Julian Barnes (Flaubert's Parrot, Talking it Over, Love etc., England England ... and so many more) has been one of my favourite contemporary writers for years. Late last year I read his two most recent books ...
Image source: www.telegraph.co.uk
Pulse (published in 2011) is a collection of short stories that collectively amount to a reflection on relationships between men and women, as well as on qualities of 'Englishness' ... at least, as far as these apply to middle-class, educated English lives. (Interestingly, Barnes seems to be bi-cultural: English-born to parents who were teachers of French, he's been a life-long Francophile and has won major French literary prizes as well as been made commandeur of the French Ordre des Arts et des Lettres).
Image source: www.dispatch.com
It's tempting to wonder about the extent to which he draws on personal experience for these stories. Barnes was married to the very
successful, South African-born literary agent Pat Kavanagh (below right), whose clients were some
of Britain’s best known writers, including Auberon Waugh, Andrew Motion,
William Trevor and Martin Amis. (When Amis dumped Kavanagh in favour of a new
editor, the longstanding friendship between Barnes and Amis, two of the best
living British writers, ended summarily, bitterly and publicly). She famously
left Barnes briefly in the 1980s to have an affair with the writer Jeanette
Winterson, returning to him for another couple of decades until she died quite recently.
Image sources: www.julianbarnes.com; www.nytimes.com
Not surprisingly perhaps, then,
many of the stories in Pulse have themes of loss and bereavement, though I was also struck by the honesty (often uncomfortable) with which he explores men as
partners.
The Sense of an Ending won the 2011 Man Booker prize - Barnes’s first win after being
shortlisted three times previously. Only 150 pages long, it’s a novella rather
than a novel, yet has the feel of a substantial story. Unlike the previous year’s Booker
winner, Howard Jacobson's The Finkler Question, which I had many reservations about (see here), I found this a really engaging read ...
Image source: www.guardian.co.uk
It explores the question of what we remember about the key
relationships in our lives as we get older. The main character, Tony
Webster, is in retirement, nearing the end of a life he considers unremarkable
but pretty satisfactory. In the early
stages of the book, he chronicles this life with the rather tidy explanations
of key events that most of us tend to rely on in summing up our lives. Tony’s
watershed moment comes when he receives an unexpected bequest that includes the
personal diary of an old friend who died young many years before. From this
point, it becomes apparent to both him and the reader that he is an unreliable
narrator. Delving back into events, he is forced to re-interpret his past and
question truths he held which now appear to have been built on illusory
grounds. Successive ‘understandings’ giving way to newer ones as they are
proved inaccurate too. In the process, Tony discovers that “as the witnesses to
your life diminish, there is less corroboration, and therefore less certainty,
as to what you are or what you have been.”
The book’s unsettling message is
that we only partially understand our own life stories; as Barnes’s character
is confronted with the unreliability of personal memories, he reflects that “the
history that happens under our noses ought to be the clearest, and yet it’s the
most deliquescent”.