CLASSIC NOVEL DISCUSSION & POTLUCK: Of Human Bondage by W. Somerset Maugham

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PLEASE DO NOT RSVP FOR THIS EVENT IF YOU MAY NOT ATTEND. IF YOU CANCEL THIS MEANS THAT SOMEONE ELSE WHO WANTED TO ATTEND WAS NOT ABLE, AS THEY WILL NOT HAVE HAD TIME TO READ THE BOOK.
This is somewhat based on a "book club" but different in several ways.
There is no membership but rather this is an event. It will be posted and require an RSVP. Attendance is limited to approximately 18 or so. It is my plan to have it monthly on Sundays, in the evening, at my house. I will post the event in plenty of time for you to read the book and will email directions to my house a few days before the event. It is also a potluck, so the event will include several of the most wonderful things in life: socializing, food, and discussion.
It is my continuing quest to read all the books off Modern Library's "100 Greatest Novels" list. It is from this list that the books will be chosen. I will pick books that are "readable" (don't worry, I won't be posting Ulysses!) and sound interesting. The beauty about this is that if you are busy a certain month or not interested in a book you can chose not to attend and skip a month.
Our January book is by #66 Of Human Bondage by W. Somerset Maugham. It looks fantastic (see a review by a reader, below). It's a "substantial" book (around 700 pages) so you may want to get started now :)
Thanks and see you soon,
D
Amazon Review
5.0 out of 5 stars
True, honest, heartfelt masterpiece, September 3, 2007
By Vivek Sharma "Vivek" (Cambridge / Boston, MA, USA)
W. Somerset Maugham's Of Human Bondage is one of the best novels I have ever read. The language is simple. The narration is subtle. The characters are real and display emotions and feelings everyone can identify with. The power of novel becomes apparent when you are reading it. You choke up every once a while, you smile for hours after you have finished reading certain passages, and you comprehend your own self, your woes and possibilities, better through perspectives that novel provides.
Philip Carey is born with a clubfoot, and as he grows up, orphaned, he struggles with his own deformity. The initial quarter of the novel is about his growing up, and details incidents and relationships that shape our hero. He then develops a fancy of becoming a painter and travels to Paris, only to quit few years later to return to London, where he studies to become a doctor. The most engrossing part of novel starts here with the entry of Mildred, the waitress.
The rest of the novel thrives on the passion of Philip, his love that carries him to the edge of self-destruction, and his coming of age. Unrequited love has never been potrayed better. Philip allows himself to become an instrument in hands of cold-hearted Mildred, who repeatedly ruins herself through absurd choices, and ruins him for not withstanding his love and care, he finds himself snubbed, ridiculed, bereft. Eventhough his reason tells him otherwise, Philip is unable to release himself from his passion for a considerable time. As is said in the novel, "But when all was said the important thing was to love rather than to be loved; and he yearned for Mildred with his whole soul."
The novel is lot more than just story of Philip and Mildred, and there are other unforgettable characters. Each person Philip encounters and each friend he makes, leaves an indelible impression on him and the reader. Be it his idealist friend Hayward, who has too much promise too little product, the poet Cronshaw who dies in poverty, Fenny Price whose hard work cannot make her draw even reasonably well, his uncle and aunt whose love is both tacit and beautifully potrayed and the writer Norah who shows Philip of a caring and loving other.
The most charming people in the novel are Athlneys. Athlney brings life and humor into the novel, and I think saves Philip from a total destruction. The novel really highlights the virtue that lies in a simple, happy married life and Anthlneys win over both Philip and readers with their goodness and simplicity. Thorpe Anthlney with his nine children is a jolly character, and be it his conversations or actions, he wins over our hearts outright.
Philip finds love in most unexpected quarters and is surprised by how help crops up from strangers. His every experience makes him as richer as the reader becomes in reading about it. The thoughts about the meaning of life, or about love or religion or about virtue or vice, and about each aspect of life that Philip encounters are spelt out with a subtlety and mastery. These thoughts find easy resonance with the reader, and make Of Human Bondage an unforgettable affair. The honesty of this piece is stunning. This novel, written without any flourishes and intricate wordplay or mystery, is I think a celebration of the deep insight and understanding of the author.
I have read his other works. The Razor's Edge, The Moon and Six Pence as well as his short stories are a proof of Maugham's ability to tell simple tales with great mastery. These, on their own, make Maugham a great novelist. But it is after reading Of Human Bondage that I realized why most novelists and readers have considered this piece as one the greatest pieces in World Literature. Maugham's aim was perhaps of catharisis and he put his own emotions into the characters, and therefore, he's created a work that is timeless and unforgettable. A must read for everyone who can read.
Modern Library's 100 Greatest Novels
- "Ulysses," James Joyce
- "The Great Gatsby," F. Scott Fitzgerald
- "A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man," James Joyce
- "Lolita," Vladimir Nabokov
- "Brave New World," Aldous Huxley
- "The Sound and the Fury," William Faulkner
- "Catch-22," Joseph Heller
- "Darkness at Noon," Arthur Koestler
- "Sons and Lovers," D. H. Lawrence
- "The Grapes of Wrath," John Steinbeck
- "Under the Volcano," Malcolm Lowry
- "The Way of All Flesh," Samuel Butler
- "1984," George Orwell
- "I, Claudius," Robert Graves
- "To the Lighthouse," Virginia Woolf
- "An American Tragedy," Theodore Dreiser
- "The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter," Carson McCullers
- "Slaughterhouse Five," Kurt Vonnegut
- "Invisible Man," Ralph Ellison
- "Native Son," Richard Wright
- "Henderson the Rain King," Saul Bellow
- "Appointment in Samarra," John O' Hara
- "U.S.A." (trilogy), John Dos Passos
- "Winesburg, Ohio," Sherwood Anderson
- "A Passage to India," E. M. Forster
- "The Wings of the Dove," Henry James
- "The Ambassadors," Henry James
- "Tender Is the Night," F. Scott Fitzgerald
- "The Studs Lonigan Trilogy," James T. Farrell
- "The Good Soldier," Ford Madox Ford
- "Animal Farm," George Orwell
- "The Golden Bowl," Henry James
- "Sister Carrie," Theodore Dreiser
- "A Handful of Dust," Evelyn Waugh
- "As I Lay Dying," William Faulkner
- "All the King's Men," Robert Penn Warren
- "The Bridge of San Luis Rey," Thornton Wilder
- "Howards End," E. M. Forster
- "Go Tell It on the Mountain," James Baldwin
- "The Heart of the Matter," Graham Greene
- "Lord of the Flies," William Golding
- "Deliverance," James Dickey
- "A Dance to the Music of Time" (series), Anthony Powell
- "Point Counter Point," Aldous Huxley
- "The Sun Also Rises," Ernest Hemingway
- "The Secret Agent," Joseph Conrad
- "Nostromo," Joseph Conrad
- "The Rainbow," D. H. Lawrence
- "Women in Love," D. H. Lawrence
- "Tropic of Cancer," Henry Miller
- "The Naked and the Dead," Norman Mailer
- "Portnoy's Complaint," Philip Roth
- "Pale Fire," Vladimir Nabokov
- "Light in August," William Faulkner
- "On the Road," Jack Kerouac
- "The Maltese Falcon," Dashiell Hammett
- "Parade's End," Ford Madox Ford
- "The Age of Innocence," Edith Wharton
- "Zuleika Dobson," Max Beerbohm
- "The Moviegoer," Walker Percy
- "Death Comes to the Archbishop," Willa Cather
- "From Here to Eternity," James Jones
- "The Wapshot Chronicles," John Cheever
- "The Catcher in the Rye," J. D. Salinger
- "A Clockwork Orange," Anthony Burgess
- "Of Human Bondage," W. Somerset Maugham
- "Heart of Darkness," Joseph Conrad
- "Main Street," Sinclair Lewis
- "The House of Mirth," Edith Wharton
- "The Alexandria Quartet," Lawrence Durrell
- "A High Wind in Jamaica," Richard Hughes
- "A House for Ms. Biswas," V. S. Naipaul
- "The Day of the Locust," Nathaniel West
- "A Farewell to Arms," Ernest Hemingway
- "Scoop," Evelyn Waugh
- "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie," Muriel Spark
- "Finnegans Wake," James Joyce
- "Kim," Rudyard Kipling
- "A Room With a View," E. M. Forster
- "Brideshead Revisited," Evelyn Waugh
- "The Adventures of Augie March," Saul Bellow
- "Angle of Repose," Wallace Stegner
- "A Bend in the River," V. S. Naipaul
- "The Death of the Heart," Elizabeth Bowen
- "Lord Jim," Joseph Conrad
- "Ragtime," E. L. Doctorow
- "The Old Wives' Tale," Arnold Bennett
- "The Call of the Wild," Jack London
- "Loving," Henry Green
- "Midnight's Children," Salman Rushdie
- "Tobacco Road," Erskine Caldwell
- "Ironweed," William Kennedy
- "The Magus," John Fowles
- "Wide Sargasso Sea," Jean Rhys
- "Under the Net," Iris Murdoch
- "Sophie's Choice," William Styron
- "The Sheltering Sky," Paul Bowles
- "The Postman Always Rings Twice," James M. Cain
- "The Ginger Man," J. P. Donleavy
- "The Magnificent Ambersons," Booth Tarkington

CLASSIC NOVEL DISCUSSION & POTLUCK: Of Human Bondage by W. Somerset Maugham