Patrick Hamilton's (1904–1962) books are filled with gin and jealousy and depict obsessive desire in oppressive circumstances. His early financial success funded his heavy drinking, but also allowed him to write some of the best fiction of the 20th century. Often cited as Hamilton's greatest work, Hangover Square (1941) is a pitch-black comedy of alcoholism, madness and murder in London before the second world war.
Set during the agonising weeks and months leading to Second World War, Hangover Square tells the tense story of a George Harvey Bone whose ambivalence for the woman he is pursuing (who has no interest in him) is manifested in two psychological states, between which he flips without warning. In one state he yearns for her, yet in the other has only one purpose – to kill her. As the book progresses and Bone gets more and more intense, Hamilton precisely describes a number of mental symptoms while never sensationalising Bone’s condition. Without introducing political material on Hitler's rise to power as the forces of war begin to overwhelm Britain, Bone's deteriorating mind makes this an impressive character study and an oblique (and bleak) look at beleaguered prewar London. Goodreads
Hamilton started writing Hangover Square on Christmas Day 1939. He completed it in February 1941, delivering it to his publishers a month later. Hangover Square was immediately lauded on its publication. James Agee called it "a magnificent thriller" (Daily Express); John Betjeman referred to it as being in "the top class of English novels" (The Spectator). Such was the novel's success that it was rapidly adapted for a film which was released in 1945.
This is an online meetup where the first half of Hamilton's book is discussed. (six first parts)