Since yesterday was International Anita Brookner Day (her 83rd birthday) I thought it would be appropriate to address her absence on this blog by posting a review of Hotel du Lac from my reading journal, from January 2004.
Hotel du Lac won the 1984 Booker and it is superb. Its central question is: what kind of woman should one be? In 1984 we were exploring feminism, but this is not quite what Brookner is on about; her female characters are always circumscribed by their lives and are never able to exercise much in the way of choices…
Edith Hope, in her late thirties, is a very respectable writer of romantic fiction, but she has scandalised her friends. Having drifted into accepting a widower’s proposal, she has jilted him at the altar. Geoffrey was a nice man, a good catch and her ‘last chance’. She meekly agrees to a ‘holiday’ at a small hotel in Switzerland while the scandal dies down…
BEWARE: SPOILERS
What seems not to be acknowledged by her friend Penelope, is that Edith has a career and an independent income. She doesn’t need a ‘good catch’. She has a pleasant home and a settled life which brings quiet satisfactions: sunshine, gardens, lunch with her publisher and her agent. She also has, unknown to anyone, a lover, David, who is the light of her life although she sees him only once or twice a month. He is married and has a family that he does not intend to leave.
What she does not have, not in 1984, is social position. She is invisible, adapting herself to others, and pitied by them for apparently being ‘unwanted by a man’. Marriage to Geoffrey would have ameliorated that, but there was too much to lose. She realises, as she rides around the block in a taxi to the Registry Office, that she would not be able to write, and she would lose her treasured routines. Her small pleasures and the identity she has suddenly seem more valuable. Were she to become a wife, she would have a different role to play, a house to keep and a social position to manage. At this crucial point, she decides to remain herself, as she is, with her life unchanged.
But the proposal and abortive marriage means that her life cannot remain unchanged. At the Hotel du Lac, she meets Mr Neville. He points out these things to her, that she is too self-effacing and that she should try behaving badly. More selfishly, less romantically. Unexpectedly, he proposes. He wants companionship, without demands. He expects, since they are not in love, to have affairs, and so should she.
She almost accepts him. She writes a farewell letter to her beloved David, from which we learn from mild traces of bitterness, that she knows that she really means very little to him. On her way to post it, she sees Mr Neville exit from Jennifer Pusey’s room – poor, pathetic and very rich Jennifer, indulged by her suffocating mother, and for whom life is passing by. In this she is like Edith, except that Jennifer doesn’t have the dignity of a profession or worthwhile pursuits. Edith is quietly outraged that Mr Neville uses women like Jennifer; she does not want to marry a man like that.
What kind of woman should she be? She will go back to England, but her life will not be quite the same. People are very cross with her, and although she tore up her letter to David, she may continue with him – if he offers. He may not, since he has not bothered to write to her. Does she want him? Like Mr Neville she wants companionship, but on her terms. She likes her house, her way of doing things. It would seem that she cannot have what she would really like, not in her social situation, because marriage brings social obligations that would interfere with the parts of her life that she likes.
Perhaps today she would be able to resolve the dilemma. She would be seen as a successful single woman, with no need of a man to place her. But her self-effacing personality, her shapeless cardigans and her inconspicuous dresses? Do they represent the real Edith, or do they symbolise the times when marriage was a woman’s only destiny?
I love Anita Brookner’s spare, reserved tone. I’ve read Visitors; Brief Lives, Altered States, Incidents in the Rue Langier, The Rules of Engagement and I’ve got five more on the TBR. (Somehow, Brookner’s books often turn up second-hand in my local Op Shops). It was high time I had a review of at least one of these on this blog; there will be more to come.
Thank you to Elizabeth at A Book Sanctuary for drawing my attention to Anita Brookner Day:)
Cross-posted at The Complete Booker
© Lisa Hill
Author: Anita Brookner
Title: Hotel du Lac
Publisher:Jonathan Cape Ltd, London (First Edition)
ISBN: 0224022385
Source: Personal library, purchased from Klanhorn Books, Queanbeyan NSW.
I remember that I read this a number of years ago, but don’t remember that much about the actual book. I noticed the Anita Brookner day thing. I’m glad that it was successful.
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By: Louise on July 17, 2011
at 8:24 pm
[…] in 2004 I read Brookner’s Booker Prize winning Hotel du Lac, and posted my review of it on this blog on International Anita Brookner Day (her 83rd birthday). (It’s also cross posted at The […]
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By: Vale Anita Brookner (1928-2016) | ANZ LitLovers LitBlog on March 15, 2016
at 10:29 pm
I read this years ago and your review makes me want to read it again.
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By: TravellinPenguin on January 23, 2023
at 7:05 pm
I love Brookner, but like you did my Brookner reading before blogging. She was one writer, I remember, for whom I need a dictionary nearby! Just a few words a novel but they were there.
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By: whisperinggums on January 24, 2023
at 9:23 am
*chuckle* I have to ‘fess up to a publishing glitch with this post.
I am writing up my review of Anita Brookner’s Latecomers, and referring to my previous posts about her, which included inadvertently posting twice about Hotel du Lac. (When I was doing my Booker winner series of Reviews From the Archive.) So I decided to delete the first one, and then realised that it would delete comments too plus the reference to her 83rd birthday and the links in my obituary. So, I restored it, not realising that subscribers would get a rerun!
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By: Lisa Hill on January 24, 2023
at 10:54 am
I did that on Sunday! I deleted them republished an O.Henry post! But that’s not one to grab attention.
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By: whisperinggums on January 24, 2023
at 10:59 am