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House of Meetings

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

House of Meetings
First edition cover
AuthorMartin Amis
IllustratorPeter Mendelsund and Chip Kidd (US edition)
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
PublisherJonathan Cape[1]
Publication date
2006
Media typePrint (Hardback)
Pages198

House of Meetings, by Martin Amis, is a 2006 novel about two brothers who share a common love interest while living in a Soviet gulag during the last decade of Stalin's rule. This novel was written by Amis during a two-year-long self-imposed exile in Uruguay following the release and tepid reception afforded to his 2003 novel Yellow Dog. The writing of House of Meetings "precipitated (another) creative crisis" for Amis,[2] which Amis reflected upon in 2010:

"You see those Posy Simmonds cartoons of people by the pool having cocktails and saying into the Dictaphone, 'On the second day, the last child died,'" he says. "And I was in Uruguay, with my beautiful wife and beautiful daughters, living a completely stressless life. So I had to do my suffering on the page and, Christ, did I do it. I was very nervous about that book."[2]

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Transcription

Plot summary

The novel centers on the modern-day (2004) recollections of the unnamed narrator/protagonist of his time spent in an Arctic gulag and the years that followed. The recollections are presented in the form of a memoir sent to the narrator's American stepdaughter, Venus. One of the primary plot elements is the complex relationship between the protagonist and his younger half-brother, Lev, who later joins him in the camp. Through many difficult revelations and trials, they eventually survive the harsh conditions of the camp and then must face a further challenge: re–acclimatizing to everyday life.

Literary significance and criticism

The novel's release was greeted with generally positive reviews; see, e.g., The Economist's October review.[3] In Literary Review, Sam Leith wrote: “Amis mistakes the nature of his own talent. His Dickensian comic mode is his strongest suit – gravitas or moral clairvoyancy his shortest. But Amis still fails more interestingly than most of his peers succeed.”[4]

Footnotes

  1. ^ House of Meetings Archived 2011-05-26 at the Wayback Machine at Fantastic Fiction
  2. ^ a b Martin Amis and the sex war, Times Online, January 24, 2010
  3. ^ "Comeback man". economist.com. 12 October 2006. Retrieved 12 August 2007.
  4. ^ "Sam Leith - A Wintry Tale". Literary Review. 5 October 2023. Retrieved 5 October 2023.

External links

Further reading

  • Bentley, Nick (2014). Martin Amis (Writers and Their Work). Northcote House Publishing Ltd.
  • Finney, Brian (2013). Martin Amis (Routledge Guides to Literature). Routledge.


This page was last edited on 5 October 2023, at 10:33
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