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The Escape
 
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The Escape (Hardcover)

by Adam Thirlwell (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
RRP: £16.99
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Product details

  • Hardcover: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Jonathan Cape Ltd (6 Aug 2009)
  • ISBN-10: 0224089110
  • ISBN-13: 978-0224089111
  • Product Dimensions: 22 x 13.6 x 3.2 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 116,897 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

Product Description

Review

’beautifully written, poignant and clever…Thirlwell has a genuinely unique insight into humankind’ - The Times, Hardeep Singh Kohli


Product Description

Haffner is charming, morally suspect, sexually omnivorous, vain. He is British and Jewish and a widower. But when was Haffner ever really married? Or Jewish? When was he ever attached? There are so many stories of Haffner: but this, the most secret, is the greatest of them all. In a spa town snug in the Alps, at the end of the twentieth century, the 78-year-old Haffner is seeking a cure, redress, more women; and ignoring the will of his wife. He is there to claim her inheritance: a villa on the outskirts of a forgotten spa town. But Haffner never does what he is told. On his arrival in the town, he has checked into the spa hotel - and tried to develop two affairs: a mildly successful affair with a younger woman whose breasts are lavish, and a much less successful affair with an even younger woman, whose breasts are the smallest he has ever known. And, intermittently, he has tried to secure the paperwork for the villa he never wanted. But gradually, in the tribulations of bureaucracy, he discovers that he wants this villa, very much. Now that he has to fight for it, he wants it. There are two character notes to Haffner: he is an egotist, and he adores women. A mediocre man, but a man of singular appetite. And so it is that, harried by his family, pursued by his women, menaced by bureaucrats, negotiating with the mafia, riven by his memory of the dead and of the missing, Haffner endures his many humiliations, as he tries to orchestrate his final escape, in the forgotten center of Europe. Through the story of his couplings and uncouplings, emerge the stories of Haffner's Twentieth Century. How can you ever desert from your past, your family, your history? That has been the problem of Haffner's life. How do you remain a libertine? A novel about the fall of empires, and the beauty of defeat, "The Escape" is a swift, sad farce of sexual mayhem.

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5 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars The Escape, 5 Aug 2009
By Leyla Sanai "leyla" (glasgow) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
Adam Thirlwell's second novel, The Escape, comes garlanded with praise from the highly respected Milan Kundera. Whether this is in part due to the fact that Thirlwell interviewed Kundera in 2000 for the New Statesman is uncertain. But Thirlwell does have outstanding credentials. He was named as one of Granta magazine's twenty 'Best of young British novelists' back in 2003, and his journalism - such as the aforementioned Kundera piece - is intelligent and finely written.

His first novel, Politics (2003), was lauded as 'one of the funniest, most stylish and utterly original debuts in years' by The Times, and Thirlwell was hailed as a prodigy by The New York Times. A.S. Byatt declared Politics ' a work of art' in The Financial Times. Thirlwell's second book, Miss Herbert (2007), won the 2008 Somerset Maugham Award. A non fiction collection, The Delighted States, was published in 2008.

Which is why I had such high expectations for The Escape. The novel follows the sexual adventures and musings of a 78 year-old protagonist, Raphael Haffner, in a small Alpine spa town. Haffner is an ex banker and has known considerable professional success, but personally, his record is less impressive. His marriage to his beautiful late wife Livia was punctuated by Haffner's frequent infidelities. Haffner is in the Alpine town to try and claim a villa that belonged to Livia's family which he believes he should inherit. But his inability to be ruled by his head rather than his willy causes him complications. At the start of the novel, he is poised in a bedroom wardrobe, watching the object of his lust, a gamine yoga teacher named Zinka, make love to her boyfriend. Soon afterwards, he is embroiled in somewhat reluctant passion with a married 55 year-old woman, Frau Tummel, who is (somewhat bizarrely) in love with him. So far, so John Self (Martin Amis's Money) - roll over Portnoy (Philip Roth's Portnoy's Complaint).

In between Haffner's shenanigans, there are flashbacks to his past with Livia and his relationship with his father, daughter Esther and grandson Benjamin. There are also musings on his past associates, his opinions and beliefs and his life in general.

In The Esape, Thirwell reminds me of Howard Jacobson, who also concentrates on self absorbed, sexually driven, middle - old aged Jewish men, often suspended in a prolonged secular-religious conflict. As with Jacobson's novels, the self indulgent drone of introspective pondering becomes irritating in The Esape; perhaps, like Jacobson, Thirlwell is either an acquired or esoteric taste. The two authors share a similar propensity for heavy duty identity conflicts wrapped in the gauzy paper of sexual frolics. Yet, as with Jacobson, who produced the contemplative and thoughtful Booker listed Kalooki Nights, Thirlwell definitely has something. It's just not employed to best use in this novel.

Not that the novel is all disappointing. There are comic interludes, such as when Zinka and Frau Tummel grimly compete for his attention at the lake:

'...Haffner maintained a casual grin...Zinka said she really had to be getting to work. Was it really necessary? asked Haffner. Frau Tummel glared at him. Yes, said Zinka, she felt so - after all, they didn't want her there, did they, interrupting them? Oh, said Haffner, he was sure that wasn't true. Was it? he asked Frau Tummel.
She didn't want to make Zinka late, said Frau Tummel.'

But for the most part, this feels like a novel without a story, a gifted writer floundering in the already well-trodden terrain of identity, ageing, intimations of mortality twinned with the desires of youth, Jewish faith and history; the reflections of a man approaching the end of his life. The lack of substance seems to be compensated for by a heavily stylized prose: Haffner is referred to repeatedly by the invisible, younger narrator; these constant references ('helpful Haffner', 'unconvinced Haffner' etc) are echoed by the chapter headings:Haffner Unbound, Haffner Amorous, Haffner Amphibious, Haffner Enraged, and so on. It becomes tiresome to read, as here:

'So often, he wanted to give up and elope from his history. The problem was in finding the right elopee. He only had Haffner. And Haffner wasn't enough.'

There is also much faux philosophising, which is equally irksome:
'Yes, because nothing in this world occurs without a backstory: and what is higher always derives from what is lower and every victory contains its own defeat.'
It's as if the term 'Pyrrhic victory' had never previously been conceived.

Thirlwell can definitely write, it just seems that in the bubble of hype following his previous successes he's become obsessed by style over substance.
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