Metroland

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Authors: Julian Barnes

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Metroland
Julian Barnes
Vintage (1992)
Rating: ★★★☆☆
Tags: Fiction, Literary
Fictionttt Literaryttt

Only the author of
Flaubert's Parrot
could give us a novel that is at once a note-perfect rendition of the angsts and attitudes of English adolescence, a giddy comedy of sexual awakening in the 1960s, and a portrait of the accommodations that some of us call "growing up" and others "selling out."

Amazon.com Review

Sixteen-year-old suburbanite Chris Lloyd and his mate Toni spend their free time wishing they were French, making up stories about strangers, and pretending to be
flâneurs
. When they grow up they'd like to be "artists-in-residence at a nudist colony." If youthful voyeurism figures heavily in their everyday lives, so, too, do the pleasures of analogy, metaphor, and deliberate misprision. Sauntering into one store that dares to call itself MAN SHOP, Toni demands: "One man and two small boys, please."

Julian Barnes could probably fill several books with these boys' clever misadventures, but in his first novel he attempts something more daring--the curve from youthful scorn to adult contentment. In 1968, when Chris goes off to Paris, he misses the May
événements
but manages, more importantly, to fall in love and learn the pleasures of openness: "The key to Annick's candour was that there was no key. It was like the atom bomb: the secret is that there is no secret." The final section finds Chris back in suburbia, married, with children and a mortgage, and slowly accepting the surprise that happiness isn't boring. "It's certainly ironic to be back in Metroland. As a boy, what would I have called it:
le syphilis de l'âme
, or something like that, I dare say. But isn't part of growing up being able to ride irony without being thrown?" Far from renouncing the joys of language, this novel wittily celebrates honest communication.
--Kerry Fried

Review

"Barnes writes like a dream."  --Village Voice Literary Supplement

Praise for
Julian Barnes’s
METROLAND

“One would have to look hard to find a wryer, more lovingly detailed account of intellectual and sexual innocence abroad.…
Metroland
portrays at once the disturbing aspects of adulthood and the consolations of maturity, a balance that makes one glad Julian Barnes is still young and still writing.”

–Jay Parini,
The New York Times

“Barnes’s books … celebrate the human imagination, the human heart, the boisterous diversity of our gene pool, our activities, our delusions.… They thrill the mind and the emotions; and he achieves, without tricks or puns, what Nabokov loved: esthetic bliss.”


Chicago Sun-Times

“If all works of fiction were as thoughtful, as subtle, as well constructed, and as funny as
Metroland
, there would be no more talk of the death of the novel.”


New Statesman

“Julian Barnes is one of a handful of innovative English novelists who have succeeded in pulling the English novel out of the provincial rut in which it lay.”


Newsday

“Flighty, playful … Barnes succeeds in vividly re-creating teenage precociousness, particularly what it feels like to be a young male encountering love and sex.”


Los Angeles Times

Julian Barnes
METROLAND

Julian Barnes was born in Leicester, England, in 1946, was educated at Oxford University, and now lives in London. His first six novels –
Metroland, Before She Met Me, Flaubert’s Parrot, Staring at the Sun, A History of the World in 10 ½ Chapters
, and
Talking It Over
– have brought him international acclaim. His newest novel,
The Porcupine
, has just been published.

ALSO BY
Julian Barnes

Before She Met Me

Flaubert’s Parrot

Staring at the Sun

A History of the World in 10 ½ Chapters

Talking It Over

The Porcupine

First Vintage International Edition, November 1992

Copyright
© 1980 by Julian Barnes

All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by
Vintage Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New York.
Originally published in hardcover by Jonathan Cape Ltd.,
London, in 1980.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Barnes, Julian.
Metroland/Julian Barnes. – 1st Vintage International ed.
p.  cm.
eISBN: 978-0-307-79777-3
I. Title.
[PR6052.A6657M47   1992]
823′.914–dc20          92–50092

Author photo © Miriam Berkley

v3.1

To Laurien

Contents

Cover

About the Author

Other Books by This Author

Title Page

Copyright

Dedication

PART ONE
Metroland (1963)

One
       Orange Plus Red

Two
       Two Small Boys

Three
     Rabbit, Human

Four
      The Constructive Loaf

Five
       J’habite Metroland

Six
        Scorched Earth

Seven
    Mendacity Curves

Eight
     Sex, Austerity, War, Austerity

Nine
      Big D

Ten
       Tunnels, Bridges

Eleven
    SST

Twelve
   Hard and Low

Thirteen
 Object Relations

PART TWO
Paris (1968)

One
       Karezza

Two
      Demandez Nuts

Three
    Redon, Oxford

Four
     Beatific Couples

Five
      Je t’aime bien

Six
       Object Relations

PART THREE
Metroland II (1977)

One
      Nude, Giant Girls

Two
      Running Costs

Three
    Stiff Petticoat

Four
      Is Sex Travel?

Five
      The Honours Board

Six
        Object Relations

PART ONE
Metroland (1963)
A noir, E blanc, I rouge, U vert, O bleu
Rimbaud
There is no rule against carrying binoculars in the National Gallery.
On this particular Wednesday afternoon in the summer of 1963, Toni had the notebook and I had the glasses. So far, it had been a productive visit. There had been the young nun in men’s spectacles who smiled sentimentally at the Arnolfini Wedding, and then, after a few moments, frowned and made a disapproving cluck. There had been the anoraked girl hiker, so transfixed by the Crivelli altarpiece that we simply stood on either side of her and noted the subtlest parting of the lips, the faintest tautening of skin across the cheekbones and the brow (‘Spot anything on the temple your side?’ ‘Zero’ – so Toni wrote down
Temple twitch; LHS only
). And there had been the man in the chalk-stripe suit, hair precisely parted an inch above his right ear, who twitched and squirmed in front of a small Monet landscape. He puffed out his cheeks, leaned back slowly on his heels, and exhaled like a discreet balloon.
Then we came to one of our favourite rooms, and one of our most useful pictures: Van Dyck’s equestrian portrait of Charles I. A middle-aged lady in a red mackintosh was sitting in front of it. Toni and I walked quietly to the padded bench at the other end of the room, and pretended interest in a tritely jocund Franz Hals. Then, while he shielded me, I moved forward a little and focussed the glasses on her. We were far enough away for me to be able to whisper notes to Toni quite safely; if she heard anything, she’d take it for the usual background murmur of admiration and assent.

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