The Folding Star

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The Folding Star
Author Alan Hollinghurst
Country Great Britain
Language English
Genre(s) Novel
Publisher Chatto & Windus Ltd
Publication date 1994

The Folding Star is a 1994 novel by Alan Hollinghurst.

Contents

[edit] Plot summary

The novel is the story of an English homosexual, Edward Manners, who, disaffected with life, moves to a town in Flanders where he teaches two students English. One, Marcel, is good but ugly while the other, Luc, is bad but, to the protagonist, deeply beautiful. The novel also deals with Manners' emerging relationship with Marcel's father who curates a museum of symbolist paintings by Edgard Orst (modelled on Fernand Khnopff and James Ensor).

Many of the characters (Manners, Orst, Marcel's father, Luc) are marked by obsession with others. The past continually intrudes into the twilight world Hollinghurst evokes, dragging Manners back to England for a time.

[edit] Main themes

The novel shows many of Hollinghurst's features as a writer, controlled prose and a keen eye for social custom. Above all it shows the dichotomy Hollinghurst often outlines between aesthetic sensibilities and lush surroundings and the grasping physical desires and acts that preoccupy his characters.

[edit] Literary significance and criticism

The Folding Star won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize for fiction in 1994.

It was also shortlisted for the Booker Prize.

The New York Review of Books described it thus: "You could read this novel as a miniature Remembrance of Things Past. Or as an expanded Death in Venice... or as a homosexual Lolita.... It is an immense pleasure to read, [filled with] funniness and poetry, handled with amazing sensitivity and accuracy."[1] Peter Kemp, Times Literary Supplement critic, said, "Even in its sexiest moments, it never loses its intellectual poise. Dry witticisms intersperse sweaty couplings."[2]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Quoted at Bloomsbury USA
  2. ^ BBC NEWS | Entertainment | Hollinghurst's rise to Booker glory