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The End of the Affair (Unabridged)
 
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The End of the Affair (Unabridged) [Audio Download]

by Graham Greene (Author), Michael Kitchen (Narrator)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (40 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Audio Download
  • Listening Length: 6 hours and 25 minutes
  • Program Type: Audiobook
  • Version: Unabridged
  • Publisher: AudioGO Ltd.
  • Audible Release Date: 13 Mar 2009
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B002SPYRFY
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (40 customer reviews)
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Product Description

The novelist Maurice Bendrix's love affair with his best friend's wife, Sarah, had begun in London. One day, without warning, Sarah had broken off the relationship. It seemed impossible that there could be a rival for her heart.
(P)2008 BBC Audiobooks Ltd

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
24 of 25 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Paperback
Have read this novel during the sixties during my University years in Coimbra (Portugal) and became unconditional fan of Greene of whom I read since all the production. The end of the Affair is is in my view his best! While in Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) last week I found one of its first editions in portuguese and bought it again. The feeling I like the most is a disturbing one: how a non believer like Sarah sticks to a promise to a God she doesn't want to believe in and how this absurdity becomes her highjest proof of love - for Bendix and for God! The fact that we know little of ourselves our unconscious beliefs, was highly disturbing to me... Recommended story to everyone who asks him(her)self on who he or she really is though it cannot respond to any question, just add more. Excellent and disturbing book.
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19 of 22 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
A book for anyone who has ever been left so heartbroken and frustrated that they can't even speak without launching into a bitter lament against such superficial feelings as love, faith and devotion. Greene's genius was always his ability to create lasting and believable characters that jostled with issues that were central to the writer, but also, could be understood and re-interpreted by the reader. In The End of the Affair, it is his own sense of heartbreak following a real-life affair he began during the war that acts as the central crux of the emotional and heartbreaking story, that is here, taken further by elements of fictitious fantasy, religious guilt and what must be one of the greatest uses of a self-referential narrative arc ever developed in post-war-literary history.

Here, Greene recasts himself as the dolorous writer Bendrix, who, without even realising it until it is too late, has fallen into a passionate and illicit affair with Sarah, the wife of his meek (and perhaps impotent) friend and associate Henry. Greene juggles the perspectives so that each of this troika get to express their feelings (which are actually the varied conscious voices of the author), in order to further the story, as well as acting as something of an essay into infidelity, obsession, guilt and bereavement. The story could have easily fallen into the realms of melodrama, prefiguring those turgid disease-of-the-week films like Love Story (and so on), but Greene is able to break down the melancholy with elements of a detective story, with Bendrix involving himself in unravelling an affair that turns out to be nothing but an after shock.

There are also elements of black comedy, an intelligent analysis of catholic-angst and an interesting use of character perspective, as Greene changes the view of the story mid-way from Bendrix to Sarah (then later, back again!) in order to tell the story from both points-of-view... a device that allows Greene to look at the two disparate sides of the tale, and also, to further develop the subtle nuances of the characters. The writing is fantastic throughout, with Greene ably conjuring the decaying embers of Post World War II London; whilst the blitz-set love scenes burn with a passion and intensity that few British writers (of Greene's generation) could equate (for more genius, see Brighton Rock!).

The End of the Affair is a great book that still manages to convey that all-important sense of loss, guilt and sadness with a vitriol that seems fierce enough to tear through a brick wall, whilst screaming in the face of pious notions of reminisce and forgiveness (in a typically 50's 'very-English' sort-of-way, of course). As others have said before, certain notions in regards to the politics and sociology of the piece have dated in the decades that have passed since the book's first publication, but this is hardly cause for despair. The book's reason for being has always been about the relationship between the three characters, the notions discussed above and the emotional connection created between the story, the characters and the reader. On these counts, The End of the Affair is a relevant today as it was when first created.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
By Lady Fancifull TOP 100 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
Like another reviewer, this is my favourite of Greene's books, and one I reread every 5 years or so.

The familiar Greene territory is all here - betrayal, guilt, responsibility, sin and redemption, and the uneasy, unwilling nature of faith, belief and spiritual identity

Unlike the works which are set in foreign or exotic locations, this book is set in a more pedestrian territory, blitz torn London, and whilst 'the affair' of the book is ostensibly one that happens between a man and a woman, the underneath or overriding affair or relationship is that between a man/woman and his or her understanding of God.

This is a very common theme for Greene, and of course mirrors his own relationship with his faith - never easy, never taken for granted, always a sense of the soul wrangling with an accommodation with Divinity.

This is a wonderful and often bleak book, and, with a female as well as a male central character, and the relationship between the sexes as pivotal, it may speak to anyone who has ever fallen in love and found themselves caught in a minefield of conflicting loyalties, secrecy and deception
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Jealousy exists only with desire
The novels of Graham Greene have given rise to a fictitious world often referred to as "Greene-land". Read more
Published 3 months ago by A Byrne
Far more an intricate portrait of human jealousy than a love story
The End Of The Affair is a post-war novel by hugely respected 20th Century writer Graham Greene.

The novel's protagonist Maurice Bendrix is a semi-successful writer... Read more
Published 3 months ago by R. A. Davison
Not as beautiful a book as I had been led to believe
I purchased this book after reading one of Charlie Brooker's articles on the Guardian. He mentioned that the ending of this book made him cry. It did not make me cry. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Ellie
who's the craziest here?
One of Greene's best , but not as good as Power and Glory.All the characters are on the verge of a nervous breakdown.
Published 6 months ago by mario vargas
The End of the Affair
I was so pleased to receive this (and so quickly). My library was out of copies. I love all the classics so I always use Amazon as my first port of call for most of them. Read more
Published 9 months ago by D. M. Sharpe
Boring!
I felt I had to review this book as it has so many 5 star reviews! I read it for my bookgroup and out of 10 people only one liked it! Read more
Published 10 months ago by Dolly Mixture
A compelling read.
This book was chosen as a Book Club title and lead to some very lively discussion. It is the first and only Graham Greene that I have read and I might be persuaded to read more of... Read more
Published 12 months ago by MJB, Scotland
Truly Brilliant
Absolutely superb! The writings of Maurice Bendrix on his love for Sarah Miles, a married woman who one day broke of an affair with him for seemingly no reason, are utterly... Read more
Published 15 months ago by Booklover
The End of the Affair
This book dragged on for ages. Far too much self reflection. The main character was not endearing,I found him to be selfish and spiteful. Read more
Published 19 months ago by Flames1009
Great insight into a man's emotions
Enjoyed this book - up to when it started getting religious and heavy, and despite seeing Julianne Moore playing Sarah (that actress just annoys me! Read more
Published 21 months ago by NJD
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