve Binchy,Benjamin DeMott,W. Somerset Maugham
The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock - T.S. Eliot
Grass on the Wayside (Michikusa) - Sōseki Natsume,Edwin McClellan
A Bride of the Plains - Emmuska Orczy
The Underdogs - Mariano Azuela
Herland - Charlotte Perkins Gilman,Ann J. Lane
Ammonite - Nicola Griffith
The Temple at Landfall - Jane Fletcher
Houston, Houston, Do You Read? - James Tiptree Jr.
The Scarecrow of Oz - L. Frank Baum

Of Human Bondage by W. Somerset Maugham

 

It has been quite a few years since I read this novel, but I thought it was absolutely terrific and I remember it vividly. The story opens when the main character Philip is a lonely young boy with a club foot being raised by his aunt and uncle. As soon as he is old enough to get away, he moves to Germany and then France where he decides to become a visual artist. That part was extremely interesting to me, as it seemed that, although art and education and customs of every kind have changed so much in the last hundred years, the inner work and the shame of “becoming an artist” have not changed in any way. It seemed very fresh and relevant. There is a “Least Likely To” type of girl who falls in love with Philip and dies by suicide.

 

Phillip decides that he doesn’t have what it takes to be an artist either, so he returns to London to study medicine. There he meets a server at a restaurant who is incredibly toxic. He falls in love with her and is completely under her sway, supporting her when she gets pregnant by another man. He seriously needs to get himself to a meeting of Codependents Anonymous! I won’t spoil the whole story but let me just give you a couple of key words: “sex work” and “syphilis.” But you will be happy to know that Philip eventually finds happiness and even love.

 

“The Love Song of Alfred J. Prufrock” by T.S. Eliot

 

This poem is perfect, and I don’t even know what I could possibly say about it. The back of the copy of The Wasteland and Other Poems that I have says “Few readers need any introduction to the work of the most influential poet of the twentieth century.” So there you go. I remember when I was a kid I liked the way the poem is so interior (as in, the interior of someone’s head), and how it was about someone who was getting old, and I just liked how it sounds. My mom used to recite and read this poem to us and I can still clearly hear in my mind just the way she would intone

 

Let us go then, you and I,
When the evening is spread out against the sky
Like a patient etherized upon a table;
Let us go, through certain half-deserted streets,
The muttering retreats
Of restless nights in one-night cheap hotels
And sawdust restaurants with oyster-shells:
Streets that follow like a tedious argument
Of insidious intent
To lead you to an overwhelming question. . .                              
Oh, do not ask, "What is it?"
Let us go and make our visit.

  In the room the women come and go
Talking of Michelangelo.

 

and then later:

 

  I grow old . . . I grow old . . .                                              
I shall wear the bottoms of my trousers rolled.

  Shall I part my hair behind? Do I dare to eat a peach?
I shall wear white flannel trousers, and walk upon the beach.
I have heard the mermaids singing, each to each.

  I do not think they will sing to me.

 

She explained to me that when you’ve had certain kinds of dental work you don’t dare to eat a peach.

 

T.S. Eliot is an example of someone who was a horrible bigot but who managed to keep it out of his poetry (as far as I’m aware.) I wish Baroness Orczy and some others could be more like that. I’m psyched for more modernist poetry to come!

 

 

Grass on the Wayside by Natsume Soseki

 

I really enjoyed reading this. It was almost as great as Soseki’s 1914 book Kokoro. It’s about a middle-aged curmudgeon who doesn’t know how to get along with anyone, especially his wife and his family. This curmudgeon had been adopted into another family as a child, which was apparently a common Japanese custom of the period, but later the adoption was reversed and he returned to his original family. Now his onetime adoptive father has resurfaced, unsuccessful and unsavory and grasping for money, and our curmudgeon isn’t sure what the right thing to do is. According to the introduction, the story is autobiographical and the main character is supposed to be a very close match to Soseki. But I don’t understand how that can be—how could anyone who has social skills as poor as the main character have the insight to present the situation the way the author does? If the author were really as blinkered as the main character, there’s no way he could have written this book.

 

I’m looking forward Soseki’s next book in 1915. But oh no! It’s his last one!

 

A Bride of the Plains by Baroness Orczy

 

As you may know, I’m a big Baroness Orczy fan. This year I have to give her credit for something very special: although basically the entire world is embroiled in war, she is the ONLY author to address this. She was the ONLY one to write about war, and in Hungary in the Carpathian basin, more or less where all the trouble began. (Okay, I guess there’s also Mariano Azuela writing about the Mexican revolution. But still, props to the Baroness!) I know the production schedule for publishing a novel is pretty long, but a lot of these Edwardians wrote two books a year, and I do think some of them could have at least acknowledged in some way, even thematically, that there’s a world war going on, a pretty big deal! (PS. Are they still Edwardians? What am I supposed to call them now? Baroness Orczy ain’t no modernist!)

 

Anyway, no one seems to set their novels in the present day, and in fact Baroness Orczy is no exception; A Bride of the Plains is set in what seemed to me like a non-specific time in the past. But the book’s opening takes a pretty clear anti-war tone. It’s almost the day when young men in this little burg are conscripted into the army, a sad day for all:

 

On this hideous day all the finest lads in the village are taken away to be made into soldiers by the abominable Government? Three years! Why, the lad is a mere child when he goes—one-and-twenty on his last birthday, bless him! still wanting a mother’s care of his stomach, and a father’s heavy stick across his back from time to time to keep him from too much love-making.

 

Three years ! When he comes back he is a man and has notions of his own. Three years! What are the chances he comes back at all? Bosnia! Where in the world is that? My God, how they hate it! They must go through with it, though they hate it all-every moment.

 

By the way, I realize that there is probably a glut of war books coming down the pipe, and in a few years I’ll be very nostalgiac for the kind of books I read this year.

 

Anyway! This is the story of a girl, Elsa, who tries to be true to Andor, the boy she loves who’s been sent off to war. But when it seems that he’s been killed, she knuckles under to her mother’s pressure to marry the bad-tempered richest man in town. But on the eve of her wedding,

Andor returns!

(spoiler show)

 

The downfall of this book is the same problem that Orczy always has: anti-Semitism. Usually it’s just a few throwaway descriptions, but here the villains are an Evil Jew and Evil Jewess. Kind of ruined the book. That’s the whole thing about bigoted people; they just can’t let it go. If you hate Jews so much, Emma Orczy, why don’t you just stop writing about them? But no, she can’t help herself! Maddening. I will say that there’s a lot of suspense and action in this book, if you can get past the bad taste in your mouth.

 

The Underdogs (Los de Abajo) by Mariano Azuela

 

This interesting novel about the Mexican Revolution is cynical toward everyone concerned. The main characters are peasants who become rebels. There are a lot of funny bits. The most depressing part is how the women are treated like garbage by everyone. You get the impression that the people of Mexico will get the shaft, no matter who wins. This is the first Mexican novel I have encountered in this project and I hope I will find more.

 

Herland by Charlotte Perkins Gilman

 

I like Herland even more than 1911’s Moving The Mountain, and almost as much as “The Yellow Wallpaper,” which I think is one of the finest short stories. Although Gilman is famous for being a feminist, I don’t think she gets as much credit as she deserves for being a speculative fiction writer.

 

Three male explorers hear of a country that consists only of women, so they decide to check it out, and with great trouble make their way in. Jeff is a tender soul who glorifies motherhood and believes in being a perfect gentleman to women. Terry is a handsome man about town, kind of rapey and full of himself, and he thinks women should be pretty and serve him. The narrator, Vandyck Jennings, is sort of in-between these two and in general presents a “rational” point of view.

 

They are amazed to discover a beautiful utopia populated only by women, with wildly different customs from their own. In this country they don’t have poverty, they raise their children communally, they wear comfy clothes, etc. Long ago, a volcanic eruption and slave uprising led to a group of women who were cut off from the rest of the world. A few of them were miraculously able to reproduce as the result of sort of an exalted mental state, and this ability was passed down through the generations. There are so many novels about all-female societies where this happens—Ammonite by Nicola Griffith and Jane Fletcher’s Celaeno series spring to mind—but Herland must be the first.

 

The women the three explorers meet are all strong, intelligent, athletic, good teachers, and able to get things done. They confound the explorers’ expectations at every turn because they have no idea how to “behave like women.” Gilman takes the gender binary away and everyone becomes a person; however, she certainly has a rosy view of how nice an all-female society, or any society, could be.

 

The three explorers each fall in love and insist on marrying their sweethearts, which the women agree to in order to humor them, although marriage is a meaningless concept to them. All this time there has been no romantic love in the country because, well, when the men are gone, it’s just impossible! But they haven’t been missing it.

 

Terry and his wife Alima don’t get along. He attempts to rape her, but she kicks him in the balls and summons help from her friend in the room next door. Terry is put on trial, and the local Over Mother sentences him to be sent back to the outside world, with his word as a gentleman not to tell anyone about their country. At first Terry is obstinate.

 

“The first thing I’ll do is to get an expedition fixed up to force an entrance into Ma-Land!”

“Then,” they said quite calmly, “he must remain an absolute prisoner always.”

“Anesthesia would be kinder,” urged Moadine.

“And safer,” added Zava.

“He will promise, I think,” said Ellador [Jennings’ wife.]

And he did.

 

(This part reminded me of Houston, Houston, Do You Read? by James Tiptree, Jr.)

 

So Terry leaves, with Jennings and Ellador to escort him. Next year is the sequel! From Gilman’s Wikipedia page I learned a lot of things that I didn’t know about her, including the fact that she married her first cousin, and that when she was diagnosed with incurable breast cancer she “chose chloroform over cancer” (her words.)

 

The Scarecrow of Oz by L. Frank Baum

 

I love all the Oz books! This is the one in which a little girl named Trot and her sailor pal Cap’n Bill come to Oz. They meet a lot of lovable characters like the Bumpy Man and Button Bright, and they help the Scarecrow solve a problem with the monarchy of Jinxland.

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review 2015-06-05 00:00
Of Human Bondage
Of Human Bondage - Maeve Binchy,Benjamin DeMott,W. Somerset Maugham So I have been living with this book for almost ten days. Not so much reading it as living with it or perhaps even living in it. It is strange that I was led to read this novel by [a: Philip K. Dick|4764|Philip K. Dick|https://d.gr-assets.com/authors/1264613853p2/4764.jpg]’s science fiction novel [b: Dr. Bloodmoney|636108|Dr. Bloodmoney|Philip K. Dick|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1355321708s/636108.jpg|880666] where Of Human Bondage is mentioned quite a few times. I have also noticed that this book is ranked at 44 in the Guardian’s “The 100 best novels” list, so that clinched it for me.

A more direct (but inelegant) title for Of Human Bondage would be “The Life and Times of Philip Carey” because that is basically what it is. A “Bildungsroman” chronicling the life of the novel’s protagonist from his childhood to his adulthood, in a similar vein to Dickens’ classic [b: David Copperfield|58696|David Copperfield|Charles Dickens|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1309281852s/58696.jpg|4711940]. What a life though! I was hooked pretty much from the first chapter to the last. The book is fairly long at 684 pages, but not a single page is wasted as far as I am concerned. It is not divided into major parts like most long novels but it could have been, the parts would cover his childhood and school years, his life as an art student, his life as a medical student, Mildred!, his destitution, his recovery and redemption. Among the episodes of his life Mildred looms as the largest figure. Described by Philip Carey at one point as “that vile woman” Mildred somehow manages to derail Carey’s life whenever she appears. He falls madly – and inexplicably – in love with her while she is happy to string him along for the convenience. His obsession is in explicable even to himself:
“He did not care if she was heartless, vicious and vulgar, stupid and grasping, he loved her. He would rather have misery with one than happiness with the other.”
“The other” referred to in the above quote is Norah Nesbit, a kindly, loving and intelligent woman Carey meets after Mildred seems to have gone out of his life and helps him to rebound. Unfortunately Mildred comes back into his life and he immediately dumps poor Norah.

His crazed passion for a girl who is obviously extremely bad for him (or any man) makes me want to strangle Philip sometime, as if he is a real person. That is worth italicizing because it is the chief strength of this powerful novel, everything feels so real and vivid. The novel is clearly a character study of Philip Carey, Mildred and other colorful characters he comes across. The reader lives inside Carey’s head, feeling his pain, his shame and even his insane passion. Mildred is something of a femme fatale but she is so well depicted by Maugham that you cannot really blame her for the cruel treatment of Carey. She is unsophisticated and cold, but she never even pretended to love Carey, in spite of being well aware of this he is swept along by his own mad passion. She is who she is and makes no pretense of being virtuous. Any semi-sensible person would stay well away from her, but Philip Carey is not anywhere near the neighborhood of sensibility when she is around.

Beside his disastrous dalliance with Mildred, Carey also makes quite a few more extremely bad choices, throwing caution to the wind unnecessarily, at one point he almost dies of starvation! This is a much more painful novel to read than [b: David Copperfield|58696|David Copperfield|Charles Dickens|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1309281852s/58696.jpg|4711940] because Carey is a deeply flawed human being. Phil does mean well generally, his mistakes stem from searching for himself throughout most of the book, often barking up the wrong tree. He does not know what he really want until the very last page. You cannot help but root for him a little.

The ending is very nice if a little too pat, W. Somerset Maugham is no [a: Thomas Hardy|15905|Thomas Hardy|https://d.gr-assets.com/authors/1429946281p2/15905.jpg] so I finished the book with an added spring in step. One day I am going to rewind it all and go through the wringer with Philip Carey again. Before that I will certainly read more [a: W. Somerset Maugham|4176632|W. Somerset Maugham|https://d.gr-assets.com/authors/1414096390p2/4176632.jpg].
____________________________________
Note on the audio book: Very nicely read by Tom Weiss, for free as part of Librivox’s collection (download link). Thank you sir!
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review 2015-03-21 00:00
Of Human Bondage
Of Human Bondage - Maeve Binchy,Benjamin DeMott,W. Somerset Maugham Having originally rated this book four stars, I rated it up on returning to write a review. And let me tell you, that doesn't often happen to me.
When I was reading Of Human Bondage, I wasn't always happy with it. Happy is not the word. Sometimes I felt exasperated, ashamed, angry - not with the writer, with the hero. And that's exactly what you feel when thinking of your own younger self and mistakes you made. In following the story of Philip Carey you identify with him and live his life over again with him - and it is as real as your own recollections, excites as many regrets, doubts, and twitches of pain. This book is life itself, and what more can you say?
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review 2014-09-04 00:00
Of Human Bondage
Of Human Bondage - Maeve Binchy,Benjamin DeMott,W. Somerset Maugham A meandering story of the life of Philip Carey. The plot is not important as Philip's discovery of the meaning of life. And by meaning of life, I really mean lack of meaning. And while that sounds quite dank and depressing, it really is quite a liberating thing to know and accept your role in this world. Of Human Bondage popped on my radar as it was mentioned in a review of recently read The Swerve as a literary example of Epicurean philosophy. Without that context, I probably would have been saying WTF Philip and giving this book a good head shake. Instead, I was able to relate to some of Phillip's foibles. Phillip was not a particularly likable character, but he had a bit of a Dickensian childhood, born with a club-foot and orphaned, so you wanted to have some empathy for him. Still, he didn't have things too bad, and was able to try out a few career paths before ultimately settling on becoming a doctor. But Phillip was an outsider, never quite embraced by gentlemanly society due to his deformity and modest means, yet he did not identify with those of abject poverty who literally live hand to mouth. As a modern American, I don't truly understand what it means to be a "gentleman" in early 20th century England, but I do understand not being embraced by certain peer groups.

Worth mentioning is the relationship with the mega-bitch Mildred. Phillip knew his obsession was unhealthy, he knew Mildred treated him like shit, but still he gave into it, and seemed to be masochistically drawn to the abuse. Honestly, I don't quite understand how it conceptually tied in, but I found Phillip's obsession with her interesting especially so since he was so emotionally disconnected with others.

I am not clever enough to pull out that one plum of profound meaning from OHB, so I take the journey of reading as its reward. In spite of Philip's flaws, the book's wandering storyline, and awkward ending, OHB is a lovely read and one that will echo in my psyche for a while.
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