I am so sorry I got to the end of this book. I was loving reading everything Julian Barnes had to say, whether as essayist, memoirist or novelist. I wasn’t sure into which genre the book was meant to fit. Part 1 is, basically, an essay on memory: to quote Julian Barnes “…that place where degradation and embellishment overlap”; and “What did TS Eliot say about memory? That no matter how you wrap it in camphor, the moths will get in”. Wonderful observations, I wish I’d made them myself!
Then follows the story of a relationship between two of Julian’s friends. It is a two-part story, the parts being separated by forty years. Julian was at university with Stephen and Jean (not, as he explains, their real names) when they were all in their early twenties. Forty years later they all reconnect, and the second part of the story begins. I don’t know if these were real people, or whether at this point I was reading a novel or a memoir, but I didn’t mind one way or the other, I just wanted to keep on reading, and did so until the early hours of this morning.
I bought this book on Kindle but I’m going to have to get the paperback now as there are lots of places in it I’ll be wanting to revisit.
Published by Vintage



