Finds Giveaway-a-Day #1: Patrick Hamilton

So, to the first in what will be a regular series of prize quizzes round this parish…

If Patrick Hamilton remains best known for Hangover Square and Gaslight, the stunning anomaly in his body of work is surely Impromptu in Moribundia, first published in 1939: a satirical fable about one man’s trespass (through a fantastical machine called the ‘Asteradio’) into a parallel universe where the ‘miserably dull affairs of England’ are transformed into an apparent idyll of bourgeois imagination. This rare item is a must for all Hamilton fans, also a treat for any admirer of fantastical literary dystopias, and we have a copy for the winner of our quiz.

To win a copy of Impromptu in Moribundia first take a look at the following question:

What is the title of the semi-autobiographical trilogy of novels by Hamilton which BBC2 made into a television series first broadcast in 2005?

Update: This competition closed at 5pm Thursday August 23rd.

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Finds and some Books of the Year (or any year!): Patrick Hamilton, Joseph Hone

The keenly anticipated and closely consulted end-of-year rounds-up have yielded a couple of very pleasing citations in the Herald newspaper for works restored to readers by Finds. Twopence Coloured by Patrick Hamilton has certainly proved to be one of our most gratefully received reissues, and novelist Dan Rhodes picks it in his selection with a great gesture of good cheer: ‘Hats off to Faber Finds for reviving Patrick Hamilton’s long-buried third-novel. What a treat.’ (I should add that The Oldie also celebrated this re-publication recently, noting that ‘Hamilton is much admired for his ability to conjure up an acute sense of place and also writes convincingly from a female perspective…’)
And then no less a luminary than William Boyd has indicated his pleasure in the discoverty of Joseph Hone’s The Private Sector, hailing it as ‘a Cold War spy novel worthy to rival le Carre.
We raise the first of many seasonal glasses to the spirit of Hamilton and to Joseph Hone, whose work is rightly enjoying an important reappraisal by current practitioners.

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‘One of the finest British novelists of the twentieth century’: Patrick Hamilton by Martyn Waites

Martyn Waites photographed by Charlie Hopkinson © 2009

Now then: a proper treat for you’s dear readers, moreover a pleasurable privilege for the Finds blog to hereby unveil another guest-author contribution – this from the Newcastle upon Tyne-born novelist Martyn Waites, much-acclaimed author of the Tyneside-set Joe Donovan crime novels and also one-half of the bestselling alias that is Tania Carver. Below, on the occasion of our Twopence Coloured reissue, Martyn reflects on the intriguing cult of Patrick Hamilton: the adaptations of his work by which Hamilton is (for better or worse) most widely known, and (rather in contrast) the authentic, unforgettable black stuff for which he is best loved by true aficionados. Over to you, Mr Waites:

I was walking through London recently with the American writer Megan Abbott, author of the wonderful THE END OF EVERYTHING. We were looking for somewhere to eat and, more importantly, drink. I suggested Fitzrovia, not least for its literary heritage, and reeled off a few names that I thought might interest her. Of course, Patrick Hamilton was mentioned.
‘Patrick Hamilton!’ said Megan, visibly excited by his name. ‘I’ve just read HANGOVER SQUARE. Isn’t it fantastic? He’s hardly known back home but I bet he’s huge here.’
Well . . . yes and no. He’s certainly a household name in my house. And probably a selected few other houses as well. But not much beyond that, I reckon. Is that a problem? Well, I rate him as one of the finest British novelists of the twentieth century. And I believe anyone who claims to care about English literature should have read at least one of his novels. Perhaps the peerless psychological Brit noir thriller HANGOVER SQUARE, still in print. Or TWENTY THOUSAND STREETS UNDER THE SKY, his heartbreaking trilogy of obsessive, wrong-hearted love and the harsh erosion of dreams by a brutal reality. Or my favourite, SLAVES OF SOLITUDE, a brilliant, symbolic restaging of the Second World War with a disparate, motley collection of bottom-rung characters set in a seedy lodging house in Henley Upon Thames.
But I doubt many have. Perhaps people may be vaguely aware of Hamilton through film versions of his plays and novels: the awful, narratively disembowelled HANGOVER SQUARE, George Cukor’s enjoyably lurid and melodramatic production of GASLIGHT, starring an Oscar-winning Ingrid Bergman and a vowel-strangling Charles Boyer, or Hitchcock’s gimmicky, tricksy attempt at ROPE. Maybe even the TV series of the Gorse novels, THE CHARMER, starring Nigel Havers.
On the one hand it’s a terrible thing that such a brilliant writer has been so badly neglected. Admittedly there are occasional attempts to remind the general public who he is. A biography every decade or so, a documentary, the BBC’s excellent version of TWENTY THOUSAND STREETS UNDER THE SKY. And now the reissue of TWOPENCE COLOURED, which is a genuine cause for celebration. The Hamilton fan brigade (of which I’m a fully paid up member) are thrilled to bits by all this, but I fear that by and large these events don’t cause much of a ripple with public consciousness.
But is that necessarily a bad thing? I mean, I’m sure it is in terms of sales for Faber or viewing figures for the BBC. But I recall a conversation a few years ago with a friend about another writer – a ‘writer’s writer’, if you will, which usually means they’re read by other writers and nobody else. ‘He’s so good,’ my friend said, ‘that on the one hand I want to tell everyone about him. But on the other I just want to keep him for myself.’
And that’s how I feel about Patrick Hamilton. On the one hand I wish everyone could read him and appreciate his very individual brilliance. But I also freely acknowledge that with his focus on marginalised and often doomed, self-destructing characters, his dark, downbeat style and the pall of human despair that so often permeates his writing… not everyone will get him. Or necessarily want to get him. And, for those of us who genuinely love his work, if we’re honest, that’s fine by us. Because that puts him in the category of ‘special’ or ‘treasured.’ A writer who you have to deliberately seek out, but once you’ve made the effort the rewards are immense.
So who should read him? Well, any reader who appreciates a writer who can understand and illuminate the human condition to the degree Hamilton can, even its darkest aspects – he’s for them. Any reader who appreciates well-drawn characters, strong narratives and emotionally literate storytelling – he’s for them. In fact, any reader who loves good writing.
And to be honest, whom does that leave out?

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Cathi Unsworth hails Patrick Hamilton and Twopence Coloured in the Guardian

Cathi Unsworth

Well, it seems we did the right thing here at Finds by returning Patrick Hamilton’s early Twopence Coloured to its natural readership. Bloggers and Tweeters have been sounding their approval, and it’s always a bonus when the broadsheet press (as we can still call them for the moment) take note of a Finds endeavour, eminently so in this case as the Guardian last week ran a review of Twopence Coloured by the novelist Cathi Unsworth, in which she writes:

Hamilton’s third novel takes its name from a toy theatre and constructs a between-the-wars stage set of dreary provincial fleapit and transient West End glitter from personal experience of a profession that would dazzle, exhault and thwart him… Still observing from the wings, Hamilton was teetering before the obsessions that would shape his greatest work and sharpen his social satire.

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Patrick Hamilton’s ‘Twopence Coloured’ + its “pretty clear knowledge of that class of people”

The literary legend of Patrick Hamilton is dark and morose, vicious at times, tinged with violence, and most often perceived through the ambers of a bottle or a glass. Alcohol ended Hamilton’s life and it coloured his work, not least the novel that is perhaps his most famous, Hangover Square (1941). His gift for murder stories, expressed in his celebrated stage/film successes Rope and Gaslight, is probably only a sidebar to his true and enduring cult following.
The terrible road accident of 1932 that left him disfigured is perhaps a marker-post in a life that came to be plagued by depression: it’s possible Hamilton never really ‘recovered’. Until that point he had undoubtedly made something of himself from unpromising beginnings. As his biographer Sean French has noted, ‘Hamilton came from a family of failed writers’, a quite particuliar form of genteel underachievement. He was a 15-year-old school-leaver (though the school in question was Westminster), after which he knocked around for a fair bit. ‘I did all sorts of things’, he later wrote, ‘anything I could get hold of; working for the army and at the law. Had a sister who was on the stage and that led me into that sort of life. Took perfectly rotten jobs in the theatre, nothing that amounted to anything more than giving me barely enough money to live, but it did give me a pretty clear knowledge of that class of people…’
The theatre work consisting on provincial touring with the company of Andrew Melville, as an assistant stage manager and occasional actor. Hamilton didn’t stick it for long; stenography became his wage-labour thereafter. But he was already writing by then, and would succeed in publishing 3 novels before he was 25. The third of these, Twopence Coloured (1928), was his ‘theatre’ book, and it found him on the cusp of what would be his breakthrough, achieved the following year with The Midnight Bell (based on his relationship with Lily Connolly) and the stage premiere of Rope. Twopence Coloured, though, remains one of the rarest items in Hamilton’s bibliography, and Finds is thrilled to be returning it to print this month.
BTW: Hamilton fans who are gladdened by its reappearance may also be keen to see the return of his very first published novel Monday Morning (1925); if so, I would ask them to contact me through the Comments feature of this page…
The writer Joseph Ridgwell admires Hamilton so much that he recently convened the Inaugural Patrick Hamilton Literary Pub Crawl through Central London; its proceedings may be inspected below.

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A New Season’s Outlook for Faber Finds

Finds has a brand new skin for its July titles, forthcoming this week and offering a refreshed range of subject matter along with a handsome redesign of the imprint’s covers (and dedicated copy for each title.) Fictional treasures amid the July selections include Stranger With a Bag, short stories by Sylvia Townsend Warner, hailed by Sarah Waters as ‘one of the most talented and well-respected British authors of the twentieth century’; Emma Tennant’s feminist gothic tales Faustine and Two Women of London; and the incredibly rare early Patrick Hamilton novel Twopence Coloured.
 
Among the non-fiction offerings are Trevor Wilson’s timely The Downfall of the Liberal Party 1914-1935; Correlli Barnett’s The Audit of War, anatomising Britain’s decline as a world power; and Tom Wintringham’s searing Spanish Civil War memoir English Captain (on the 75th anniversary of the generals’ coup.)
 
Pop culture also makes its presence felt on the Finds list through two seminal works of the mid-1980s: Dave Rimmer’s Like Punk Never Happened: Culture Club and the New Pop, and Fred Vermorel’s brilliantly lubricious Starlust: The Secret Fantasies of Fans. And the literary dimensions of football are represented by Gazza Agonistes, a terribly funny and deeply felt appreciation of Paul Gascoigne by the late poet and Spurs fan Ian Hamilton.
 
The list is completed by memoirs from two of the great neglected geniuses of twentieth-century English letters: Maiden Voyage by Denton Welch and Apostate by Forrest Reid. In the week ahead please do look out for more on this page for each of these brilliant titles.
 

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A blue plaque for Patrick Hamilton

English Heritage hereby confirms the thankful news:

The unsung hero of twentieth century fiction is honoured. The novelist and playwright Patrick Hamilton (1904-1962), has been commemorated with an English Heritage blue plaque in celebration of his life and contribution to literature. The plaque was installed at 2 Burlington Gardens, Chiswick, W4 on Saturday (12th February).

I understand the plaque’s installation is something of a personal triumph for Nick Robinson, Vintage Sales Manager, who campaigned for it over a good many years. So a big bravo for that effort.
As previously reported, Faber Finds has been hopeful for some time of returning certain rare Hamiltons to print, and I think that as of today I can safely report that Twopence Coloured and Impromptu in Moribundia will be reissued in Finds this coming July. If we could do it tomorrow we surely would… But this is certainly something for all of us to look forward to, and Hamilton fans should be reassured that Monday Morning will follow in Finds just as soon as is practically possible.
Patrick Hamilton is a ‘writer’s writer’ in many respects, and also one of whom we must say, in a bittersweet way, that both his life and work have to be considered with a nod to both the creative and the destructive powers of alcohol. As such I’d argue that the most finessing appreciations of Hamilton one can read are those written by fellow novelists, and ideally novelists who also have passed a certain number of hours “in the ambers”, as whisky-drinkers would say. So I heartily recommend to you this Guardian piece by Dan Rhodes, who says of Hamilton that “he wrote some of the best fiction, and far and away the best pub fiction, I’ve come across”

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Lost Literary London

An interesting piece here on the website of West End Lane Books, concerning ‘Lost London Authors.’ As one would hope in light of our stated ambitions, certain writers whom Finds has already revived are namechecked therein: A.S.J. Tessimond for starters, also Colin MacInnes, and there’s a nice mention for Dan Davin’s Closing Times, the author’s reminiscences of Julian Maclaren-Ross, W. R. Rodgers, Louis MacNeice, Enid Starkie, Joyce Cary, Dylan Thomas and the Yiddish poet Itzik Manger.
Then, of course, there is Patrick Hamilton, early works of whose Finds dearly hopes, sourcing issues permitting, to be restoring to readers by the middle of the year ahead… Hamilton’s classic Hangover Square remains very much in print and currency, of course: I picture it here simply because in its aura, in its very name, it speaks so eloquently of just how sharply Hamilton perceived and could paint in words a portrait of ‘The Big Smoke’…

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