angrysoba
Philosophile
As a sort of homage to Christopher Hitchens, I have decided to read a few of the authors he enjoyed to see if they were as good as he made them out to be. I'd already read Graham Greene and a bit of Nabokov before I started reading Hitchens but I knew nothing about Evelyn Waugh.
So, late last year, I picked up Decline and Fall, Waugh's first novel, which is considered hugely funny and classic of a certain genre.
It was written in the Thirties and has a somewhat P.G Wodehousian quality to it but it was indeed funny with some amusing characters: Paul Pennyfeather, Mr Prendgast, Captain Grimes, Lady Circumference and her son, Lord Tangent and the unusual butler, Philbrick.
For the first 100 or so pages I really enjoyed it until suddenly the appearance of Mr Cholmondley who, being black, seems to give the novel the excuse to descend into some of the most gobsmacking racism.
After that it dragged a little and never really got back to the pace it was at at the beginning. I would give it about 6 out of ten although it started with some promise.
Undaunted I opened Scoop two days ago to see if it could be better. Well, it was! Much funnier, more cynical, better characters and, for the most part the book didn't slacken like Decline and Fall (which declined and sagged towards the end!).
It was also racist. There was no way any author would try and get away with writing that sort of stuff today.
Sometimes when I read books like that I hope that the racism is just a feature of one of the characters but this really doesn't seem to be the case with Waugh. He seems to be a very casual racist completely unconcerned even with the possibility that someone might object to it.
That said, I think I might still read more Waugh. Any advice? Any opinions?
So, late last year, I picked up Decline and Fall, Waugh's first novel, which is considered hugely funny and classic of a certain genre.
It was written in the Thirties and has a somewhat P.G Wodehousian quality to it but it was indeed funny with some amusing characters: Paul Pennyfeather, Mr Prendgast, Captain Grimes, Lady Circumference and her son, Lord Tangent and the unusual butler, Philbrick.
For the first 100 or so pages I really enjoyed it until suddenly the appearance of Mr Cholmondley who, being black, seems to give the novel the excuse to descend into some of the most gobsmacking racism.
After that it dragged a little and never really got back to the pace it was at at the beginning. I would give it about 6 out of ten although it started with some promise.
Undaunted I opened Scoop two days ago to see if it could be better. Well, it was! Much funnier, more cynical, better characters and, for the most part the book didn't slacken like Decline and Fall (which declined and sagged towards the end!).
It was also racist. There was no way any author would try and get away with writing that sort of stuff today.
Sometimes when I read books like that I hope that the racism is just a feature of one of the characters but this really doesn't seem to be the case with Waugh. He seems to be a very casual racist completely unconcerned even with the possibility that someone might object to it.
That said, I think I might still read more Waugh. Any advice? Any opinions?