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The End of the Affair
The 100 Best Novels
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Week 71- The End of the Affair by Graham Greene
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I find this an interesting choice. It wasn't very well received when we read it as a group. I personally gave it 2*s but I think many of us found it a bit boring and found the characters too sad and destructive.
(view spoiler)
Personally I would have chosen Brighton Rock over this as a much more interesting, compelling read.
(view spoiler)
Personally I would have chosen Brighton Rock over this as a much more interesting, compelling read.
I was thinking the same think Heather! Nice how different people can have totally different impression of the same book!

Shirley wrote: "Yes, I wasn't particularly enamoured by this book when I read it. I may try again sometime, perhaps I just wasn't in the right mood at the time, I don't know..."
Definitly I didn't like it as well!
Definitly I didn't like it as well!

Gill - you may be getting it sooner than you think ;)


I'm planning on reading Our Man in Havana very soon.
I did like the start of the article which I copied in the first post which explains why he picked this particular book
I did like the start of the article which I copied in the first post which explains why he picked this particular book



I'm currently reading a collection of letters between Evelyn Waugh and Nancy Mitford, which has fabulous gossip about other literary figures.
This is a snippet Evelyn wrote to Nancy in 1950 -
'I am obsessed by poverty at the moment. But not so much as the multi-millionaire Graham Greene, the socialist, who I gather has been sniffing around Chantilly'
I love reading what authors were saying about each other!

I found that aspect was one I liked best when I read Words in Air: The Complete Correspondence Between Elizabeth Bishop and Robert Lowell -- in their case, they exchanged gossip about Robert Frost (they didn't like him), T.S. Eliot, Ezra Pound (they did like him), Marianne Moore etc.
Jean wrote: "LOL! I wonder who was best at bitching, Evelyn or Nancy! :D"
Ha ha Jean! :D
It is interesting to read commentary by writers who have a lot of character. Leslie, I'm more and more interested in reading that book of correspondence. It's just so long!
Years ago, I really enjoyed The Delicacy and Strength of Lace: Letters Between Leslie Marmon Silko and James Wright, a book of correspondence between the American poet James Wright and the Native American poet & writer Leslie Marmon Silko that she published after his death.
Ha ha Jean! :D
It is interesting to read commentary by writers who have a lot of character. Leslie, I'm more and more interested in reading that book of correspondence. It's just so long!
Years ago, I really enjoyed The Delicacy and Strength of Lace: Letters Between Leslie Marmon Silko and James Wright, a book of correspondence between the American poet James Wright and the Native American poet & writer Leslie Marmon Silko that she published after his death.

That is one still on my TBR
I've only read three books by Greene so far: The End of the Affair, Our Man in Havana, and The Third Man. Each of them was vastly different, but I liked them all in their own ways. I definitely want to read more of him, particularly the one you mention Alice!
Books mentioned in this topic
The End of the Affair (other topics)Our Man in Havana (other topics)
The Third Man (other topics)
The Heart of the Matter (other topics)
The Heart of the Matter (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
James Wright (other topics)Leslie Marmon Silko (other topics)
Graham Greene (other topics)
From the article
"There are many Greenes, and almost all of them – the thriller writer (The Third Man), the entertainer (Our Man in Havana), the contemporary political novelist (The Quiet American), the polemicist (The Comedians) and the serious religious writer (The Power and the Glory) – deserve consideration in this series. I’ve chosen The End of the Affair because it blurs the line he drew between his “entertainments” and his more serious work. The novel owes its inspiration to the conventions of romantic fiction while at the same time transcending genre. Crucially, it dates from Greene’s best years, the age of postwar austerity that also nurtured the previous author (No 70) in this series, George Orwell."
This was our classics read for Aug-Sept 2014. You can read our discussion thread here