#CBR10 Review #56: The Line of Beauty by Alan Hollinghurst
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I’ve lost track of how many people I have told about my
notable experience with sleep paralysis last year, which included a very
strange dream with Dan Stevens that was related to said experience with sleep paralysis. However, this led me
to watching a LOT of Dan Stevens content in the months that followed. This has
nothing to do with this novel, except for the fact that upon referencing some
info for my review, I find that there was a miniseries adaptation of the book
starring… well, Dan Stevens of course! So I guess I will be watching that once
I figure out where I can procure it, huh? But anyways, on to the novel at hand!
The Line of Beauty follows the story of Nick Guest, a young gay man in 80s Britain, who has taken to living with the wealthy family of one of his classmates from Oxford: the patriarch of the household is a local MP name Gerald, which inevitably ties Nick up into the world of politics (particularly those of the Thatcher-era shown here), wealth, and potential scandal. Over the years we see him explore his identity as a gay man in the particular culture he finds himself in, with the AIDS crisis becoming an important aspect of this life in the later sections of the novel. There are also a lot of themes regarding the draw of beautiful things, even when they might not be what is best for us: this includes relationships, wealth, and the drugs (a line of beauty for some being found in a line of cocaine, rather than the double-S shape of the architectural Ogee that the book is also considered titled for).
The Line of Beauty follows the story of Nick Guest, a young gay man in 80s Britain, who has taken to living with the wealthy family of one of his classmates from Oxford: the patriarch of the household is a local MP name Gerald, which inevitably ties Nick up into the world of politics (particularly those of the Thatcher-era shown here), wealth, and potential scandal. Over the years we see him explore his identity as a gay man in the particular culture he finds himself in, with the AIDS crisis becoming an important aspect of this life in the later sections of the novel. There are also a lot of themes regarding the draw of beautiful things, even when they might not be what is best for us: this includes relationships, wealth, and the drugs (a line of beauty for some being found in a line of cocaine, rather than the double-S shape of the architectural Ogee that the book is also considered titled for).
Nick’s relationships and the draw of this life he finds
himself instilled in are founded both in beauty and the recklessness of
idealizing such beauty: there is a hypocrisy to it all, and the privilege of
these people and the way they play at life is certainly scrutinized throughout
this novel: rigid conservatism in particular is the backdrop of many of the
characters’ lives, which inevitably results in some of their downfall and
unhappiness. Well, Nick’s unhappiness is really the starkest, being that he is
front and center to the reader as the protagonist, but also given that his
station in life and identity as a gay man doesn’t allow him to get away with
the same things as his wealthier contemporaries: he is literally just playing
at being as rich and privileged as he desires. Because of this sense of acting
the part and just trying to fit in, there is a real sense of yearning and
almost loneliness throughout this entire novel (not unlike the last two books I’ve
reviewed which were also super lonely-feeling, I mean what is up with this
trend of mine right now?). Nick is searching for love and trying to find a place
where he fits, but even when he feels like he has found love it turns out to be
different than he expected or just another experience of him thinking he’s
found his place while still being an outsider in some way or another.
Yet, despite the melancholic feel of this novel and some of
the serious subjects it touches on (including homophobia, mental illness, AIDS,
infidelity, etc), there is still quite a lot of wit about it, and some truly
enchanting lines and banter within the pages. The writing itself clearly strives
for beauty, despite the fact that it took me a little bit of work to really get
into in the beginning (I’m not entirely up on all the ins and outs of British
politics, especially not those of the 80s because well I was not born at the
time, you see). I must admit however, that this Oxfordian, upper-crust, yuppie
sort of thing does often strike me as so annoyingly uppity and pretentious; yet
it is also quite the delicious aesthetic and… dare I say, a big gay mood?
All in all, The Line
of Beauty is a lovely book, filled with a lot of sex, drugs, and secrecy. Maybe
a little more work to get through for myself personally than I anticipated when
starting it, but ultimately it ended up being worth it, I think.
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