The Line of Beauty

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The Line of Beauty
Author Alan Hollinghurst
Country Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom
Language English
Genre(s) Gay, historical novel
Publisher Picador Books
Publication date 2004
Media type Print (Paperback and Hardback)
Pages 300 pp (hardcover edition)
ISBN ISBN 0-330-48321-8 (hardcover edition)

The Line of Beauty is a 2004 Booker Prize-winning novel by Alan Hollinghurst.

Contents

[edit] Plot introduction

Set in the United Kingdom in the early to mid-1980s, the story surrounds the post-Oxford life of the protagonist, Nick Guest.

As the novel begins, Nick moves into the household of the Fedden family, comprising his friend, crush, and fellow Oxford graduate Toby; Toby's eccentric sister Catherine; their wealthy and aristocratic mother, Rachel; and their Thatcher-obsessed father, Gerald, a newly-elected MP for the Conservative Party. Nick has his first romance with a black council worker, Leo, but a later relationship with Wani, the son of a rich Lebanese businessman, illuminates the ruthlessness of 1980s Thatcherite Britain.

The book explores the tension between Nick's intimate relationship with the Feddens, in whose parties and holidays he participates, and the realities of his sexuality and gay life, which the Feddens accept only to the extent of never mentioning it. It explores themes of hypocrisy, homosexuality, madness and wealth, with the emerging AIDS crisis forming a backdrop to the book's conclusion.

[edit] Explanation of the novel's title

The title of the book refers to the Double ‘S,’ described by William Hogarth in his The Analysis of Beauty as the model of Beauty[1], which protagonist Nick Guest uses to describe his lover’s body.

[edit] Characters in "The Line of Beauty"

  • Nick Guest. A white gay postgraduate student, writing a thesis on Henry James and staying at the Feddens'.
  • Don and Dot Guest. Nick's parents, of humble origins.
  • Tobias Toby Fedden. Nick's straight friend from Oxford University.
  • Gerald Fedden. Tobias's father, a Conservative MP.
  • Rachel Fedden. Tobias's mother.
  • Lord Kessler. Rachel's brother, left-wing in political ideology and implied to be homosexual.
  • Elena. The Feddens's maid.
  • Catherine Fedden. Tobias's sister, an outspoken woman who has bipolar disorder and engages in self-injury.
  • Lady Partridge. Gerald's mother, and Catherine and Tobias's grandmother, a racist. Her first husband was Gerald's father, Jack Fedden, a lawyer; her second husband was Jack Partridge, a builder of motorways. She has outlived them both.
  • Jasper. Catherine's boyfriend, an estate agent.
  • Russell. Catherine's ex-boyfriend, a bad boy, whom she dates again by the end of the novel.
  • Leo Charles. Nick's black lover, whom he meets through a lonely hearts. Leo dies from AIDS, presumabily contracted from his ex-boyfriend Pete. Leo's homosexuality is not completely accepted by his mother who is a devout Christian.
  • Rosemary Charles. Leo's sister. She brings along her friend Gemma to tell Nick that her brother has died.
  • Barry Groom, a politician who never says hello.
  • Morden Lipscomb, an American.
  • John Timms, a minister in the Home Office. His wife is named Greta.
  • Penny Kent. Gerald's secretary, with whom he has an affair.
  • Jenny Groom
  • Brentford, the taxi driver who brings Catherine back after Russell has dumped her.
  • Antoine Wani Ouradi. A friend of Nick and Tobias's from Oxford University, a rich Lebanese who has a sexual relationship with Nick and later contracts AIDS.
  • Bertrand Ouradi. Antoine's father, a rich Lebanese businessman.
  • Monique Ouradi, Wani's mother. She is French.
  • Uncle Emile, Wani's uncle. His son is named Antoine.
  • Martine. Antoine's 'fiance', who is paid an allowance by his mother.
  • Leslie, an older man at the pool.
  • Ricky, a man Nick and Wani pick up at the pool.
  • Sam Zeman, a friend of Nick's.
  • Simon Jones and Howard Wasserstein, two men who work at Wani's office.
  • Melanie. A girl who works at Antoine's office.
  • Nina Glasevora, a pianist.
  • Polly Tompkins, a young man. He brings along her friend Morgan to Nina's concerto.
  • Lady Dolly Kimbolton, a lady at the concerto.
  • Norman Kent, a man who cries at the concerto.
  • Sir Maurice Tipper. A rich and greedy shareholder, engaged in unethical business practices; a homophobe.
  • Sally Tipper. Sir Maurice's wife.
  • Sophie Tipper. The Tippers' daughter, who nearly married Tobias.
  • Pat Grayson, Catherine's gay godfather, who dies of AIDS. He lived in Haslemere.
  • George Titchfield, a minor Conservative politician.
  • Jonty Stafford, a former ambassador.
  • Tristao. A foreign waiter, gay.
  • Margaret Thatcher. Herself, the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom.
  • Treat Rush and Brad Craft, two American 'queens' interested in financing Nick and Wani's film adaptation of The Spoils of Poynton.
  • Joe, a man Nick has casual sex with before seeing Leo in a bar years later.
  • Fabio, the waiter in the restaurant Nick and Wani lunch with Treat and Brad.

[edit] Major themes

The book touches upon the emergence of HIV/AIDS, as well as the relationship between politics and homosexuality, its acceptance within the 1980s Conservative Party and mainstream society. The book also considers heterosexual hypocrisy regarding homosexual promiscuity.

[edit] Allusions to other works

[edit] Allusions to actual history

[edit] Literary significance and criticism

Hollinghurst wrote the novel in Yaddo.

The book won the 2004 Booker Prize[2].

Hollinghurst has received praise for his portrayal of life among the privileged governing classes during the early to middle 1980s.[3]

The novel has been compared to Anthony Powell's A Dance to the Music of Time[4], with special regard to Powell's character Nicholas Jenkins.[5] The protagonist has also been likened to Nick Carraway in F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby[6].

Margaret Thatcher's tardy appearance has been compared to that of Kurtz in Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness[5]; Sir Maurice Tipper and his wife have been compared to characters from Evelyn Waugh[5].

[edit] TV adaptation

The novel was adapted for television by Andrew Davies as a three-part mini-series for BBC Two, broadcast from 17 May 2006. It stars Dan Stevens as Nick Guest, with Hayley Atwell, Tim McInnerny, Alice Krige, Alex Wyndham, Oliver Coleman, Joseph Morgan, Lydia Leonard, Elize Du Toit, Don Gilet, Kenneth Cranham and Barbara Flynn.[7] It was directed by Saul Dibb.

[edit] Footnotes

[edit] External links

Awards
Preceded by
Vernon God Little
Man Booker Prize recipient
2004
Succeeded by
The Sea