The Go-Between

The Go-Between

1953 • 327 pages

Ratings9

Average rating4

15

I have only just started, and despite really enjoying Hartley's lyrical prose I'm finding that the heavy-handed editing (in the 2003 Penguin edition)is getting on my nerves. I'm one of those people foolish enough to read the introduction before I start and to at least try to read the notes, but Brooks-Davies has committed the cardinal sin of thoroughly spoiler-ing the book in the introduction then adding insult to injury by over end noting (at least five notes per page)with further spoilers and over-analysis. Save it for the study edition, Douglas, I just want to read and analyse the book myself and discover its mysteries in peace.

Update: the notes weren't too bad. At least it explained all the French conversation, although it was like having an over-eager guide alongside. Having read the NYRB Classics introduction by Colm Toibin (the introduction and some reading notes are available here: NYRB Classics site) I'd probably recommend that edition.

Review: Beautiful book, Hartley really captured the young narrator in his innocence and misunderstanding the world the ‘grown-ups' inhabited, also the period before the Great War. Love the way that Ted and Marian's actions are left to our interpretation and all the little things that the narrator brings in such as the references to the zodiac, the use of Belladonna as a symbolic device and how Leo believes as a young boy that he can perform magic. Wish I hadn't read the introduction through, as I think it would've been one of those books that the less you know about it in advance, the better. Shocking ending though, even though I knew what was going to happen, I didn't expect it to end that abruptly.


March 5, 2013Report this review