Backlisted - Patrick Hamilton Extra Episode
Episode Date: April 3, 2017Following on from the Slaves Of Solitude episode, here is an extra half hour of conversation about Patrick Hamilton. Please listen the the main episode before this one.* To purchase any of the books m...entioned in this episode please visit our bookshop at uk.bookshop.org/shop/backlisted where all profits help to sustain this podcast and UK independent bookshops.* For information about everything mentioned in this episode visit www.backlisted.fm*If you'd like to support the show, listen without adverts, receive the show early and with extra bonus fortnightly episodes, become a Patreon at www.patreon.com/backlisted Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Well, we've just recharged our glasses with gin and French,
and we're all gathered as a group.
You join us in the snug.
Certainly in the saloon bar.
We've left the saloon bar, we're now in the snug.
To talk a little bit more about Patrick Hamilton,
one of the things I want to...
Hang on, though, John.
We have Matt.
Matt is the Phil spectra of the operation
is waving a gun around and saying saying for god's sake reintroduce our guests so it's me
it's john mitchinson it's the excellent novelist lisa evans the excellent novelist and short story
writer stuart evers and hello guys oh hello sorry the subject of the conversation I was a bit gin and french there for a moment
the subject of the conversation is the excellent
I mean brilliant novel by Patrick Hamilton
The Slaves of Solitude
and we're just
I guess we've charged our glasses
we're going to give you a bit of extra
Hamilton kind of insight
or whatever this passes for
what I wanted to say is that the amongst the many
pleasures of this book and they are as you will know if you've listened to the rest of it many
it's surely the greatest christmas scene you're talking we're talking about hamilton as a
dickensian writer i the chapter 18 opens with this memorable sentence ah that christmas that christmas of hatred fear pain terror and disgrace and then
later on he says he says about something about christmas he said the madness of christmas is
not to be resisted by any human means it either stealthily creeps or crudely batters its way into
every fastness of fortress of prudence all over the land. And what I love about that scene is the attention to detail
where they wouldn't ordinarily be allowed to drink in the lounge,
but it's all right because he's brought some gin and orange.
And Mrs Bain gets quite into it.
The landlady gets quite into it.
I quite like the idea that Patrick Hamilton invented gin and juice.
There's Snoop Dogg's song.
I like that. I like idea that that snoop was
was was reading rolling down the street yeah yeah i think you know reading patrick hamilton
and uh thinking i just i just want to i haven't read anything from the slaves of the studio i
just want to read the opening because as openings go even the opening is superb, right?
You see, I'm going to have to take issue with that.
But go on, you go ahead.
Ooh, chapter one.
London, the crouching monster,
like every other monster, has to breathe.
And breathe it does in its own obscure, malignant way.
Its vital oxygen is composed of suburban working men and women of all kinds
who every morning are sucked up through an infinitely complicated
respiratory apparatus of trains and termini into the mighty congested lungs
held there for a number of hours
and then in the evening exhaled violently through the same channels.
I've just watched, incidentally, listeners...
It's just terrible.
I've just watched Stuart vap, listeners, Stuart. I've just watched Stuart
vaping in time to that
particular exhalation.
Do you think that's terrible?
It's just taking his metaphor
too far.
Ladies and gentlemen, this is the first time
I know we get told off, indeed rightly
for not finishing our sentences
and overusing breathless hyperbole
on this shoot, but I don't think
we've yet had a bravura moment
on Pat's back
You know what it is, don't you, John?
It's a tour de force
It's the gin and it, mate
No, but I think this
I'm glad that you brought it up
because I find No, but I think this... I'm glad that you brought it up because...
LAUGHTER
Talking of tired old locutions, Stuart,
I'm very glad you asked me that question.
Because I think that that is a perfect example
of Hamilton being a good novelist,
a great novelist, but not a particularly great writer
because, actually, I do think it's completely overwritten
and it goes on and on and on this whole kind of...
He's read the fog chapter of Bleak House.
Yeah, and it's this big metaphor of blowing people in
and blowing people out.
But what is fascinating about it is that what it does,
even though it's a very crude instrument,
what it does give is the idea of London as a living,
breathing,
um,
physical,
um,
like actual,
uh,
with life in it.
And what it brings is when the people are actually spat out down into Thames,
Lockton is,
is the,
is the sense that when you get there,
that you realize that all life is,
is ended here.
Um,
that this is a,
a,
an unliving space a
place of hiatus if you like um and that all of these characters are just stuck in this horrendous
place um and i think that that even though i i think it's overwritten i can i can see why it's
there because it needs to be there to show that life is elsewhere and they are stuck in this unliving place.
And I think what I found fascinating
is about this novel,
and I think Richard Curtis should really read it.
Oh my God.
Because in Richard Curtis,
or any kind of...
Eight, actually.
But in any of those kinds of romantic comedies,
the Americans arrive, and the Americans arrive,
and they are witty, they are clever, they are different,
they are full of life.
But this American, this lieutenant, I find him fascinating.
He's dead inside.
Yeah, yeah.
And his dream is laundry. That his dream and that's it's
the smallest possible dream absolutely and there is no content to his conversation whatsoever it's
empty and he is a proper genuine alcoholic like there's you know the other people drink but he
has to keep going he has to keep and there's always another drink and and you know when it
comes out later that you know he's even more nefarious than...
I actually don't feel bad for him.
I just kind of want to give him a cuddle and say, you know,
your life is terrible.
And they kind of excuse him because they excuse him...
You're so nice, Stuart.
No, but he is excused.
I mean, not Vicky, but Miss Roach excuses him consistently
by saying, oh, he's inconsequential,
or, well, there's the second front coming up
and he's got the shadow of war.
But as the book goes on, more and more,
there's more and more stuff about the war.
The war is mentioned more and more.
And this is a, you know, as we say, this is a war novel.
Let us not be... The war is a you know as we say this is a war novel like let us not be
you know this is a war
yeah
and you know and he is
clearly terrified not only about
the war and possibility of not
of not living through it but
also of going back and being
this laundry
this bladder of lard is going to be on the beaches
in a year you know that's the most extraordinary thing the second front and i love
the way he brings in that that thing of exactly that miss roach feels sympathy for him and then
she also there's that sense that she comes she goes back to london and then you know the bombing
is going to start again but i tried to find find, because I read this thing, Andy, that you'd said about the whiskey.
I tried to find some drunk writing in the book.
And I think I found only, this might be brilliant,
or this might be bravura, or this might be just overblown.
Tell me what you think.
What do you think is going on here?
Miss Roach looking at the countryside.
At such moments, the countryside stealthily informing
her of its immense size would seem, of course, in grandeur, wildness, and stillness. This is Henley
and Thames, right? Completely to dominate and submerge all things appertaining to men and towns,
and to reduce in particular to microscopic thread-like smallness the railway
tracks by which these communicated with each other the noise of the trains thereon distantly
falling on her straining ear like something less than minute rumblings in the enormous belly of the
enormous supine organism enveloping her and everything it's almost no excuse for using the
word thereon but no by this adjustment of her sense of dimensions,
Miss Roach's spirit bathed in moonlight would be composed,
consoled and refreshed.
And then she says, the train, on the other hand,
which Miss Roach normally took down from London to Thames Lockton,
had opposite ideas, so far from being aware of its doll-like magnitude
in the night, of being diminished practically to the point of extinction
by the surrounding void of fields, woods and hills.
It came crashing on like a huge
staggering bully from station to station lashing out right and left at the night on which the
tables were turned which was itself relegated to nothingness and whose very stars had less
importance in the eyes of the train than one of the sparks from the funnel of its engine
in the same way miss roach's attitude was completely reversed
and when at last she
alighted at Thames lockdown station
instead of feeling composed,
consoled and refreshed, she was invariably filled with anxiety
apprehensive. I'm closing the book now.
That is a terrible passage.
No, no, hang on, but that
is this close to truthing.
You know, like, it's this close
to Thwaites, isn't it? It's this close to truthing. You know, like, it's this close to the weight, isn't it?
It's this close.
But also the energy of it.
What I like about Hamilton's prose,
even when he's not afraid to be gauche,
he's not afraid to really try and push through that barrier.
He uses disinterested as well.
But you see, for me, those bits, I've forgotten those bits.
Yeah, me too.
They haven't hit me in the head at all.
I think, bloody hell, we don't need that.
All I mean is a man
with a bottle of whiskey at night
and he's writing about trains
and he's writing...
Lord knows what the editorial process
with Hamilton...
Funny you should say that.
Now earlier on we were talking about
whether the titles
of Patrick Hamilton's novels were any good.
And I thought they were brilliant.
And what do you think, Stuart?
Well, I think they fall into two categories.
Hang of a Square, genius.
Yeah.
Hang of a Square, I want to read that book.
Slaves of Solitude, not so much.
What does it sound like?
It sounds like an 80s kind of album, doesn't it?
It's like the Lost Bunnyman album.
Craven House.
Great title.
Wonderful.
I love that.
But the worst, Toppins Coloured.
Yeah.
That's terrible.
I think that would have meant something to him.
You know, it means nothing to us.
But Toppins Coloured definitely would have been significant.
Toppins means female pudenda as well as Toppins.
Oh, blimey.
I wasn't
thinking about it
does it
yeah
sorry
this is why it's
actually this is like
after dark
for sure
I was thinking
press your red button
now
so most of the
titles of Patrick
Hamilton's novels
were not devised
by Patrick Hamilton
get out of here
no it's true I'll go to the foot of my stairs okay they were devised by Patrick Hamilton. Get out of here. No, it's true.
I'll go to the foot of my stairs.
They were devised by his editor,
and his editor is a man who deserves
his own episode of Backlist.
He's a man called Michael Sadlier.
Have you ever heard of him?
Oh, yeah, yeah.
So Michael Sadlier was the publisher at Constable,
and he would often,
his editorial letters will often say,
Patrick, I love the book.
Just one thing, need to change the title.
Okay, so he often devises the titles for the books.
The thing that is one of the significant things about Michael Sadlier,
do you know who else he was publishing at the same time he was publishing Patrick Hamilton?
So where are we?
Constable, late 30s. Constable, late 30s.
Constable, late 30s.
Priestley.
Nope.
Good guess.
Stu?
No, Orwell's Glance.
Let's just say somebody who wrote about drinking
and could be quite a handful.
Dylan Thomas?
I'm afraid not.
He was Gene Rees' editor. Gene Rees? Oh, afraid not. He was Gene Rees' editor.
Gene Rees?
Oh, my God.
Really?
Gene Rees' editor.
Oh, my God.
I listened.
I'm the host.
I'm just going.
Gene Rees' editor on Voyage in the Dark.
Easy Christmas presents for your clients, so.
And Good Morning Midnight, which we've done on the podcast, of course.
And I was going to say to you, Joe, can you imagine the lunches?
Looking at your diary and thinking
you've got Patrick Hamilton on Wednesday
and jeans coming in on Friday
what a fantastic thing
can you imagine that now
but what were his titles originally
they're in Nigel Jones' book
but I do know that Craven House
was sadly his idea
definitely, but I think Slaves of Solitude was Hamilton.
I think Hamilton...
Well, I mean, it's in the book, isn't it?
It's a sort of terrible title.
It is.
I mean, it's not as bad as Tuppence Coloured, but...
It's both portentous
and it gives you no feeling for the characters at all.
Time now for an advert.
No, not at all.
I mean, I don't know.
Could you have called it Miss Roach?
Probably not.
But Roachie?
Enid?
Enid.
Enid.
But that's made me think how brilliant Muriel Sparks' titles always were.
Slender memes.
Yeah.
And the Abyss of Crewe.
What a great title that is.
And A Far Cry from Kensington.
Yeah.
So there's another thing here. And a far cry from Kensington. And the
driving seat as well.
There's another thing I'd like to say about
Patrick Hamilton. This is wonderful.
This is reproduced in Nigel Jones's book.
Everybody should read that. It's an amazing
brilliant biography called
Through a Glass Darkly, The Life of Patrick
Hamilton by Nigel Jones. And he includes
this letter. This is very Hamilton.
He really didn't like abroad.
No, he didn't. I love it.
He really didn't like to be anywhere other than England.
He didn't like the French. He didn't like the Germans.
Here's his letter to his brother Bruce.
Bruce who loved France.
That's so sweet.
Here is his 11-point letter about their trip to France.
We went to Paris, Dijon and Auxerre.
Paris, I think, is the filthiest
and most loathsome city in the world.
I absolutely hate it from every point of view.
I have a list of the things I hate about it.
One, the dirty, filthy smell of the place.
The cheap, restaurant-y, omelety,
Hive Life cigarette-y stench
which greets your nostrils at and between every corner.
Two, the revolting advertisements
with which the whole place is plastered.
A picture of a lewd, fat, smiling baby.
Three, the peeling, grey, debauched rottenness of the slummier quarters. Four,
the obscene gurgling language which, it's Alex, I can neither speak nor understand.
And when they hear you fumbling with it they haven't won eighth of the sympathy which an
Englishman would have for a Frenchman in the same predicament. They look angry and indifferent. Five, the Americans. Everybody will tell you that Paris is completely
spoiled by the Americans. Well, if it is spoiled, what is the use of going there? Six, the French.
Seven, the hashed buttery cooking, invented for a people with enervated appetites which require tickling
and are absolutely opaque to the subtleties of plain food eight the coffee complex i cannot
digest coffee i loathe french bread and so i feel slightly sick for the rest of the day
nine the horse traffic and then there's a long bit I won't read you about just ranting
about horses. Ten, the noise.
The amount of cobbled stones and
drays and incessant sharp shriek of the
taxi horns. Finally, eleven,
the fact, this is an unreasonable
objection, but nonetheless real
for me, that all the traffic
is going the wrong way and much
too fast.
He'd get a series now, wouldn't he, going round the world?
Isn't it?
It does sound like a conflagration
between Nigel Farage and Geoffrey Boycott.
I just feel like I've got to go to a ten-point manifesto.
This is also the point.
This is the thing which I love so much about fiction.
He can write Mr. Thwaites
because, of course, he in some ways is Mr. Thwaites.
And that's what I love about...
Can I do a bit?
Go on, you've got to do it.
Go on, listen.
OK, fine.
We just have to have a bit more Thwaites.
We can have a bit more Thwaites.
OK, well, one phrase which he uses quite a lot is,
I keeps my counsel. Like the wise old Well, one phrase which he uses quite a lot is, I keeps my counsel like the wise old bird.
I happens to keep my counsel,
I happens to be like the wise old bird.
And then later on he says,
I hay my dudes.
That's all, says Mr Thwaites.
I hay my dudes.
And he has not thought Miss Roach going to add,
as the Scotchman said.
Surely he's not going to add, as the Scotchman said. Surely he's not going to add, as the Scotchman said.
As the Scotchman said, said Mr Thwaites.
Yes, I hame a do.
Brilliant.
So I've got two things to add and then we'll wind up.
But the first thing I'd like to add is,
we normally have clips on Backlisted of the authors talking
or maybe interviewed.
And as far as we know, there is no audio of Patrick Hamilton talking but I would like to recommend there's a wonderful
series on YouTube called Cummings Your Way in which a gentleman I believe called Cummings
maybe not goes to a variety of towns and wanders around them and gives a little narration while he does it the one about
patrick hamilton and about brighton is by far and away the best thing about patrick hamilton on
youtube it's only 15 20 minutes long if you're listening to this and you like patrick hamilton
and you love things that are english in a sort of either cutlery, although he wasn't English, Betchemony kind of way,
Cummings Your Way on YouTube.
Just look for Cummings Your Way, Patrick Hamilton,
and you'll find it's absolutely tremendous.
I would like to ask everybody around the table,
John, you've already said
that this might be the book you've enjoyed most
of any that we've done on Backlisted.
I said at the top that I felt it was sort of Patrick Hamilton
was the ultimate Backlisted author.
Why is it, then, that Hamilton remains perceived, I think,
as a cult writer rather than a mainstream writer?
He is not talked of in the same breath as, say, Graham Greene and George Orwell,
unless it's to say he's often thought of
as not quite as good as
Graham Greene and George Orwell. But,
why is he perennially underrated?
I think because his
focus is so small. I think because
he's looking under the microscope. I mean, Orwell
wrote about small, ordinary things,
but he also had to look at his range. It was absolutely
extraordinary. Patrick Hamilton's looking at one type of people one type of person in one type of
place I think I think you said it earlier Andy when you said he was a limited writer I hate to
feel because I love this book I really I mean it's been a total revelation to me but I think he is a rebarbative human being
he's quite hard to like, you can feel that
Hamilton would have been a difficult
person, we don't agree on this
but I always feel I could have gone
I could have met DH Lawrence
and kind of, you know, we could have had a
we could have had a... A naked wrestle?
No, not a naked wrestle but we
you know, we could have
Hamilton I just feel, was...
Hamilton was a...
I mean, he was a major league fuck-up,
but the best of him went into his books,
and I think the best of Hamilton is in this book.
I think, for me,
I think the reason why he's perennially a cult writer
or an under-the-radar writer in that respect
is that he fell at the wrong time.
Yeah.
That his subjects were, you know,
that Hangover Square feels quite dated
when you compare it to, say, if you are in the late 50s
and you've got the kind of angry young men and women,
people coming in the late 50s, early 60s.
He's under the radar.
He's under the radar for
most of that time and yet he's actually the precursor for for those writers those writers
that with Patrick Hamilton I think that when I first started reading Hangover Square the very
first book of his that I read I felt in the company of the kinds of people like Keith Waterhouse
John Brain those kinds of writers who had meant so much to me
in my mid to late teens,
because they were talking about people that I understood,
that I knew they were in a space that made sense.
And, you know, and Kingsley Amis for me,
I mean, like, it's not just rich people I struggle to read about.
I mean, campus novels I have a massive problem with but but again hamilton
occupies two things which puts him out of disadvantage he writes about ordinary people
who are not necessarily just in the in the gutter yet and yet aren't you know aren't rich or anything
like that but also the timing you know like people do do people want to read about the war when it's there isn't a kind of sense of impending loss, even though this book actually does do that very well.
I think there is an issue there where he's writing about the boring mundanity of living under an oppressive regime and this kind of sense of fear.
And this is why this book actually reading it again
now feels
so contemporary
in so many ways
that you know Thwaites
for example you could go anywhere
in this country and I go up and down the
country regularly go to smaller places
you know not cities
but towns and places all around
the UK and you hear thwaites
everywhere trothing you know even even trothing you know i think that's a really good point
i would like to add one thing to this which is that as someone who is fascinated by the sort of
ebbing and flowing of reputations and the nuances of where authors fit in the general picture at any given time.
I totally never get tired of thinking about this.
And I was thinking back to when I started as a bookseller in the early 90s.
And I was thinking about how much I loved, and indeed still love, Graham Greene. You know,
Graham Greene was a very important writer to me when I was young. And I was thinking
that what's so interesting about Patrick Hamilton is he was actually, you know, he was a successful
writer in his lifetime. He was well-reviewed and widely read, and his books sold. And by
the mid-60s, he was forgotten. Green who was still
alive when I worked as a bookseller was in he through his lifetime considered
one of the preeminent British novelists of the 20th century. I would be fairly
sure that here in 2017 Patrick Hamilton is now more widely read than Graham Greene.
I've got no way of proving that.
No, I don't know.
I feel in terms of a writer who's referenced and talked about.
I hope that's true because I think...
I think you'd be surprised.
No, not even close.
I'm going out on a limb and we haven't done Backlisted on Greene,
but all Greene's books are disfigured by Catholicism.
I can't wait till we do Green, because I will
be disagreeing with you.
I reckon I would
lay money down, I would lay
down 50 quid.
I would lay down 50 quid
at the end of the affair, and
the power and the glory together
have sold more than all
of Patrick Hamilton put together all of
his stuff over the last four years last year on my phone here no you haven't you have not
I'm afraid you're wrong I'll take your money I'm afraid I'm afraid book scan it's not
book scanning it's not on your phone it's not on your phone I know this I know this I've been
through your phone um uh I did I did have. I know this. I know this. I've been through your phone.
I did have a point to make about Patrick Hamilton.
Many years ago in Select magazine,
my magazine of choice during the early 1990s,
there was a review of Dog Man Star by Suede.
There is the line in it,
and I always think about this whenever I think about cult writers or whatever.
The line was, when people have forgotten whether this whenever I think about cult writers or whatever, the line was
when people have forgotten whether smashing pumpkins
were animal, vegetable or mineral
there will always be someone
late at night with their
headphones on listening to Dogman's Star
and I always
think that that's kind of
the case and I think that's where Hamilton
fits in perfectly
is that he will never be
in the same rank as Green or
Orwell but there will always be someone
late at night reading
Patrick Hamilton.
It comes back, you know, Andy
your love for absolute beginners. There's just
some
writers who get things and the thing about
Hamilton, what I feel about him is he
fixes something
more perfectly more
there's
no other writer who can do
what he does and yet somehow
it's like the brilliant line
that Russell Hoban once said
he said you know my readers
trade in used paperbacks
if you love Russell Hoban
you give your copy of Russell Hoban to somebody else.
I feel that's it.
You know that bookseller kind of telegraph we have?
It's when you read a Patrick Hamilton novel,
you say, you've got to read this.
You've got to read this.
And yet somehow Graham Greene is up there
as a settled star on the literary firmament.
I don't think Hamilton ever will be.
We don't need him to be.
Let's raise a glass
to both
Patrick Hamilton, to Batlist
and all you lovely people for listening through to the end
of this. We'll see you next
time.
Somewhere down the road.
Oh, in fact,
are we still going?
God help us.
God help all of us.
Everyone, all of us.
The end.
The end.
It's kind of anti-Tiny Tim, isn't it?
Yes, it is.
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