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The Stranger's Child [Paperback]

Alan Hollinghurst
2.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (255 customer reviews)
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Book Description

24 May 2012
The UK number one hardback bestseller from the Man Booker Prize-winning author of The Line of Beauty

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Product details

  • Paperback: 576 pages
  • Publisher: Picador (24 May 2012)
  • Language: Unknown
  • ISBN-10: 0330483277
  • ISBN-13: 978-0330483278
  • Product Dimensions: 20 x 13 x 3.5 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 2.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (255 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 4,067 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Review

'Hollinghurst's follow-up to The Line of Beauty, his 2004 Man Booker-Prize winner, is still several months away, but advance word suggests another classic. Following the lives of two families from the eve of WW1 to the close of the 20th century, it promises to be hugely ambitious, deeply affecting and beautifully written. If it's not, we'll eat your copy.' --GQ

'An epic story of two families and two houses spanning the entire 20th century, it promises to enhance its author's claim to the title of best British novelist working at the moment.' --Observer News Review 2011 Preview

'I'm particularly looking forward to the first novel in seven years from Alan Hollinghurst, and the word on the street is that it's every bit as compelling as The Line of Beauty' --Mariella Frostrup, `Stylist' (her number One choice for `2011's Essential Reading')

'Hollinghurst is promising a huge novel for the summer, a tale of two families that ranges from 1913 to the late Noughties.' --Sunday Times 2011 Preview

'I'll definitely be taking Alan Hollinghurst's The Stranger's Child, which spans several generations, no doubt in his usual impeccable prose' James Walton
'I'll be packing a copy of Alan Hollinghurst s The Stranger s Child. That's partly because he s the finest prose stylist of his generation, but also because his writing sits so invitingly between the intellectually risky and the sexually risqué' Robert Douglas-Fairhurst
'I loved The Line of Beauty and The Swimming-Pool Library so I am very much looking forward to Alan Hollinghurst s The Stranger's Child, which promises to match his earlier books in both elegance of prose and acuity of psychological insight' Michael Gove --Daily Telegraph's Summer Reading

An intricate, witty, playful meditation on what is now beginning to emerge as one of Hollinghurst s chief concerns: Englishness. Comedy of manners, investigation of class, changing political and social landscape all the reliable pleasures that his fiction offers are here in their dense, detailed richness.... Miraculously handled Hollinghurst set-pieces... It is woven with stupendous deftness, its internal assonances making a complex, comprehensive harmony... A magnificent coherence The Times


Masterful... There is a huge cleverness to the book at a structural and, as it were, managerial level. Characters are named with an aptness which is light-footed and unswervingly accurate... Hollinghurst, as ever, is quietly brilliant about architecture, both in the specific sense of a cultural discourse about buildings, and the broader sense of how people behave in different kinds of place... there is something symphonic about [the novel s] wholeness. There is also something filmic in the book s enveloping embrace; not the heritage cinema of Merchant Ivory et al, but the more experimental, argumentative efforts of the Sixties and Seventies. I often found myself recalling Joseph Losey's version of The Go-Between, and occasionally the anguished exquisites of Michelangelo Antonioni... there s also a lot that is purely and simply very funny Daily Telegraph 4-star review


A showcase for bravura writing. Such praise could be off-putting: the glitter of fine writing often elevates style over substance. Perhaps I should therefore stress straight away that The Stranger s Child is not only written with extraordinary beauty, but is also exceptionally readable and this even though the narrative is fragmented by chronological leaps, the characterisation disrupted by shifts in perspective. The author s imagination is teased by the extent to which we are strangers to each other, and the way in which the past becomes strange to the present. His genius lies in his ability to intrigue the reader, too, suggesting the hinterland of a secret, vivid life, glimpsed out of the corner o --Irish Times

'Opening in 1913, this brilliantly written novel unrolls an almost century-long cavalcade of changing social, sexual and cultural attitudes' --A Top Choice pick in The Sunday Times s Summer Reading feature

'Brilliantly written, intricate... Marvellously acute in its attention to idioms and idiosyncracies, psychological and emotional nuances, the book gives intensely credible life to its swarm of characters. Masterly in its narrative sweep and imaginative depth, this novel about Cecil s increasingly threadbare literary reputation enormously enhances Hollinghurst s own. With The Stranger s Child, an already remarkable talent unfurls into something spectacular --The Sunday Times, Paperback of the Week

'A big, long, absorbing novel that one can get wrapped up in while the outside world goes about its business... Written in prose that s lush, tastefully ornate and as easy to get lost in as the corridors of Cecil s family seat, The Stranger s Child is also graced with a sensuality that s far subtler than Hollinghurst s earlier, more explicit work. It s a change of direction for the author, but one in which he s emerged triumphant' --Herald, Paperback of the Week

'A sharp and extraordinary novel' --Daily Express

'The Stranger s Child is a treasure: few contemporary novels show equal care at the level of structure and line. Sex, war, class, literature, Englishness little is untouched as it sweeps through the 20th century. What better to read over the Jubilee' --The Times

'The first 105 pages are a preternaturally vivid and deliciously readable evocation of Edwardian Britain, which might have been written by E M Forster or Ford Madox Ford... The next section is an equally vivid evocation of Britain in the 1920s; and the next section, Britain in the 1960s; and so on, up to 2008... A novel about time, and change, and art, and sex, and death which is also as light as a soufflé. It s clever, subtle, melancholy and amusing at the same time. I know it s a reviewer s cliché, but I actually did miss my stop on the Tube while reading this' --Independent on Sunday

'Hollinghurst s exquisite rumination on grief, sex and literature' --Sunday Telegraph

'Changing social, sexual and cultural attitudes all contribute but it s the disturbingly insouciant Cecil who drives this excellent novel' --The Lady

'A beautifully told story of love and loss by one of the most highly regarded authors in the country' --Novel of the Week, Suffolk Free Press

'The book is a feat of virtuosity'
--Irish Times

Book Description

The Sunday Times Novel of the Year ‘With The Stranger’s Child, an already remarkable talent unfurls into something spectacular’ Sunday Times In the late summer of 1913, George Sawle brings his Cambridge friend Cecil Valance, a charismatic young poet, to visit his family home. Filled with intimacies and confusions, the weekend will link the families for ever, having the most lasting impact on George’s sixteen-year-old sister Daphne. As the decades pass, Daphne and those around her endure startling changes in fortune and circumstance, reputations rise and fall, secrets are revealed and hidden and the events of that long-ago summer become part of a legendary story, told and interpreted in different ways by successive generations. Powerful, absorbing and richly comic, The Stranger’s Child is a masterly exploration of English culture, taste and attitudes over a century of change. ‘I would compare the novel to Middlemarch . . . a remarkable, unmissable achievement’ Independent ‘Magnificent . . . universally acclaimed as the best novel of the year’ Philip Hensher

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
94 of 101 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Forster's Epigone? 2 Nov 2011
By Antenna TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
Hollinghurst often reminds me of E.M.Forster with his nostalgia for the early C20 and his focus on the minute details of people's thoughts, observations of one another and interrelationships, all presented in well-crafted prose (apart from the odd clunky phrase like "she said carryingly").

Charismatic, arrogant and manipulative, the aristocratic Cecil Valance achieves a possibly undeserved popularity as a poet after his early death in the First World War. Can the truth of his life ever be told by biographers? This seems unlikely since even those who claim to know him have very different perceptions. In five separate sections separated by gaps of several years or even decades, the author aims to show the false nature of memory.

You could argue that Hollinghurst is daring in discarding many of the "conventions" of novel-writing. The development of a strong plot is given second place to what often reads like a series of short stories: portrayals of characters who make only brief appearances, or the description of quite minor incidents, evocative of past generations, but very amusing, ludicrous or in the style of a black comedy. The author tends to build up anticipation of a certain outcome, only for it not to occur, insofar as one can judge! Significant events are frequently no more than implied.

Although this book promises much, my growing suspicion that it would not deliver proved justified. It suffers from being too long, repetitive in its limited revelations and self-indulgent, not least in its campness - I grew tired of "blushing" and "giggling" men of all ages.

It does not bother me that most of the characters are very middle class , but there are certainly too many of them to relate to easily, and I was left feeling I had waded through an Oxford don's overblown soap opera fantasy.

I know that "the stranger's child" is a quotation from Tennyson's "In Memoriam" read aloud by Cecil in Part 1, and thanks to Roderick Blythe for explaining to me in the comment below its meaning in the title.
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16 of 17 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars I Felt A Stranger In Hollinghurst's World... 20 Nov 2011
By Simon Savidge Reads TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
Before I go into what I hope will be a fair critique of `The Strangers Child' I should really discuss the premise of it. The novel is really a tale of people of years and years, the novel itself is told in five sections each relating to a different decade. The two main characters, well I thought they were the main force of the story though others may disagree, Cecil Valance and Daphne Sawle meet, along with Daphne's brother George who is equally smitten with Cecil (this made me think of `Brideshead Revisited' though apparently that's not something you should say to Mr Hollinghurst, oops, but it does give the book a slight feel of `oh haven't I been here before?') and really we follow their lives from their first meeting and join them at various points in time as the book progresses.

As much as I am being vague to not give any spoilers away, I was also slightly at a loss as to why we meet these characters when we do, and why they tend to wander off. Yes, that's real life... well possibly real life if you are very rich and can spend life being unlikeable yet fabulous. These points in time, to me, didn't seem pivotal, and I couldn't get a hold on them. I didn't mind the fact they were all rather unlikeable but as the novel progressed I just kept thinking `where is this going, and do I care?' Some will say the rather random way in which the book is written is one of the cleverest points of the novel, really? I don't expect my books linear at all, yet I sometimes wonder if `clever' (which is the word I have seen in many reviews) is a good way of describing `we don't get it and so it must be the authors intention to be a little unconventional, it's the art of the book... how clever'. Hmmmm.

I can say the writing is utterly stunning, yet `stunning', `beautiful', `elegant', `effortless' (as the reviews keep on saying) prose can only go a certain way and I honestly feel in the middle of the book it became all about the prose and it simply didn't stop. The beautiful prose started to drag and the effect of it started to sag and I thought `I'm not going to finish this'. Yet I did and as the last third starts the book indeed picks up again. The random plot threads make a little more sense, then they don't and tantalise and then they sort of do.The characters stay being dislikeable yet readable and I liked the way it ended. Yes the way it ended, not the fact it ended.

This of course has left me very torn. There is no doubt that `The Strangers Child' contains some utterly gorgeous prose, no question of that at all. I just wish there had been a much tighter edit on the book as with about 200 pages taken out of it, or several thousand of those wonderfully worded words, this book would have become a possible favourite of mine, I do love an epic after all. Instead I became rather bored, if somewhat beautifully.
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161 of 177 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars where's the ending??? 28 Jan 2012
Format:Hardcover
I started this book full of hope. I adored The Line of Beauty - and the first chapter of The Stranger's Child drew me in so completely I immediately put the book down as i didn't want to finish it too soon! The characters pre WW1 were so engaging and the elegance and wonderful descriptions were what I expected after LOB. I was glad to see such strong female characters here and i know that had been a criticism in the past - in fact they stood head and shoulders above all the men. Alan Hollinghurst is obsessed with class but that is okay as so are most of we, the subtle tell tale signs which give the imposters away are so well described - as are all the socially awkward situations as we expect. The only question I would have is does Mr H really think every man has had/would have a gay experience? or is it an aristocracy thing? This aspect made it seem unlikely as I cant recall one male in the book where at least a liaison was suggested. However I was dying to see how the secret which had been believed destroyed for so long would emerge - but it didn't emerge and the end of the book was the biggest let down ever - I felt like it just trailed off. I actually started thinking I must have skipped a chapter but no - perhaps it leaves it open for a sequel but I wont be buying in hard back next time. Whilst I am still thinking about the characters in the earlier chapters, the later ones were less charming. I still love the wonderful writing - but after such a wait for this - I was a little annoyed by the last page - I was robbed!
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
1.0 out of 5 stars Don't other!
No idea what that was all about having ploughed through 600 pages of turgid prose. Not sure the reviewers read the same book. Read more
Published 11 hours ago by Madscot
3.0 out of 5 stars Disappointing
I found this book was just too long. I enjoyed the first half of this book but by the end I had lost interest in the characters and found I just didn't care how the book finished... Read more
Published 11 days ago by Cass
2.0 out of 5 stars wrong sort of book!
Not for me,got it for my other half and she just could not get into the story so back to the drawing board to find an writer that she likes.
Published 18 days ago by Dennis wragg
2.0 out of 5 stars Disappointed
Several 'good' copies of this book on sale but I opted for this one as it was described as 'very good'. Read more
Published 24 days ago by smc
3.0 out of 5 stars Intriguing book. Too many interrelated characters. Needed a family...
The unfolding of the family tree was interesting with so many generations and affairs to keep track of. Very readable but not the best read of the decade. Good holiday read.
Published 1 month ago by MRS D
1.0 out of 5 stars Another Saga
I found this book quite tedious and essentially without point. It felt like just another family saga with a minor and unlikable poet at the heart. Read more
Published 1 month ago by J. Woods
2.0 out of 5 stars Disappointing
Beautifully written, but I felt the story lacked any sense of direction and wasn't the thrilling tale of family secrets I'd hoped for.
Published 1 month ago by Mrs. S. E. Milburn
3.0 out of 5 stars Stranger's Child
Too rambly at start, and self indulgent. Service was excellent but content of book disappointing, tho I really liked twists in plot
Published 1 month ago by Barbara Bear
2.0 out of 5 stars waste of reading time
don't know why I persevered with this book. the author seems to be obsessed with one thing only, and it got very boring.
Published 1 month ago by Christine Dewick
5.0 out of 5 stars Profound and entertaining
An incredibly good book. Hollinghurst is one of my favourite authors and he has excelled himself here. A monumental read.
Published 1 month ago by Alison Goldie
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