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Swimming Pool Library

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Title: Swimming Pool Library
by Alan Hollinghurst
ISBN: 0-679-72256-4
Publisher: Vintage
Pub. Date: 19 September, 1989
Format: Paperback
Volumes: 1
List Price(USD): $14.00
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Average Customer Rating: 4.14 (14 reviews)

Customer Reviews

Rating: 4
Summary: Disturbingly Erotic
Comment: This novel is well-written, and vacillates between extremely well-written fiction and minutely detailed erotica. The story centers around Will, a promiscuous, narcisscistic, wealthy gay young Londoner in the pre-AIDS era of the early 1980's. Will has no financial or moral restrictions. He leads us on a journey through the hot summer of 1983, that is at times graphic, and also historically engrossing.

Will Beckwith's adventures are by far some of the most graphically-detailed I have ever read, but highly erotic for both gay and straight readers. Concurrently, Will encounters an elderly British Lord who wants Will to write his life story. There is an undercurrent of duplicity in all of his relationships, from his passionate, physical affair with the young, uneducated hotel employee, Phil, to the exact nature of his professional dealings with his Lordship. Also, there is a pitying tone to his relationship with his best friend, a doctor who is also gay, but who is the only person who seems to have Will's heart, instead of his libido.

This is not your ordinary novel. Alan Hollinghurst is an extremely intelligent writer, who can also write with an almost animalistic sense of depravity. It is almost like reading two novels; on one page, extremely explicit sex, on another, intellectual stimulation. It is certainly one of the most unique books of its kind I have ever read.

Rating: 4
Summary: One of the most intelligent gay novels in years
Comment: Alan Hollinghurst may be the most intelligent gay English-language novelist writing today, with the possible exceptions of Edmund White and Gore Vidal, but Hollinghurst is neither so precious as White nor so nutty as Vidal. THE SWIMMING-POOL LIBRARY was his first effort, and remains his best. It marvelously captures the life enjoyed by a wealthy, handsome, leisured, and predatory London aristocrat, William Beckwith, in the early Eighties, and the way his life changes when he meets Chalres Beckwith, a titled man whom Beckwith incorrectly assumes lived a life very similar to his own. The novel is basically about the absence of gay history at the time it was written, and the ways in which privilege and security can be taken for granted. The book read very differently in 1988 (at the darkest moments of the AIDS crisis) than it does today, and its message seems less elegiac in many ways than before. It's not a novel without its problems: although Beckwith is clearly intended to be understood as morally blinkered (and he does get a something of a comeuppance eventually), his incessant vanity and self-congratulation does make him eventually a bit of a bore as first-person narrators go. Hollinghurst also witholds crucial information about the plot until the very last fifty pages of the novel, as he did in his next effort THE FOLDING STAR, so that you're not even fully aware of what the mystery guiding the novel's action really is until fairly late in the game. While this makes the final revelation more of a surprise, the book reads much better the second time than the first, when (as again with THE FOLDING STAR) there seems to be little plot to sustain your interest. Most readers have found Hollinghrust's third book, THE SPELL, the weakest of his efforts so far: it will be interesting to see if he can either repeat or surmount the success of THE SWIMMING-POOL LIBRARY.

Rating: 3
Summary: Old and young
Comment: Will Beckwith is a young Brit of privilege who leads a life of leisure and sexual escapades, whether he has a boyfriend or not. He befriends the elderly Lord Nantwich who pressures him to co-write his memoirs, but the young man has many hesitations, and as he reads Nantwich's journals, he finds himself equally fascinated and alarmed at the connections he sees with his own life. In his youth, Nantwich was much like Will and he met a bevy of notable queers, including E. M. Forster and Ronald Firbank. "The Swimming-pool Library" is #34 of the 100 Best Gay and Lesbian Novels for its exploration of gay camaraderie, history, sexuality, and literature, as well as for its interactions between the younger gay culture and the older gay culture mostly cast aside and ignored. The novel ends as a kind of elegy that shimmers with surprises.

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