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Travels with My Aunt: Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition

 
Travels with My Aunt: Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition   Author: Graham Greene
By Penguin Books
Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5Average rating of 4.0/5

List Price: £10.25

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Product Details
Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 823.912
EAN: 9780143039006
ISBN: 0143039008
Label: Penguin Books
Manufacturer: Penguin Books
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 288
Publication Date: 2004-09-15
Publisher: Penguin Books
Studio: Penguin Books

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Customer Reviews

Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5 Surely a masterpiece., 2008-04-09
Henry Pulling is a recently retired bank manager. He was offered an arrangement after many years of devoted service when his bank was taken over by another. He is looking forward to spending more time with the dahlias that are his pride and joy, and also rubbing shoulders with his former customers in Southwood, an unremarkable London suburb that seems to be populated entirely by retired officers from the armed forces. He mentions Omo quite a lot and is vaguely embarrassed by the fact that he shares initials with a well known brand of sauce. And then he meets his long lost aunt, Augusta Bertram.

Henry's mother has just died. His father died forty years before. He never really knew the father and his relationship with his mother was perennially tense. After the funeral, Agatha takes him on one side and calmly informs him that his father was something of a rogue and that his "mother" was really his step-mother, his true biological mother being one of his father's bits on the side. Henry Pulling finds himself attracted to his aunt, not because she is something of an eccentric, unpredictable old bird, but also because she retains, somewhere, the secret of his own origins. When she suggests they travel together, he eagerly accompanies, despite the fact that he has never been one for straying far from the nest.

Graham Greene has Henry and Aunt Augusta travel as far afield as Brighton, Istanbul and South America. Together, via stories from Aunt Agatha's past, they relive the first half of the twentieth century, from late Victorian roots to 1960s drug culture, from fascism to dictators, from war to peace. Throughout, Henry Pulling comes across as a genial, predictable gent in his late fifties, whilst Aunt Agatha seems to be a confirmed member of Hell's Grannies. Europe - the world even - seems to be littered with her conquests, with hardly a country passing by without some faded memory of hers coming back to life.

As it unfolds, Travels With My Aunt reveals itself as a true masterpiece of twentieth century fiction. The characters really do live through the century's history, but the events are never pressed onto the surface of their lives. On the contrary, they are entwined within the fabric of Aunt Augusta's being, a character whose complexity unfolds as the story progresses.

Throughout Henry Pulling is a truly comic character. He seems out of his depth, naïve, a product of an over-protected suburban existence, over-burdened with the assumptions of his upbringing. But he comes into his own and eventually it is no surprise when he describes his new life, which is almost as far removed from a suburban bank manager's office as it is possible to get. And, of course, the story's denouement, when it arrives, is also no surprise. And is not less because of that.

There are many laughs along the way, not least as a result of Henry's being constantly taken aback by his aunt's bluntness and lust for life. Particularly memorable, however, were scenes where Henry put his personal foot in it. On Paraguay's national day, he carries a red scarf on his aunt's advice so he can show allegiance to the ruling party and the dictator. He just happens to be outside the military and political headquarters when he sneezes and uses the scarf as a hankie. A nearby soldier records the snotting into the national emblem as deeply insulting and irreverent, duly beats him up and slaps him in jail. Situation comedy at its best.

Travels With My Aunt is quite simply a must read and must re-read book. Graham Greene's immense skill provides a simplicity of style and construction to communicate a complex plot alongside powerful characterisation, and all this accomplished with true but elegant economy. It is a beautifully crafted book, expertly written, full of surprises and humour, all set against a deadly serious plot: surely a masterpiece.


Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5 Dated but Entertaining, 2008-04-04
This novel seems very dated when viewed through the jaded lens of the twenty first century but I suspect it felt that way even on it's day of publication. The central character seems out of place in the swinging sixties and belongs back in thirties and the realm of the stiff upper lip. Not so his outrageous ageing Aunt, who drags Henry Pulling almost by the neck, into the open air and confronts him with present day (the 60's) realities.

The first half of this novel details Henry first meeting his Aunt and being persuaded on a voyage from London to Istanbul. The style is largely anecdotal and hugely entertaining. Greene's prose is second to none and his velvety words slip past effortlessly. The second half of the book is darker and less about the journey than the destination. The light tone and comedy of the first section are lost; characters become more sinister and the novel is driven by plot rather than character. Unusually for Greene the plotting is rather lazy and unsatisfactory, leaving the reader disappointed. After an excellent beginning I had expected rather more.

Travels with my Aunt is still a very good novel, written by a master craftsmen and definitely worth reading but I have been left somewhat deflated by a second half that pales when compared with the brilliance of the first.


Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5 Brilliant writing, 2008-10-23
Travels with my aunt is a fabulous book that should encourage anyone embarking on the 2nd half of their life that many adventures, romance and travel can and will happen if you want it too and have the energy to carry it through.

Bank manager, dahlia enthusiast and all round dull and boring person Henry has his life turned upside down after meeting flamboyant Aunt Augusta at his mother's funeral. Fascinated by such an extraordinary lady he is roped in to travel with her to a variety of places, always first class and on the edge of criminal activity Henry gradually opens his eyes to pleasures and scenes not previously known to him.

His naïve musings on new events in his life are quite hilarious. `I wondered what all the men here did for a living. It seems extraordinary that one could watch such a scene during banking hours.' Henry says to himself upon seeing a naked black woman dancing with a feather boa in a club.

The real star of this book though must by Aunt Augusta, quite unlike the woman portrayed on the front of many of these publications she is in fact a racy woman of 75 years with a long colourful past involving a string of very virile men and she has no hang ups about continuing her slightly debauched life for as long as she can. Knocking back as much champagne as possible at every opportunity Aunt A then launches into stories about the men and adventures of her life.

Yes this book can seem a little dated but the writing is always brilliant. Grahame Greene was an excellent writer and the quality remains.


Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5 I was expecting more, 2007-04-09
I have only read two other novels by Graham Greene - 'Brighton Rock' and 'The End of the Affair'. I enjoyed them very much and have always been telling myself to pick up more of his work. So I thought 'Travels With My Aunt' would be a good point to carry on where I left off - but I have been left disappointed...

I think what displeased me most was how the narrative structure was essentially a series of anecdotes from Aunt Augusta - all of which were fanciful and none of which were particularly amusing. Yes, she has never lost her lust for life and yes, she has seen and done some fantastic things - but her tales left me uninterested and uninspired. I felt myself wanting to say: "Get over yourself."

Wordsworth, the only black character, was hackneyed and presented in a somewhat racist light (even for 1969). Moreover, although he popped up in the most unlikely places, his presence in the plot was mostly pointless (except when cannabis was involved - a substance that Greene really does obsess about too much here in a very stuffy English way.)

The novel is supposed to be about Henry Pulling's awakening from the dull constraints of English suburbia - under the influence of his aunt. But for most of the second half of the book, the story decides to centre on the character of Mr. Visconti...a war criminal whose exploits I really couldn't have cared less about. I was hoping that the story would stick with Henry and Aunt Augusta, but it went off on a tangent and stayed on it until Aunt Augusta was eclipsed and Mr. Visconti - not present for most of the novel - took centre-stage for a rushed, unconvincing finale.

Oh, and there's a twist in the tale: but it has lost so much impact by the time it arrives that a shrug and a quietly muttered 'oh I see' may well be all that it elicits. Disappointing for Graham Greene. It hasn't turned me off him for good, but this probably wasn't the best choice from his back-catalogue.

Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5 A Good Read, 2008-10-30
A decent read.Green can't resist going back to his favourite south america themes.The book's narrator,the main character is an interesting person.He is settled,enjoys the routine and rhthym of each day.He contemplates a union with an equally routine woman client from his bank manger days.His Aunt is diametrically opposite,always on the fringes of the law and taking risks.The slight problem for me is that the aunt is actually a bit of a bore in her unrelenting misbehaviour.She lacks a depth of emotions.As the story progresses her exploits become more extreme and she becomes a little unbelievable.His persona becomes a little lost and corrupted as the story continues.
Other characters are interesting during travels abroad.Something in the way green tells a story and brings colour into the narrative through his peripheral players in the book,keeps you turning the page.
A good read,but would have been better if aunt had been written in a more vulnerable way at times to compliment the know it all attitude,and pompus demeanor