Arthur & George
Arthur & George book cover

Arthur & George

Paperback – January 9, 2007

Price
$16.00
Format
Paperback
Pages
464
Publisher
Vintage
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1400097036
Dimensions
5.21 x 0.93 x 8 inches
Weight
11.6 ounces

Description

“Extraordinary.... First rate.... A cracking good yarn.” —The New York Times Book Review “An absorbing fictional re-creation of a real-life detective story.... A finely evocative historical novel as well as a morally and psychologically astute glimpse into the worlds of two men.” —Los Angeles Times Book Review “Masterly throughout.... The author keeps the reader on edge.” —The Washington Post Book World “Deeply satisfying.... From the first chapter, Barnes has us in his thrall.” – San Francisco Chronicle “A page-turner.... Arthur & George is by far Mr. Barnes's most pressurized novel to date.” — The Wall Street Journal “Utterly absorbing, beautifully crafted.... Rich and immensely readable.... A stream of flawless, driving sentences.... A great novel.” — O, The Oprah Magazine “A marvelous book.” — Entertainment Weekly , “A” “His most engrossing novel ever.” —Jay McInerney, The New York Observer Julian Barnes is the author of two books of stories, two collections of essays, a translation of Alphonse Daudet's In the Land of Pain , and nine previous novels. In France he is the only writer to have won both the Prix Médicis and the Prix Fémina, and in 2004 he became a Commandeur de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres. In England his honors include the Somerset Maugham Award and the Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize. He has also received the E. M. Forster Award from the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters. He lives in London. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. oneBeginningsArthur A child wants to see. It always begins like this, and it began like this then. A child wanted to see.He was able to walk, and could reach up to a door handle. He did this with nothing that could be called a purpose, merely the instinctive tourism of infancy. A door was there to be pushed; he walked in, stopped, looked. There was nobody to observe him; he turned and walked away, carefully shutting the door behind him.What he saw there became his first memory. A small boy, a room, a bed, closed curtains leaking afternoon light. By the time he came to describe it publicly, sixty years had passed. How many internal retellings had smoothed and adjusted the plain words he finally used? Doubtless it still seemed as clear as on the day itself. The door, the room, the light, the bed, and what was on the bed: a ‘white, waxen thing’.A small boy and a corpse: such encounters would not have been so rare in the Edinburgh of his time. High mortality rates and cramped circumstances made for early learning. The household was Catholic, and the body that of Arthur’s grandmother, one Katherine Pack. Perhaps the door had been deliberately left ajar. There might have been a desire to impress upon the child the horror of death; or, more optimistically, to show him that death was nothing to be feared. Grandmother’s soul had clearly flown up to Heaven, leaving behind only the sloughed husk of her body. The boy wants to see? Then let the boy see.An encounter in a curtained room. A small boy and a corpse. A grandchild who, by the acquisition of memory, had just stopped being a thing, and a grandmother who, by losing those attributes the child was developing, had returned to that state. The small boy stared; and over half a century later the adult man was still staring. Quite what a ‘thing’ amounted to — or, to put it more exactly, quite what happened when the tremendous change took place, leaving only a ‘thing’ behind — was to become of central importance to Arthur. George George does not have a first memory, and by the time anyone suggests that it might be normal to have one, it is too late. He has no recollection obviously preceding all others — not of being picked up, cuddled, laughed at or chastised. He has an awareness of once having been an only child, and a knowledge that there is now Horace as well, but no primal sense of being disturbingly presented with a brother, no expulsion from paradise. Neither a first sight, nor a first smell: whether of a scented mother or a carbolicy maid-of-all-work.He is a shy, earnest boy, acute at sensing the expectations of others. At times he feels he is letting his parents down: a dutiful child should remember being cared for from the first. Yet his parents never rebuke him for this inadequacy. And while other children might make good the lack — might forcibly install a mother’s doting face or a father’s supporting arm in their memories — George does not do so. For a start, he lacks imagination. Whether he has never had one, or whether its growth has been stunted by some parental act, is a question for a branch of psychological science which has not yet been devised. George is fully capable of following the inventions of others — the stories of Noah’s Ark, David and Goliath, the Journey of the Magi — but has little such capacity himself.He does not feel guilty about this, since his parents do not regard it as a fault in him. When they say that a child in the village has ‘too much imagination’, it is clearly a term of dispraise. Further up the scale are ‘tellers of tall stories’ and ‘fibbers’; by far the worst is the child who is ‘a liar through and through’ — such are to be avoided at all costs. George himself is never urged to speak the truth: this would imply that he needs encouragement. It is simpler than this: he is expected to tell the truth because at the Vicarage no alternative exists.‘I am the way, the truth and the life’: he is to hear this many times on his father’s lips. The way, the truth and the life. You go on your way through life telling the truth. George knows that this is not exactly what the Bible means, but as he grows up this is how the words sound to him. Arthur For Arthur there was a normal distance between home and church; but each place was filled with presences, with stories and instructions. In the cold stone church where he went once a week to kneel and pray, there was God and Jesus Christ and the Twelve Apostles and the Ten Commandments and the Seven Deadly Sins. Everything was very orderly, always listed and numbered, like the hymns and the prayers and the verses of the Bible.He understood that what he learned there was the truth; but his imagination preferred the different, parallel version he was taught at home. His mother’s stories were also about far distant times, and also designed to teach him the distinction between right and wrong. She would stand at the kitchen range, stirring the porridge, tucking her hair back behind her ears as she did so; and he would wait for the moment when she would tap the stick against the pan, pause, and turn her round, smiling face towards him. Then her grey eyes would hold him, while her voice made a moving curve in the air, swooping up and down, then slowing almost to a halt as she reached the part of the tale he could scarcely endure, the part where exquisite torment or joy awaited not just hero and heroine, but the listener as well.‘And then the knight was held over the pit of writhing snakes, which hissed and spat as their twining lengths ensnared the whitening bones of their previous victims . . .’‘And then the black-hearted villain, with a hideous oath, drew a secret dagger from his boot and advanced towards the defenceless . . .’‘And then the maiden took a pin from her hair and the golden tresses fell from the window, down, down, caressing the castle walls until they almost reached the verdant grass on which he stood . . .’Arthur was an energetic, headstrong boy who did not easily sit still; but once the Mam raised her porridge stick he was held in a state of silent enchantment — as if a villain from one of her stories had slipped a secret herb into his food. Knights and their ladies then moved about the tiny kitchen; challenges were issued, quests miraculously fulfilled; armour clanked, chain mail rustled, and honour was always upheld. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • NATIONAL BESTSELLER • BOOKER PRIZE FINALIST • From the bestselling author of
  • The Sense of an Ending
  • comes an “extraordinary … first rate” novel (
  • The New York Times Book Review
  • ) that follows the lives of two very different British men and explores the grand tapestry of late-Victorian Britain.
  • As boys, George, the son of a Midlands vicar, and Arthur, living in shabby genteel Edinburgh, find themselves in a vast and complex world at the heart of the British Empire. Years later—one struggling with his identity in a world hostile to his ancestry, the other creating the world’s most famous detective while in love with a woman who is not his wife—their fates become inextricably connected.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(347)
★★★★
20%
(231)
★★★
15%
(173)
★★
7%
(81)
28%
(323)

Most Helpful Reviews

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A Real Live Adventure

In ARTHUR AND GEORGE, author Julian Barnes presents the intersection of two lives - one successful and celebrated the other obscure -- until a strange conjunction of events propels each of them into the glaring spotlight of the British judicial system. The famous person is Sir Arthur Conan Doyle; the unknown and ill-served man is George Edalji, the son of a Parsee Anglican Clergyman and his Scottish wife. Edalji is accused and convicted of a series of barbaric attacks on farm animals, incarcerated, and after several years in prison, released but not exonerated.

Enter the recently-widowed creator of Sherlock Holmes, who decides to use the same skills of his fictional detective in a quest to absolve Edalji and solve the crime. Utilizing both facts and deduction, as well as modicum of subterfuge and a healthy dose of influence, Conan Doyle sets to work on cracking the case.

Author Barnes has done a superb job of researching this true crime story--which at the time rivaled the Dryfuss case in France. Long-since forgotten by the cavalcade of history, the circumstances are revived and reviewed by Barnes in a thoroughgoing manner. He allows the reader to garner the impressions and facts that have guided his research into the crime, and is scrupulously accurate in his account of these two men and their contemporaries.

It makes for an often riveting narrative--and is "so adventurous a tale it may rank with most romances" as W. S. Gilbert might have put it. The reader follows the surprising twists and illuminating turns, and is deeply sympathetic to both Arthur and George, men whose lives are anything but ordinary, as well as to all the main characters in the novel. It is clear that Barnes has become warmhearted toward them and he succeeds in helping the reader to become fond of them as well.

Some passages in the book are quite tender and lyrical. There is poignancy to the moment he describes when Sir Arthur encounters the winner of a strong-man competition. Barnes' description of the various facets of Conan Doyle's personality is also outstanding.

The surprises continue till the last pages and the closest comparison one might make would be to E. L. Doctorow's RAGTIME, which similarly recounts an historic event in a way that the narrative flows like fiction. Indeed, as has been said, "Fiction is real life with the boring bits taken out." Barnes has done this, splendidly.

If you find this review helpful you might want to read some of my other reviews, including those on subjects ranging from biography to architecture, as well as religion and fiction.
49 people found this helpful
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Flat-footed Fictionalization

The strange case of George Edalji, and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's quest to prove him innocent after years of public humiliation and imprisonment, is an interesting one -- I just don't think Julian Barnes is the right author to tell it. His approach is an intellectual and chilly one, when I think a little more emotion and heart would have done more to draw the reader -- at least this one -- in. And Barnes is inconsistent in his storytelling. After having Conan Doyle agonize at length over how his children will react to his potential remarriage, Barnes never tells us; the wedding and wedding party are presented in laborious detail (including a description of the bride's gown that seems to have been copied verbatim from accounts of the time), and yet not a word from the kids. Oh, well, I guess it wasn't important after all.

I'm a fan of mysteries, so I found the section in which Conan Doyle plays Sherlock Holmes quite rewarding. But the book is ultimately done in by Barne's pedantic, scholarly approach. He's obviously done his research, but does he have to include every piece of it? (An insignificant cricket match is described in an excruciatingly detailed play by play; what's the point, and why should we care?) And when Barnes tries for poignancy and profundity (particularly in the endless epilogue), the results are generally perfunctory and flat. Additionally, the headings that Barnes has given to the book's individual parts strive for meaning, but are just mystifying and pretentious.

All in all, I think a non-fiction approach (from a Sebastian Junger, perhaps) would have been a much more effective way of telling this fascinating story.
19 people found this helpful
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Beyond Sherlock Holmes

It is difficult to write a review that does not give away matters that Julian Barnes reveals only gradually in the carefully-paced exposition to this magnificent novel. So I will confine myself to things that the reader cannot help reading elsewhere on this page or in the reviews printed prominently inside the front cover. The "Arthur" is Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, physician, creator of Sherlock Holmes, and pioneering spiritualist. The "George" is an unassuming solicitor who becomes the victim of a malicious campaign of threats and accusations, which come close to destroying him. After their stories have been laid out separately but in parallel, eventually George's case becomes known to Sir Arthur, who dashes to his defence, making it into a cause célèbre.

All this is a matter of historical record. As he had done in [[ASIN:0679731369 FLAUBERT'S PARROT]], Barnes takes the art of biography (or in this case two intertwined biographies) and uses it to create a new form, the novel of biographical interpretation. He has a wonderful ability to imagine the hearts and minds of his characters. By contrasting Arthur's happy marriage and rising success with George's isolation and misfortune, he gives depth to both of them. And by the time that the creator of Sherlock Holmes has taken on George's case as a mystery to be solved and injustice to be righted, I had quite forgotten that I was not reading one of Conan Doyle's own stories.

In fact, I sat down intending to heap praise on Julian Barnes for his skill in setting up Holmesian expectations but then avoiding the clear-cut ending of a Sherlock Holmes tale. Things here do not go as smoothly as in fiction, and although solutions to the various mysteries do emerge, they seem almost peripheral to the developing story. Then it occurred to me that Barnes was following the historical record here too; it is not so much that he was shaping the story in less predictable ways, but that he chose this particular history precisely because it would lead him into shades of gray rather than neat black and white. George's legal problems, for example, have much less to do with fact and proof than about how facts may be twisted or shaded by people with prior assumptions, whether arising out of prejudice or (in Sir Arthur's case) from the desire to right a wrong. Indeed it is George who emerges as the more logical and objective of the two men, not the author who had enshrined just those qualities in his creation of Sherlock Holmes. Conan Doyle is seldom shown with his feet firmly on the ground, but as a scientist who becomes a spokesman for spiritualism, a lover sighing for the woman that his honor will not permit him to have, and the white knight in search of a cause.

As the jacket wisely says, this book is about "the differences between what we believe, what we know, and what we can prove." It is also a brilliant exploration of the space between historical fact and the novelist's imagination.
11 people found this helpful
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Sadly disappointing

Julian Barnes is a wonderful writer but, sadly, this novel does not use his gifts to his advantage. Had it been by another author, I'd have put it down for good about a third of the way through. It was only my previous experience w/ Barnes's work that kept me plowing ahead.

The plotline has been recited in many other reviews; suffice it to say that Barnes did a lot of research -- probably too much for him to turn away from this work in midstream, which he should have. The novel is disjointed, too long, plodding, and lacking in a satisfying ending. Rather than "Arthur and George," read something else by Barnes.
10 people found this helpful
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Concerning the Editorial review on top

I haven't read the book but have wanted to. But WHY Amazon, did you put in an Editorial review that GAVE AWAY THE ENTIRE PLOT of the story? Its actually pointless now for me to read it. That sort of review is not a review, it is a recap of the book and anyone can do it--it just is a matter of saying this happened then this happened and then this....PLEASE don't let your editorial reviews do this!!!
9 people found this helpful
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A Study in Prejudice

I found this mystery on a list of the 100 best mystery novels of the twentieth century. I’d never heard of it but knew Julian Barnes to be an excellent writer, and wasn’t disappointed. He not only brings the two major characters, Arthur Conan Doyle and George Edalji to life, but captures their idiosyncrasies as well as their character strengths and weaknesses. What struck me most, though, was how well Barnes delineated both the subtle and the obvious prejudices and racism Edalji has to endure. The timeliness of it did not escape me. In fact the utter exasperation I felt was perhaps due in part to the current circumstances in this country.
8 people found this helpful
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Arguably Barnes's best novel to date

Julian Barnes scales new heights with the superlative "Arthur & George (A & G)", which easily surpasses his previous work. Like watching a split screen movie with two separate parallel plots, Barnes' narrative shuffles between Arthur's growing up years that saw him make the transition from medical doctor to investigative fiction writer and George's struggle to establish himself as a small town lawyer until the occurrence of a series of savage attacks threaten to upend his career and land him in jail. While Arthur's story is altogether less dramatic, less colourful than George's which frankly is where the main action's at, it is arguably just as moving and engaging. The reader never feels like zipping through the Arthur chapters to get back on track with what's happening with George because Barnes manages to find that delicate balance between the two stories that suggests to the reader that keeping faith with him will yield results as when the two stories finally intersect and meld as one.

As historical fiction, A & G exploring issues of love, class, race and identity in late Victorian England to devastating effect, is never less than compelling. The characters are well rounded and believable, never caricatures, even with the motley crew of bigots out to nail the half-caste George simply because his complexion suggests he cannot be "one of us". The faithfulness in spirit if not in flesh of Arthur's love for his first wife Touie is so poignantly essayed, it cannot leave anyone unmoved.

Barnes' writing is simply exemplary - balanced and true. A & G is contemporary literature of the highest quality that will stand the test of time. Highly recommended.
8 people found this helpful
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Absolutely stunning

Historical fiction about lives of the renown Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and a lesser known individual, solicitor George Edalji. One was the son of a strong mother who drove in him a deep sense of family history, honor and chivalry. The other was the son of a pastor who instilled in him a strong rooting in religion and what it means to be an Englishman....despite his mixed heritage.
One goes on to study medicine and become a world famous writer, but loves a woman not his wife. The other, on his way to becoming a solicitor, becomes the victim of increasingly nasty anonymous letters and a suspect in the vicious maiming of farm animals. In an act of desperation to clear his name and restore his rightful place in his profession, George seeks our Arthur and presents him with his case, and this intersection of their paths result in changes in both their lives.

The book contains excerpts from letters and newspaper articles and Julian Barnes weaves these smoothly into his fictionalized take on the the personal experiences of both these men. Apart from the rich story, what's incredible is the degree to which he exposes the inner strength that exists in some people even in the face of unbearably unfair treachery, where they draw their strength from, how love can fuel a person to greatness, and how a person's integrity can slide because of an enormous desire for something beyond his reach, and the false sense of comfort one feels when one lives in denial of the truth.
5 people found this helpful
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Guilty until proven innocent?

This fictionalized account of two historical figures is especially intriguing because of the extraordinary criminal case that made their lives interconnect and that, despite being mostly forgotten since, contributed to an important change in English law. With great skill and some empathy, Barnes creates not only believable in-depth portraits of two such diametrically different characters, he also brings out the complexity of English society at the turn of the twentieth century. Arthur takes on the case he believes to be a blatant example of "miscarriage of justice" with George as the innocent victim.

Both protagonists are introduced through their dissimilar family backgrounds and upbringing. Barnes places great emphasis on illustrating how the divergent socio-cultural environments formed the two individuals early on and set them on such different paths: Arthur develops into a popular, wealthy and worldly gent, who copes in private with his secret demons. He has remained famous beyond his own lifetime. Whereas George, despite (or because of) the support of his (over?)caring family, his intellect and diligent study, never really made it in society. He is hardly known outside a small circle of insiders and legal experts.

Following their story chronologically, Barnes presents the two narrative streams in parallel, until they merge when circumstances demand it. Giving anything more away of the personalities, even their last names, or the plotline, as many have done, is a disadvantage and diminishes the pleasure of following the step by step revelation of characters, context and events. Numerous clues are suggested, hints given, but they could also be false leads, just as they must have happened in the actual criminal proceedings. This section of the novel is the most gripping and convincing.

While the author evidently researched the characters, the specific circumstances and the wider background in great depth, one wonders at times about the line between fact and fiction. This applies in particular to the depiction of some of Arthur's character traits, such as, for example, his relationship to the strong women in his life, in contrast to his fervent objection to the women's vote and their active participation in public life. At times in the middle section, Barnes's detailed portrayal of Arthur comes across as a bit too long winded and drawn out, without adding much to our deeper understanding, but letting the attention drift, only to pick up again as the action moves forward. George's portrayal is more succinct and successful in my view. His characterization appears to be more convincing and while he may have had some unusual behaviour patterns they appear to be consistent with his actions in the case and its aftermaths.

What may have been the novel's primary objective for Barnes? Possibly the miscarriage of justice case that contributed to changing the criminal appeal system in England? Was it also to depict a society at the turn of the twentieth century with some of its blatant societal prejudices and how they blinded the course of justice? This wider context in particular, gives the novel depth and importance beyond the sheer entertainment value of a real-life detective drama. Without doubt, George's case, more or less forgotten since that time, deserved to be re-told and re-evaluated; Barnes did it brilliantly. [Friederike Knabe]
5 people found this helpful
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just good enough to read to the end

Well-written, but slow moving; knowing it's based on a true story adds to the interest, and I was grateful for the note at the end that tied up all the endings. The author is no doubt a good writer, but gotta wonder if this could have been quite a bit shorter, and still a good story.
4 people found this helpful