The British Museum Is Falling Down

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The British Museum Is Falling Down
Author David Lodge
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Genre(s) Comic novel
Publisher MacGibbon & Kee Ltd
Publication date 1965
Media type Print (hardcover, Panther paperback 1967)

The British Museum Is Falling Down (1965) is a comic novel by British author David Lodge about a 25 year-old poverty-stricken student of English literature who, rather than working on his thesis (entitled "The Structure of Long Sentences in Three Modern English Novels") in the reading room of the British Museum, is time and again distracted from his work and who gets into all kinds of trouble instead.

[edit] Summary

Set in Swinging London, the novel describes one day in the life of Adam Appleby, who lives in constant fear that his wife might be pregnant again with a fourth child. As Catholics, they are denied any form of contraception and have to play "Vatican roulette" instead. Adam and Barbara have three children: Clare, Dominic, and Edward; their friends ask if they intended working through the whole alphabet.

In the course of only one busy day several chances to make some money present themselves to Adam. For example, he is offered the opportunity to edit a deceased scholar's unpublished manuscripts. However, when he eventually has a look at them he feels uncomfortable realizing that the man's writings are worthless drivel. Also, at the house in Bayswater where he is supposed to get the papers, Adam has to cope with an assortment of weird characters ranging from butchers to a young virgin intent on seducing him.

Lodge's novel makes extensive use of pastiche, incorporating passages where both the motifs and the styles of writing used by various authors are imitated. For instance, there is a Kafkaesque scene where Adam has to renew his reading room ticket. The final chapter of the novel is a monologue by Adam's wife in the style of Molly Bloom's soliloquy in Ulysses.

This use of different styles mirrors James Joyce's Ulysses, a work also about a single day. When Lodge's novel first came out quite a number of reviewers and critics, not appreciating the literary allusions, found fault with Lodge for his inhomogeneous writing. [1]

[edit] See also

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ David Lodge: "Afterword" (1980). The British Museum Is Falling Down (Penguin Books, 1983), p.171.