William Boyd on The Sophomore by Barry Spacks: ‘Hilarious, shrewd and very true’

First published in 1968, The Sophomore was Barry Spacks’ debut novel: he subsequently turned to poetry over prose, and has been writing and teaching in that form ever since – a shame only in the sense that The Sophomore is a polished laugh-out-loud gem, and superior practitioners of the comic novel are rare enough.

The novel’s protagonist is Harry Zissel, 22 years old, a college sophomore who plans to be a Major American Writer. Unfortunately Harry just can’t seem to finish a piece of writing of any appreciable length. Then his girlfriend Miriam announces she’s pregnant. Suddenly Harry fears he’ll end up a married wage-slave, the seeming fate of his former comrade Arthur Thompson. Leaving his apartment to get breakfast, Harry decides instead to hit the road, hoping to live the American dream of ‘starting afresh’, mildly anxious that in fact he is meant to buck up, straighten out, do some work for a change…

Much praised in 1968, The Sophomore’s reputation has endured, with thanks in no small part to William Boyd who has frequently praised it as a key early influence on his own work. And William has graciously offered us a fresh endorsement for the jacket of our edition:

‘The Sophomore by Barry Spacks is that rare beast: a clever, sophisticated novel that is very, very funny. It’s like an American Lucky Jim – at once hilarious, shrewd and very true. A complete delight.’ William Boyd

Faber Finds is delighted to be returning The Sophomore to readers in 2012. You can order the paperback here and the ebook here. Our Finds edition includes a new preface in the form of a Q&A about the novel between Barry Spacks and me, from which I offer the following by Barry about the novel’s genesis:

“The seed of the book came to life one day in a writing workshop where I offered the group what I thought was a deeply mournful short story, centred on Harry’s desire to be recognized as a significant artist without creating anything in the way of significant art. The reaction in the workshop was laughter… I hadn’t expected that, hadn’t seen the comic potential in the character’s stance until then. And the tonic of laughter released the tone of the book to follow… the mock-epic strain in the narrative’s tone evolved from this workshop recognition that such self-importance is funny.
Finding what I came to call the ‘X’ plot of reversals and repetitions was a matter of sweating it out over the typewriter keys… But the early scene where [Harry’s] aunt and mother pay a surprise call on Harry [at college] and Miriam has to hide in a closet? That came right out of my own experience…”

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Enoch Powell at 100: the rights and wrongs

Enoch Powell in Belfast, 1974. Photo by Don McPhee, (c) Don McPhee/The Guardian/TopFoto

The recent centenary of the birth of Enoch Powell incited a compelling range of commemorations, across a spectrum of daily papers and blogs – the accents (as ever with Powell) upon intellect and conviction, controversy and infamy, Powell’s striking tendency toward ‘Here I stand, I can do no other’, and the perennial theme of how all political careers end in failure, some more conspicuously than others. Front and centre among the commentators was Powell’s authorized biographer Simon Heffer, whose Like The Roman: The Life of Enoch Powell Finds has been pleased to offer since 2008. As of this year we have been doubly pleased to make it available for Kindle (see here), on which device a work that runs to 1000+ printed pages may now be weighed in the balance within the palm of one’s hand…

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T.E.Hulme (1883-1917) by Robert Ferguson

This month we’re thrilled to reissue Robert Ferguson’s superb biography The Short Sharp Life of T. E. Hulme. It’s a remarkable thing that Hulme remains such a marginal figure in English letters: if the works are not numerous they are highly noteworthy, and the life should be of interest to anyone with a pulse. No-one is more keenly aware of this than Robert Ferguson, of course; and Robert has very kindly written the following for us as a primer for those coming new to the Hulme oeuvre:

“T. E. Hulme was an English aesthetician, literary critic, philosopher and poet, self-taught in all these disciplines. He was born in Endon, Staffordshire in 1883 and educated at Newcastle-under-Lyme Grammar school. He spent a year at St John’s College, Cambridge before being sent down for brawling. Returning to the same college some years later as a mature student he was again sent down, this time for conducting an erotic correspondence with the teenage daughter of a wealthy stockbroker who was a fellow member of the Aristotelian Society. Hulme was a restless, turbulent young man, as curious to know about sex as about the history of philosophy. He was handy with his fists too and once settled a disagreement with the painter Wyndham Lewis by hanging him upside down by the turn-ups of his trousers from the railings in Soho Square. He was, according to Jacob Epstein, ‘as capable of kicking a theory as well as a man downstairs when the occasion demanded.’

Hulme lived mainly in London. He was a charismatic personality and a circle quickly grew up around him that included Ezra Pound, Robert Frost, the English poet and translator F.S.Flint, Jacob Epstein, and Hilda Doolittle (H.D.) In 1908 he founded the Poets’ Club, and between them Hulme, Flint and Pound developed a theory of poetry which placed stress on the need for verse to be clear, economical, objective and concrete in detail. Hulme’s own small production of verse – which for T.S. Eliot contained ‘some of the finest short poems in the English language’ – observes his own strictures unforgettably:

Above the quiet dock in midnight,
Tangled in the tall mast’s corded height,
Hangs the moon. What seemed so far away
Is but a child’s balloon, forgotten after play.

Hulme joined up at the outbreak of the Great War. Unlike many of his intellectual contemporaries he was a militarist with cogent reasons for believing in the urgent necessity of fighting the war. Direct experience of life in the trenches did not change his views. It makes him a unique and unfashionable figure among English poets and cultural personalities of the First World War, and is probably one reason why his name is so often passed over in silence. He did not glorify war but saw it as a tragic necessity. During lulls in the fighting he wrote and sent home articles opposing the pacifism of, among others, Bertrand Russell. He also wrote letters and kept a diary. Early in 1915 he was wounded in action at St Eloi and sent back to England to convalesce. He re-enlisted and was killed at Flanders in September 1917 at the age of 34.

Of all the literary interests of my youth Hulme is perhaps the one that remains most enigmatic and interesting to me. At unexpected times I still find myself contemplating some of his more striking aphorisms:

‘Philosophy is about people in clothes, not about the soul of man’.

‘Why grumble because there is no end discoverable in the world? There is no end at all except in our own constructions’.

To the romantic, Rousseauian view of the human spirit as a bottomless well that is infinite in its capacity for good things Hulme opposed his own ‘imagist’ vision in which he compared it, rather, to a bucket, that can only be filled so full. A hundred years on from his death his critique of romantic idealism remains entirely salutary.”

Robert Ferguson, Oslo

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Clarkson speaks his mind on… Keith Moon

Who? Clarkson, Daltrey, Townshend...

Faber Finds is proud to be a list that is shaped by the myriad tastes of readers, many of our titles coming to us by recommendation from people who keep especially well-stocked bookshelves. A good number of those readers, happily for us, have been notable authors: we’ve been delighted to share with you the enthusiasms of, inter alia, Philip Pullman for Lionel Davidson, David Mitchell for Joseph Conrad, Ruth Rendell for Charles Williams, Nadine Gordimer and JM Coetzee for CJ Driver, William Boyd for Barry Spacks, Sarah Waters for Sylvia Townsend Warner… And now we can add to that roster none other than Jeremy Clarkson, in praise of Peter ‘Dougal’ Butler.
That Clarkson is a confirmed Who-ligan is common knowledge, not least as he selected ‘Behind Blue Eyes’ for a 2003 appearance on Desert Island Discs, and has welcomed Roger Daltrey as a guest on Top Gear – evidence below. But in a 2005 episode of the show he even drove a Rolls Royce into the Chipping Norton Lido en hommage to Moon.
Here then is the verdict of Clarkson on Dougal’s Full Moon:

‘This book should be required reading for all aspiring musicians. So they know how to do it.’

You couldn’t make it up, and we didn’t. The rest of 2012 is looking with each passing day like a bigger and bigger year for The Who and their fans, so keep ‘em peeled for further bulletins on the subject from Faber Towers…

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Virginia Cowles, Off-Broadway

Heidi Armbruster and Angela Pierce in ‘Love Goes to Press’. (c) Richard Termine

It is chiefly on account of her accomplishments as a roving war correspondent that we are proud to publish Virginia Cowles’ Looking For Trouble. But then we wouldn’t want to overlook Cowles’ contribution to the corpus of 20th century stage drama. It’s fair to say, though, that not many people were aware of said contribution – all the more reason to celebrate the efforts of the Mint Theatre Company of New York, who are currently presenting Love Goes to Press, a play co-authored by Cowles and Martha Gellhorn in 1946, and derived from their own remarkable life-experiences. The story goes that Gellhorn regarded the piece so lightly that she never kept a copy of the script. Thankfully, someone did. Here are some bits of notices the show’s already received:

“The war correspondent heroines of the 1946 play “Love Goes to Press” have smarts and bravado and glamour. They also have an impeccable pedigree: They’re creations of Martha Gellhorn and Virginia Cowles, journalists who covered the Spanish Civil War and World War II, which gave them intense, firsthand experience of the topic.
Interestingly, “Love Goes to Press,” the latest work to be plucked out of obscurity and dusted off by the invaluable Mint Theater Company, isn’t a heavy treatise on war but an enjoyable romantic comedy, whose real skirmishes are between the sexes. With its rat-a-tat rhythms, this Jerry Ruiz-directed production evokes the screwball comedies of the era, a sort of “His Girl Friday” at the front lines.”
Rachel Saltz, New York Times

“The Mint’s staging is spot-on: an impeccably run-down Italian villa, complete with military maps, Remington field typewriters and sprinklings of plaster dust after nearby shell bursts. Here reporters Annabelle (Heidi Armbruster) and Jane (Angela Pierce) navigate the male-dominated scene as if they are two of the guys, romantically skirmishing with Joe (Rob Breckenridge), a Hemingwayesque hack with whom Annabelle shares a troubled history (indeed, Gellhorn was married to Hemingway) and Philip (Bradford Cover), the beleaguered Brit in charge of the press camp…
The play is a romp through a dark time, a piece of escapism driven by the same impulse as Hollywood’s screwball response to the Depression. Gellhorn acknowledged this right off: “This play bears no resemblance whatever, of any kind at all, to war and war correspondents,” she wrote. “It is a joke. It was intended to make people laugh.” And that’s what it did when it opened in London in 1946. Odd to find such frothy preoccupations so near the front. But if one is able to check one’s sense of reality in at the door, it’s easy to get swept up with the play’s charm.”
Eric Uhlfelder, Financial Times

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Anthony Barnett’s ‘Iron Britannia’: Falklands Resurgens

June 14 2012 is the 30th anniversary of Argentine surrender in the Falklands War of April-June 1982. This month Finds is reissuing Iron Britannia by Anthony Barnett, originally published between covers in 1982 and deriving from writings Barnett first published in the New Left Review. Iron Britannia is a swingeing polemic against the Falklands War, to which Barnett has now added previously unpublished material and a brand new 10,000-word preface in which he examines Britain’s foreign policy and military engagements overseas in the 30 years since the Falklands. That preface is now posted at Barnett’s Open Democracy website.

Even in a heavy news month of what has been a heavy news year, I doubt any of our readers have failed to notice revived tensions between the UK and Argentina’s Kirchner government over the status and future of the Falkland Islands. Anthony Barnett has been foresquarely involved in this renewed public debate, and also at Open Democracy you can read a fascinating transcript of his appearance last February on BBC Radio Five’s Stephen Nolan Show, where he exchanged views with Jan Cheek of the Falkland Islands’ Legislative Assembly.

Need we pique your interest any further? If so, just take a look at the following selection of responses to Iron Britannia‘s original publication. The reviewers in question require no introduction, as the saying goes.

‘The most impressively sustained polemic against the government’s policy on the Falklands yet to appear.’ Sean French, Sunday Times

‘One of the liveliest pieces of expert polemic this country has seen for many years, and done with almost Swiftian vigour. I warmly recommend it.’ John Fowles, Guardian

‘A furious, sometimes gleeful and often witty polemic against the decaying British political system which the conflict revealed… the Churchillism idea remains the best thing in this essay. Another hit is Barnett’s joyous savaging of the British press: the gloating screams of the Sun, the surging moral orgasms of the Times.’ Neal Ascherson, London Review of Books

‘A blistering polemic from the outside left written in the heat of anger (and incidentally in limpid English). Anthony Barnett makes a variety of telling points in his attack on Mrs. Thatcher and the English parliamentary hegemony. Most tellingly of all, the concept he puts forward of ‘Churchillism’, the rhetoric of national unity which overrides party and class considerations.’ Geoffrey Wheatcroft, Times Literary Supplement

‘Brings some sense into the strange episode of the Falklands war.’ A. J. P. Taylor, Observer (Books of the Year)

‘A sharp intelligently argued case … his examination of the mythological factors at work in the British political situation is brilliant.’ Robert Kee

‘In the most honourable tradition of left-wing journalism, it is also very funny.’ Angela Carter

‘Without belittling those who served, it exposes the rhetoric heaped on their efforts by the Government and the media.’ Andrew Wilson, Observer

‘A welcome antidote to the current wave of Falkland porn, and the author poses the right questions.’ Ben Pimlott, New Society

‘The only interesting analysis of the war I’ve read.’ David Hare

‘Barnett makes a devastating case to show Thatcher’s attempt to utilize the war for political purposes.’ Tam Dalyell, Tribune

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