WICKES
12-12-2012, 01:00 PM
I guess most people on here know of Orwell, but for those who don't he was an English-British writer of the first half of the 20th century. Orwell came from a middle class family, went to Eton (where he was taught by Aldous Huxley, author of the other great dystopian novel of the 20th century), spent time working for the colonial authorities in Burma, then became a poverty stricken writer and committed socialist. He is one of the most loveable and admirable literary figures of the 20th century: a man who lived his socialism, working as a miner in the north of England during the Depression, living as a tramp in Paris and London, fighting for the Republicans in the Spanish civil war, refusing to leave England even when the Nazis looked set to invade and so on. Yet, he was never a sanctimonious or bullying leftie- he loved England (even though most on the left hated it) and had the courage to criticise the Soviet Union when other left wing intellectuals were falling over themselves to excuse and justify it.
Keep the Aspidistra Flying is a novel, set in London during the Depression of the 1930s. The central character is Gordon Comstock: an intelligent, 30 year old wanna-be poet with little literary talent whose background is the shabby, genteel English lower middle class. His predicament is recognizable to many of us on here: he loves literature and wants to be left alone to read, write and dream. But money, money, MONEY gets in the way. To his eternal fury he has to earn a living. He once worked in advertising, where he earnt a good income, but felt he was selling his soul. So he quit, ''declared war on money'', got a low paid job in a secondhand bookshop and rented a horrible little room in a boarding house. There are three people in his life: a girlfriend called Rosemary, an upper middle class 'socialist' friend called Ravelston and Gordon's sister Julia (ugly and unmarried). He rails and whignes about his poverty, then gets a poem published and, flushed with money and success, he gets drunk, hits a policeman, loses his job and decides to sink down into the twilight world, to 'drop out' as we'd say today. He gets an even worse job and rents an even worse room in an even worse part of London. There he feels free. In the slums he doesn't have to worry about maintaining respectability or striving for career success. He just drifts in a sort of detached, numb way until his girlfriend announces she is pregnant. She makes it clear to him that he owes her nothing, but he 'surrenders'- the money God has got him after all and he marries and returns to advertising.
Overall, well worth a look. For me it is the weakest of his books (Orwell himself was ashamed of it). Let me get the negatives out of the way first. It is too long and should have been cut by about 50 pages. It sags a bit about a third of the way through and is at times repetitive. The single biggest flaw however is the central character. I accept that you don't have to make your main character likeable, but surely Orwell wants us to sympathise with his struggle? Gordon holds views that most of us would agree with (I hope): he hates the crude, ugly world of advertising, the shallow emptiness of a career persuading people to buy crap they don't need. He feels there is something rotten about modern, urban life and prefers poetry and natural beauty to traffic jams, housing and trashy literature. Why put such sound views into the mouth of this tedious little egotist? Gordon is consumed with self-pity, is whiney and negative, feels little solidarity or sympathy with his fellow bums and treats those in his life appallingly. His girlfriend is lovely: kind, gentle, good-humoured and understanding. But he throws her patience back in her face. He is supposed to be making war on money, yet he talks of nothing else. At one point he even gets drunk and forces himself on her in a filthy alley. His friend Ravelston is the perfect English gentleman and a loyal friend, but again Gordon does nothing but whinge when he is with him and make him feel guilty about his own wealth. Then there is his sister Julia. She is lonely and unwanted, exploited by her boss and wasting away in a dingy flat (Julia is very well drawn and, though she isn't in the novel much, her empty, sad little life moved me much more than Gordon's). But he only visits her when he wants money. When his poem is published instead of repaying her he spends the money in a brothel.
It has many plus points though and many passages to be pondered and re-read. Chapter 3 is worth reading on its own- a funny, perfectly observed depiction of a dull, 'respectable', uninteresting, unhappy family of mediocrities, weaklings and losers who "never did ANYTHING" and even died of boring and uninteresting things. It is also an interesting exploration of the way money, or rather the lack of money, affects things we like to imagine are above income: sex, love, creativity, friendship- even morality. That is the real theme of the book and one that is more than relevant to us today.
Keep the Aspidistra Flying is a novel, set in London during the Depression of the 1930s. The central character is Gordon Comstock: an intelligent, 30 year old wanna-be poet with little literary talent whose background is the shabby, genteel English lower middle class. His predicament is recognizable to many of us on here: he loves literature and wants to be left alone to read, write and dream. But money, money, MONEY gets in the way. To his eternal fury he has to earn a living. He once worked in advertising, where he earnt a good income, but felt he was selling his soul. So he quit, ''declared war on money'', got a low paid job in a secondhand bookshop and rented a horrible little room in a boarding house. There are three people in his life: a girlfriend called Rosemary, an upper middle class 'socialist' friend called Ravelston and Gordon's sister Julia (ugly and unmarried). He rails and whignes about his poverty, then gets a poem published and, flushed with money and success, he gets drunk, hits a policeman, loses his job and decides to sink down into the twilight world, to 'drop out' as we'd say today. He gets an even worse job and rents an even worse room in an even worse part of London. There he feels free. In the slums he doesn't have to worry about maintaining respectability or striving for career success. He just drifts in a sort of detached, numb way until his girlfriend announces she is pregnant. She makes it clear to him that he owes her nothing, but he 'surrenders'- the money God has got him after all and he marries and returns to advertising.
Overall, well worth a look. For me it is the weakest of his books (Orwell himself was ashamed of it). Let me get the negatives out of the way first. It is too long and should have been cut by about 50 pages. It sags a bit about a third of the way through and is at times repetitive. The single biggest flaw however is the central character. I accept that you don't have to make your main character likeable, but surely Orwell wants us to sympathise with his struggle? Gordon holds views that most of us would agree with (I hope): he hates the crude, ugly world of advertising, the shallow emptiness of a career persuading people to buy crap they don't need. He feels there is something rotten about modern, urban life and prefers poetry and natural beauty to traffic jams, housing and trashy literature. Why put such sound views into the mouth of this tedious little egotist? Gordon is consumed with self-pity, is whiney and negative, feels little solidarity or sympathy with his fellow bums and treats those in his life appallingly. His girlfriend is lovely: kind, gentle, good-humoured and understanding. But he throws her patience back in her face. He is supposed to be making war on money, yet he talks of nothing else. At one point he even gets drunk and forces himself on her in a filthy alley. His friend Ravelston is the perfect English gentleman and a loyal friend, but again Gordon does nothing but whinge when he is with him and make him feel guilty about his own wealth. Then there is his sister Julia. She is lonely and unwanted, exploited by her boss and wasting away in a dingy flat (Julia is very well drawn and, though she isn't in the novel much, her empty, sad little life moved me much more than Gordon's). But he only visits her when he wants money. When his poem is published instead of repaying her he spends the money in a brothel.
It has many plus points though and many passages to be pondered and re-read. Chapter 3 is worth reading on its own- a funny, perfectly observed depiction of a dull, 'respectable', uninteresting, unhappy family of mediocrities, weaklings and losers who "never did ANYTHING" and even died of boring and uninteresting things. It is also an interesting exploration of the way money, or rather the lack of money, affects things we like to imagine are above income: sex, love, creativity, friendship- even morality. That is the real theme of the book and one that is more than relevant to us today.