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- <text id=89TT2063>
- <title>
- Aug. 07, 1989: Romance, Of Course, Blooms
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Aug. 07, 1989 Diane Sawyer:Is She Worth It?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOOKS, Page 60
- Romance, of Course, Blooms
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Christopher Porterfield
- </p>
- <qt> <l>NICE WORK</l>
- <l>by David Lodge</l>
- <l>Viking; 277 pages; $18.95</l>
- </qt>
- <p> If English movies of the '80s had a team like Spencer Tracy
- and Katharine Hepburn, David Lodge's funny, adroit Nice Work
- would make an ideal vehicle for them. The novel's protagonist,
- Vic Wilcox, is a gruff but keen-witted exec struggling to turn
- around a laggard steel-parts factory in Rummidge -- "an
- imaginary city," the author informs us, "which occupies, for the
- purposes of fiction, the space where Birmingham is to be found
- on maps of the so-called real world." Vic's antagonist (and here
- the term is literal) is Robyn Penrose, an attractive, rigorously
- feminist lecturer in literature at the local university -- a
- specialist in the 19th century industrial novel, no less. To
- bolster her chance of a permanent appointment, Robyn goes along
- with a university scheme to shadow Vic's movements for one day
- a week in the interests of better academic-industrial
- understanding. The result: temperaments and cultures clash.
- Complications multiply. Romance, of course, blooms. Wittily
- rueful insights emerge.
- </p>
- <p> All of which is predictable -- but not too predictable.
- Lodge is a writer who seems to favor schematic setups precisely
- because they enable him to play sly variations on the formulas.
- Left-wing Robyn, for example, decries Vic's factory as a hellish
- model of capitalism in extremis and dismisses his maneuvers
- against rival companies as "a lot of little dogs squabbling over
- bones." Yet while tagging along to a trade show in Frankfurt,
- she can't resist helping him bring off a negotiating coup for
- a piece of automatic machinery that will replace several
- workers. Vic charges that Robyn's scholarly concerns have no
- place on society's balance sheet and that the university's
- elitism violates her own populist ideals. Yet he soon starts
- turning up on campus, helping Robyn's faculty committee
- reorganize a syllabus and shyly thumbing a volume of Tennyson
- in one of her tutorials.
- </p>
- <p> Lodge takes care to keep these two evenly matched, each as
- disconcertingly perceptive and sweetly ridiculous as the other.
- Sexually, it is Robyn who is the lighthearted aggressor and Vic
- who, after spending a single night with her, turns into a
- love-sick calf and begins making alarming declarations about
- leaving his "podge" of a wife. Robyn, ever the teacher,
- expounds poststructuralist literary theory to him in bed,
- explaining that what he mistakes for love is merely a rhetorical
- device, a bourgeois fallacy. "Haven't you ever been in love,
- then?" he asks. "When I was younger," she replies, "I allowed
- myself to be constructed by the discourse of romantic love for
- a while, yes."
- </p>
- <p> Bright as its comedy is, Nice Work takes place within a
- sort of psychological smog spread by England's economy. All the
- characters, whether they know it or not, are indirect victims
- of Thatcherism -- Robyn because of the cuts in public spending
- that have ravaged her university's budget; Vic because of
- Rummidge's desperate rust-belt competition, which causes his
- firm to be taken over and him to get the sack; even Robyn's
- lover Charles because of the post-Big Bang financial
- speculations that lure him from academe and leave him adrift.
- This theme weighs a bit heavily on the book and keeps it from
- having quite the buoyancy and sparkle of Lodge's earlier campus
- novels, Small World and Changing Places. However, a pair of
- holdovers from those novels, the long-suffering Professor Philip
- Swallow and his American counterpart, the wheeler-dealer Morris
- Zapp, put in welcome minor appearances.
- </p>
- <p> As Zapp's walk-on particularly illustrates, Lodge has more
- verve in academic settings than in his conscientiously
- worked-up factory scenes, and naturally so. He taught literature
- at the University of Birmingham from 1960 to 1987, and still
- holds an honorary chair there. But in either sphere his writing
- displays the wicked eye of a born satirist. Swallow's smile
- exposes teeth set at odd angles, "like tombstones in a neglected
- churchyard." A receptionist at Vic's factory strokes her
- platinum-blond hairdo "as if it were an ailing pet." This is a
- novel that lives up to its own billing: it's nice work.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-