Look back in regret | |||
In Julian Barnes' The Sense Of An Ending, a retired old man digs through his memories and finds that his past isn't what it used to be | |||
The story, such as it is, fits easily into the 150 pages accorded to it. An unremarkable man in his sixties called Tony looks back on his childhood, youth, and middle age. Things appear to be on an even keel; he's had a couple of love affairs, a marriage, a child, and a divorce and is now fading into a benign old age. And then a letter arrives from a lawyer that forces him to reconsider his past, both the people in it and the role played by his younger self. He begins to dig among his memories and lay them out to better understand them. The principal players are his first girlfriend Veronica, and his deceased school friend Adrian. "Small," and "personal," Tony's history undoubtedly is. But where TS Elliot could offer poetic drama with 'The Love Song of J Alfred Prufrock', despite giving us a hero who states "I am not Prince Hamlet, nor was I meant to be…", Barnes gives us a protagonist who is reduced by his own memories, cut and redefined, made smaller and meaner, until he dwindles to a point where it's hard to care. And what story there is, is punctured by his admissions and readmissions, "But Tony was and is Tony, a man who found comfort in his own doggedness." Barnes' control over the ebb and flow of the pattern of connections and associations means that the very first pages we read and the very last, contain the same ripple of awareness — notions of "unrest," and "accumulation" and "responsibility" are what we gather are important here. A beautiful motif introduced, as one of Tony's earliest memories, is of the currents on the river Thames being reversed — the idea that memory itself can go upstream and not always flow in one direction. The novel doesn't quite work that way though. The Sense Of An Ending doesn't gather itself, and flow into, a sea of brightening evocation. Instead, with the narrator stating time and again, "at least, that's how I remember it now," the narrative is pulled too often into rumination for it to take wing as a novel. But all said and done, Barnes' meditative prose is itself such a joy to read it won't be surprising if it gets him the Booker. |
Privacy Policy
▼
No comments:
Post a Comment