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Half a Life
 
 

Half a Life (Paperback)

by V.S. Naipaul (Author)
3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (27 customer reviews)

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Half a Life finds the veteran Booker Prize-winning novelist VS Naipaul on familiar territory, blending autobiography and fiction in an exploration of the "half lives" of individuals brought up in the English colonies and educated in the metropolitan centre.

Naipaul's protagonist is Willie Somerset Chandran, named after Somerset Maugham's encounter with Willie's father in the 1930s, whilst travelling "to get material for a novel about spirituality". Willie travels to England for his education, where he becomes "part of the special, passing bohemian-immigrant life of London of the late 1950s". Willie soon realises that his colonial background allows him to write short stories for well-meaning white liberals. Willie soon begins "to understand that he was free to present himself as he wished" and that he could "re-make himself and his past" through his writing. The effect is suffocating rather than liberating, and he marries a vaguely sketched "girl or young woman from an African country" who has read his one published book. Willie begins another "half life" in colonial Mozambique, where he soon tires of the domestic and sexual tedium of plantation life, and flees to Germany, mournfully reflecting that "I have been hiding for too long".

This is classic Naipaul, with its effortless dissection of the damaging personal consequences of post-war decolonisation, but its virtue seems it primary vice, as the novel feels like a conflation of several earlier Naipaul books, including The Mimic Men and the brilliant A Bend in the River. Consequently, some readers may well find that Half a Life reads more like half a novel. --Jerry Brotton --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From Publishers Weekly

V.S. Naipaul has often been accused of being ungenerous, especially in his scathing accounts of Third World countries. His slim new novel tacitly poses the question of the worth of generosity without clarity and purpose. Willie Chandran, the central figure here, is born in India in the 1930s, the son of a bitter mixed caste marriage between a Brahmin and a "backwards" person, or untouchable. Willie learns as a child to despise his father's ineffectuality and his mother's coarseness. His father's vague motive in marrying his mother had been to break out of the provincial mold in which he was raised and to "live out a life of sacrifice," but too late he discovered that he retained all the prejudices of his caste and despised his wife. Going to London on a scholarship, Willie mixes in immigrant and bohemian circles, and even publishes a book. Naipaul's detached rendering of Willie's travails shows what happens to a young man who pieces his life together around the great, central dread of not being taken seriously the image of his father as an "idler" is always in his mind. Willie meets Ana, a woman of mixed African descent, when she writes him a fan letter about his novel. They become lovers. Willie goes back with Ana to her large outback estate in the "half and half" world of a Portuguese colony like Mozambique, where he remains for 18 years. Naipaul's plain narrative is studded with beautifully realized scenes, such as the London party at which a newspaper editor reads his own, self-written obituary, or the night Willie goes to an African brothel with Alvaro, an estate overseer. Although this novel does not aspire to the breadth of Naipaul's earlier fiction, it reminds us that his vision is on par with Conrad's or Graham Greene's. 40,000 first printing; 5-city author tour.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Customer Reviews

27 Reviews
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4 star:
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3 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.4 out of 5 stars (27 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars Life and love in the shadow of colonialism, Jun 17 2003
By Michael J. Mazza (Pittsburgh, PA USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
"Half a Life," by V.S. Naipaul, tells the story of Willie Chandran, born to a priestly caste father and a lower caste woman in India. The novel follows its conflicted protagonist to England and to a Portuguese colony in Africa; along the way we see both his romantic/sexual strivings and his efforts to express himself as a writer.

This book offers a fascinating glimpse at the disintegration of colonial regimes in India and Africa. This is a novel with a truly global span; Naipaul creates an intriguing group of characters and interrelationships. There are a number of characters whose relationships or backgrounds reflect the crossing of lines of caste, color, and/or ethnicity. The story is nicely enhanced by Naipaul's straightforward prose style. It's a tale of love, rebellion, loss, regret, and the quest for identity.

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1.0 out of 5 stars More of the same, May 12 2002
By Cecelia E Connally (Cleveland, Ohio USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Half a Life (Hardcover)
I'm sure that VS Naipaul is entitled to the accolades that he has received for HALF A LIFE, not for this work but on the strength of his former works. I believe that sometimes the critics feel that the time of an author has arrived and they want to reward him for his achievements. Such is probably the case in HALF A LIFE. I have read A BEND IN THE RIVER and HALF A LIFE repeats many of the same themes. Once again the main character is having sex with his friends wife or lover. Once again there is a man who is displaced from his culture and his family and trying to create a life for himself in a new world. Naipaul is a fine writer and I find much of his prose beautifully written. Someday I'd love to take a class or be in a discussion group with a Naipual scholar who could trace many of his themes and characters. But this is one book that I really can't recommend.
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1.0 out of 5 stars Slim work, slim ideas, April 15 2002
By "sivap" (San Jose, CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Half a Life (Hardcover)
V S Naipaul usually sketches on a vast canvass with a range of ideas that usually outnumber the pages in the book; However, this time, he seems to be obsessed with just a few themes, the curse of birth, caste system, inter-racial sex, unsuccessful writers, land rovers, and escapism. Again and again, he comes back to the same familiar themes, as though the slim book was written over a long time in a state of constipation for ideas; So that each time a theme came up it took so long that it was forgotten that it had already found its place in the book in a similar setting. It appears that the author wrote the book in a few spaced-out sittings and was involved in some other projects in between. I was looking forward to a satisfying read and had to actually push myself to finish this book.
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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Three Continents take us through one half of this life
Half a Life is an incredible book. First, we hear the story of Willie Chandran's father, who married out of caste, and with his wife had children whom he began to regret as he... Read more
Published on April 13 2002 by kellyke

5.0 out of 5 stars Birth is destiny
I think the central theme is that most of what happens to us depends on being born in the right bedroom; depends on our caste and place of birth. The boundaries are set for us. Read more
Published on April 9 2002 by D. P. Birkett

3.0 out of 5 stars Is a half a life better than none?
This novel ends with its protagonist at the age of forty-one. Is his life half over? Willie Chandran is the son of a Brahmin who marries far out of his caste. Read more
Published on Mar 26 2002 by J. Carroll

3.0 out of 5 stars Is half a life better than none?
This spare novel of one man's journey through half of his life making decisions of convenience is impressive and erudite. Read more
Published on Mar 14 2002 by Luan Gaines

4.0 out of 5 stars Family
This is an endless source of material. How much can one extract oneself from the family that brought you into this world, or is it a repeating cycle?
Published on Mar 11 2002 by sielaff68

4.0 out of 5 stars Not the best of his output
The first half of Naipaul's much heralded HALF A LIFE makes a fine promise that this writer can spin delectable webs. Read more
Published on Mar 5 2002 by Grady Harp

4.0 out of 5 stars Half Better Than None
Disgruntled pundits have taken to calling Naipaul's latest "Half a Novel", and it is a criticism not without justification. Read more
Published on Feb 26 2002 by Randall Ivey

5.0 out of 5 stars Have you ever taken the wrong path?
If your answer is "yes," you're going to enjoy this read. Willie Chandran, like his father before him, charts his progress in life according to others' expectations. Read more
Published on Feb 21 2002 by tamara

2.0 out of 5 stars One of Naipaul's Lesser Efforts
I was eager to read Naipaul's first novel in years even though the reviews were decidedly more polite than enthusiastic. Read more
Published on Feb 19 2002 by suetonius

1.0 out of 5 stars A poor attempt at an important subject...
I must confess that this is my first Naipaul novel; I selected it since he had just won the Nobel prize. I have never been so disappointed with a book. Read more
Published on Feb 6 2002 by Eric S. Williams

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