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First edition | |
Author | Alan Hollinghurst |
---|---|
Language | English |
Genre | Gay literature |
Published | 2024 (Picador Books) |
Publication place | UK |
Media type | Print (Hardback) |
Pages | 496 pp |
ISBN | 9781447208235 |
Our Evenings is a 2024 novel by Alan Hollinghurst.
Plot
Prologue
David Win, a late middle-aged actor, and his husband, Richard, listen to news of the death of David's benefactor, Mark Hadlow. David then visits Cara, Mark's elderly widow.
Adolescence
The rest of the novel traces David's life, from his adolescence, living with his English mother, Avril Win, to his death. Avril is a skilled seamstress with her own business, and David and Avril are close. David's Burmese father is absent: a mysterious figure, whom Avril rarely mentions.
Avril meets Esme Croft, a well-to-do divorcée. Esme is Avril's client at first. Later, Esme invests in Avril's business, and the two women develop a close personal relationship. Esme, Avril and David go on holiday to Devon, where Dave becomes increasingly aware of his attraction to men. Esme and Avril eventually move in together, although the true nature of their relationship remains long unstated.
David attends Bampton, a public school, on a scholarship funded by the Hadlows. Dave visits the Hadlows at Woolpeck, a farm owned by Cara's family. David's admiration for Mark and Cara grows, and he is fascinated by the house and its surrounding countryside. He is also bullied by Mark and Cara's son, Giles. At the end of his visit, David demonstrates his acting ability, rehearsing a scene with Mark's mother Elise, a famous French actress.
Oxford
After Bampton, David attends the University of Oxford. He initially does well academically, but he becomes increasingly absorbed by acting. David receives a positive review in The Times for playing Mosca in Volpone. A few weeks later, he walks out of his final exams, feeling unprepared. Dave's last few weeks at Oxford are further complicated by his coming out, marked by an awkward, unrequited crush on another student. Back home, reeling from his experiences at Oxford, Dave comes out to Avril and Esme.
Adulthood
After Oxford, David remains committed to acting. He joins an experimental theatre company, which is eventually supported by the Hadlows. Dave has his first relationship with Chris, a man ten years his senior; their relationship is intensely passionate but also "missing" something deeper. Dave breaks it off to live with Hector, another actor. Both Dave and Hector, who is black, experience English racism, although Hector appears to suffer from it more. Hector breaks up with David to pursue his career elsewhere.
After much hard work, David develops into a skilled actor and speaker. He writes a book, and while promoting it at a literary festival, he meets Richard, who interviews him. David and Richard become lovers and later marry. With Richard, Dave experiences an emotional stability he didn't find in his earlier relationships.
David experiences the death of Esme, Mark, and eventually, most painfully, his mother, Avril. Richard remains steadfast.
Giles Hadlow
Giles reappears throughout the novel as an ambitious and increasingly successful conservative politician. He writes a book entitled "Our Laws, Our Borders" and opposes UK membership in the European Union. He is made Minister for the Arts although he has no background in them. As Giles' career progresses, England is riven by anti-immigrant and racist sentiment.
Death and Memoirs
David dies shortly after suffering grave injuries in a racially motivated attack. Richard edits Dave's memoirs, which become the novel itself.
Title
At the end of the novel, David tells Richard that he intends to call his memoirs Our Evenings. David reveals, partly to Richard and partly to the reader, the many meanings the title has for him: the evenings David spent with other men when he was younger, the evenings David spent rehearsing and acting (David says of actors, "our evenings are rarely our own"), and, finally, the happy evenings David and Richard spend together (Richard tells David, "I like evenings best"). The title is borrowed from the first movement of On an Overgrown Path by Leoš Janáček, which David listened to with a young schoolmaster at Bampton, and which inspired David to devote himself to art.
Reception
According to Book Marks, Our Evenings received overall "positive" reviews, with 15 reviews being "rave," two being "positive," four being "mixed," and one being a "pan."
A reviewer in the Sunday Times wrote, "at the sentence level, Hollinghurst remains an English stylist without obvious living equal."
Alexandra Harris, writing in The Guardian, highlighted the continuity of themes in Hollinghurst's work, asserting that Our Evenings forms a "deep pattern of connection with ... , while being an entirely distinct and brimming whole .... the finest novel yet from one of the great writers of our time."
Megan Nolan, writing in the New Statesman, locates the "heart" of the novel in the loving relationship between Dave and his mother, Avril, arguing that it can be "difficult to convey without sentimentality or a universalising blandness, but this is where Hollinghurst excels, remaining patiently and gladly in these moments as they unspool and the life around them becomes as real as our own."
Simon Schama, writing in the Financial Times, praises Hollinghurst's descriptive powers and command of social irony: "I'm not sure any living writer is quite as good as taking you so immersively ..." However, Schama also criticises the episodic character of the novel and the lack of depth of some of the characters, including David himself.
Francesca Peacock, writing in The Spectator, found Our Evenings to be "tedious" and a "turgid composite of his previous works."
Notes
References
- "Our Evenings". Book Marks. Retrieved 26 December 2024.
- Maier, John (4 October 2024). "Our Evenings by Alan Hollinghurst review — the best living English novelist?". The Times. Retrieved 24 November 2024.
- Harris, Alexandra (25 September 2024). "Our Evenings by Alan Hollinghurst review – his finest novel yet". The Guardian. Retrieved 24 November 2024.
- https://www.newstatesman.com/culture/books/2024/10/alan-hollinghurst-our-evenings-review-intimate-vision
- Schama, Simon (3 October 2024). "Our Evenings by Alan Hollinghurst — a gay coming-of-age novel". Financial Times. Retrieved 24 November 2024.
- https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/familiar-scenarios-our-evenings-by-alan-hollinghurst-reviewed/