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- <text id=89TT0257>
- <title>
- Jan. 23, 1989: A Triumph Of Trying-Really-Hard
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Jan. 23, 1989 Barbara Bush:The Silver Fox
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOOKS, Page 66
- A Triumph of Trying-Really-Hard
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By R. Z. Sheppard
- </p>
- <qt> <l>INCLINE OUR HEARTS</l>
- <l>by A. N. Wilson</l>
- <l>Viking; 250 pages; $17.95</l>
- </qt>
- <p> Of all Britain's young literary lions, Andrew Norman Wilson,
- 38, has been busiest at marking his territory. Since the
- mid-1970s he has published eleven satiric novels, plus
- biographies of John Milton, Sir Walter Scott, Hilaire Belloc,
- and last year's much and justly praised Tolstoy. In addition,
- Wilson has written about Christian theology and religious
- affairs (How Can We Know?; The Church in Crisis).
- </p>
- <p> Add to this diverse plenty a consistently high quality of
- thought and prose, and one has the makings of a Man of Letters
- -- a quaint designation in this era of celebrity scribes, but
- valid nevertheless. Wilson's formal structure and traditional
- style indicate an impatience with the sort of contemporary
- fiction that makes its own creation a central concern. What
- matters to him is the contradictions of human nature and the
- religious impulses that seek to understand the desires of the
- flesh and the spirit.
- </p>
- <p> These are assuredly old and durable subjects, yet ones that
- Wilson probes with a comic irony sharpened on the modern world.
- Inevitably, his work has been compared to the novels of Evelyn
- Waugh. There are similarities but only "up to a point," as a
- subordinate in Waugh's Scoop responded when Lord Copper
- blustered that Yokohama is the capital of Japan. Wilson's
- comedy is more tolerant than that of the malicious master. Both
- authors, however, project intimidating confidence in their
- styles and possess a technical virtuosity that makes the
- difficult look easy.
- </p>
- <p> Not surprisingly, these qualities can be found in the
- character of Julian Ramsay, narrator and groping intelligence of
- Incline Our Hearts. Born in London with the coming of World War
- II, he is orphaned by German bombs and sent to Norfolk to be
- raised by his Aunt Deirdre and Uncle Roy, a local vicar.
- Rounding out the rectory household is Felicity, a laconic and
- inaptly named teenage cousin, who leaves her room long enough to
- be impregnated and abandoned by Raphael Hunter,
- scholar-scoundrel and the novel's sinister presence.
- </p>
- <p> These are the central players in what evolves from a surface
- entertainment into a deceptively rich and complex novel about
- coming of age (if not about the age itself). Julian's story
- brims with figures and rituals familiar to British fiction:
- barmy relatives, eccentric aristocrats, a public school -- the
- "English Gulag" -- where the headmaster enjoys hitting boys with
- sticks. As a teenager, Julian spends a summer in Brittany, where
- French is taught by Mme. de Normandin and sex by her daughter
- Barbara. Later, while trying to avoid work in the army, he
- learns another of life's essential lessons: "Not-really-trying
- is just as much effort as trying-really-hard. The only
- difference between the two modes of activity is that
- not-really-trying receives no reward."
- </p>
- <p> It is one of Wilson's deeper ironies that the callow but
- decent Julian lacks conviction while the older and more
- experienced Hunter is full of indecent passion and ambition.
- Hunter's conquest of Felicity is pure business, part of
- securing the private papers of James Petworth Lampitt, a
- deceased minor writer who was a friend of her father's. Hunter
- succeeds, and by playing up Lampitt's possible suicide and
- probable homosexuality, turns the life of a justifiably
- forgotten literary figure into a scandalous best seller. "One
- accomplishes nothing so stylishly as the thing in which one has
- no belief," thinks Julian. "Gigolos probably make better lovers
- than those weak with desire; the best politicians are those who
- are most like actors; the most influential churchmen are those
- who seem furthest from the ideals of the Gospel."
- </p>
- <p> Elsewhere, this demoralizing line of reasoning leads to more
- profound conclusions. Unlike most autobiographers, Julian
- concedes that what he remembers is only a crude map of his
- former self. "Our attempts to recover or uncover the past and
- what really happened are doomed at the outset to failure
- because it is we ourselves who are doing the investigation," he
- admits. "We move on. We become someone else."
- </p>
- <p> At novel's end, Julian, harboring ambitions to become an
- actor, is in church listening to Uncle Roy intone the Ten
- Commandments and thinking that the one prohibiting adultery
- will be hard to keep. This, and his remark about politicians
- resembling actors, suggest that Julian may grow up to be a
- successful public man who gets entangled in a sex scandal.
- Given Wilson's production rate, it is unlikely that readers will
- have to wait long to find out. Incline Our Hearts is the first
- novel of a proposed trilogy. If the next two are as good as the
- first, readers will have a small classic on their hands.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-