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Headlong
  

Headlong (Audio CD)

by Michael Frayn (Author), Frederick Davidson (Narrator)
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (74 customer reviews)

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1 new from CDN$ 122.90 1 used from CDN$ 115.90

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From Amazon.com

With its sumptuous surfaces and alluring sense of gravitas, classic Dutch painting has fascinated writers for centuries. It's easy to see why. Giant religious representations and gaudy classical scenes already have the weight of literature behind them. But an enigmatic portrait or dimly lit interior seems like a virtual incubator for narrative, and now Michael Frayn joins the Netherlandish fray in Headlong, which features a Bruegel canvas in the starring role.

The other star of the novel is youngish art historian Martin Clay (a Hugh Grant character gone to fat), who identifies the lost Bruegel in a tumbledown country home. The picture elicits an immediate shock of recognition:

Already, somewhere in those first few instants, something has begun to stir inside me. In my head, in the pit of my stomach. It's as if the sun's emerging from the clouds, and the world's changing in front of my eyes, from grey to golden. I can feel the warmth of the sunlight spreading over my skin, passing like a wave of beneficence through my entire body.
The sight of this masterwork glimmering through the "grimy pane of time" fires up Martin's customarily dilettantish intellect, and he decides to secure it for the nation--and make himself a fortune--without revealing its true value to the owner. Much double-dealing, bamboozling, and suppressed hysteria ensue as he and the owner try to outfox each other. Yet the heart of the novel is Martin's search for the meaning of the painting that has become his "triumph and torment and downfall." Bouncing from gallery to museum to library, he delivers an extended (and entertaining) lesson on iconography and landscape.

As Martin's obsession takes hold, the pace of the novel also accelerates into a breathless rush of action, comic anguish, and scholarly speculation. Not surprisingly, some of Martin's machinations go haywire, which leads to a certain amount of irritating slapstick--shady deals in underground parking lots, art treasures being tipped into the back of a filthy Land Rover, and so forth. But even if he makes his plot work overtime, Frayn is superb in the quest for the meaning of art, not to mention the lure of money and intellectual reputation. And for that alone, Headlong deserves to be called picture perfect. --Eithne Farry --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.



From Publishers Weekly

Frayn, a highly successful playwright (Noises Off) as well as a novelist of note (A Landing on the Sun; Now You Know), is an odd combination of skilled farceur and scholar, and these strands in his work seem somewhat at odds in this new novel, his first in six years. It is an intellectual comedy, veering occasionally into knockabout, revolving around a philosophical historian, Martin Clay, and his discovery, in the dilapidated manor house of a frightful country neighbor, of a painting he believes to be a missing Bruegel. The comedy arises from Martin's efforts to ascertain its provenance, raise some money for a token payment and somehow spirit the painting away from the churlish Tony Churt, calm the suspicions of his art historian wife, Kate, who is surprised by his sudden interest in her field, and fend off the advances of the highly flirtatious Laura Churt. Frayn is wonderfully funny about English country life, the mustier byways of art history, the art auction business and the deviousness that lurks within apparently mild-mannered art historians. But he has obviously read up extensively on Bruegel, his period and the possible political symbolism of the series of paintings of the seasons to which Churt's picture apparently belongs; and Frayn cannot resist giving the benefits of his scholarship back to the reader, at often exhaustive length, entirely halting his promisingly frolicsome narrative in the process. His attempts to give his lighthearted plot some intellectual weight almost sink the good partsAa pity, since Frayn proves himself again and again a highly civilized entertainer, and the good parts are both funny and true. 50,000 first printing; 7-city author tour.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Customer Reviews

74 Reviews
5 star:
 (26)
4 star:
 (24)
3 star:
 (9)
2 star:
 (5)
1 star:
 (10)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.7 out of 5 stars (74 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most helpful customer reviews

 
5.0 out of 5 stars A book that offers a lot!, Jan 7 2007
By Ian Gordon Malcomson (Smithers, Canada) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Headlong (Paperback)
I picked this book up at a remainder sale and I'm glad I did. It offers a most intensive and rewarding read at a couple of levels. For starters,if you know little about Dutch art of the 16th century, this story provides some interesting tidbits about Bruegel and his many interpretations about life during the Counter-Reformation. Against this background, Frayn - a playwright by trade - throws in a complicated, modern day thriller involving the identification and theft of some of Bruegel's paintings of town scenes. The climax to the story is both farce and serious comedy, which only proves that Frayn has written a gem. Keeping the past, present, and future in constant balance throughout the plot is one of the book's endearing features. At the end, the reader, too, has to decide whether the reclamation of antiquity is worth imperiling one's posterity. A great read!
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5.0 out of 5 stars Stunning book!, Jun 24 2003
By M. Warren (San Francisco, CA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Headlong (Hardcover)
This is one of the better books I have read in a long time. I know nothing about Dutch art in the 1600's, but I don't have to. Frayn lays everything out for you, and the art history is a vital and exciting element of the book.

The book is so well written, you understand exactly what motivates the main character. Frayn's writing style is easy to read, but very well developed and intelligent. I had to force myself to slow down, I was so caught up in the plot, but wanted to enjoy the writing.

Excellent book!

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3.0 out of 5 stars Interesting art history, but the comedy wasn't great, Jun 5 2002
By Kim Farrell (Cupertino, CA, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Head-Long (Paperback)
A couple from London are at their country home for the summer (they are both professors - he of philosophy, she of art history). They are invited to the house of one of their neighbors for dinner, and asked to appraise some paintings they're thinking of selling. The husband (the main character and narrator of the story) thinks one of the paintings (held in low regard by the couple) is actually a long-lost painting by Bruegel, a Netherlandish painter of the mid-1500's. The painting may be part of a series of six (or more) paintings depicting characteristic activities of the peasants during the year, only five of which are currently accounted for (in real life - this novel does try to stick to the historical facts).

About one-third of the book's text advanced the plot of how the main character was going to get his hands on this painting, and the rest was a narrative of his research into Bruegel and the time he lived to try to find hints that could help him prove this was actually the lost painting he thought it was. I found the part that advanced the plot to be less than enthralling; the characters came across as rather slimy and the events just left a bad taste in my mouth; the humor just didn't work for me. However, the part describing the art history and political history of Bruegel's times was interesting, and it was intruging to see how a real historian could go about doing his research into a lost work of art.

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Most recent customer reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Entertaining farce
I was waffling on reading this one but a friend gave me the final nudge I needed and I'm awfully glad he did. Read more
Published on Feb 17 2002 by Fanoula Sevastos

4.0 out of 5 stars What a frolic!
Michael Frayn is very current with his plays "Copenhagen" and "Noises Off" delighting audiences bicoastally. Read more
Published on Nov 30 2001 by Grady Harp

5.0 out of 5 stars a real page-turner for people who do not like "page-turners"
First of all this is one of the few underrated books in amazon. I have just finished reading it and I still feel the thrill, speed and colors of it. Read more
Published on Sep 7 2001 by Calvin Hobbes

5.0 out of 5 stars You Have To Be Dead To Think This Isn't Funny
Finding lost medieval paintings just to spite your wife? Well, no. It's to avoid work, really. In Frayn's world the two are not incompatible. In fact, they're inseparable.
Published on Jul 3 2001 by James M. Yeager

4.0 out of 5 stars Ah, iconography....
Michael Frayn's "Headlong" is a fun, funny tale of intrigue with the added kick of being a repository of "Northern Renaissance" art tidbits and curiousities. Read more
Published on Jun 2 2001 by James T. King

3.0 out of 5 stars great Dutch (art) history lesson, not-so-great novel
'Headlong' seems to be the case of where an obviously gifted writer decides to write a thinly disguised story of himself and/or his passion. Read more
Published on April 27 2001 by lazza

4.0 out of 5 stars Art history meets detective story meets morality play
Philosopher Martin Clay is asked by a neighbor to appraise a few paintings; he's unimpressed with all but one, a pastoral scene that he believes to be a long-lost Bruegel. Read more
Published on Mar 25 2001 by Carol S.

5.0 out of 5 stars A Delightful Romp Through the World of Art
I was given a copy of HEADLONG quite by chance and loved it. The often tedious relm of art history has never come alive quite like this before. Read more
Published on Mar 25 2001 by Ben Erickson

4.0 out of 5 stars Intellectual Property
"Headlong" is a very entertaining sort of novel that revolves around a wonderful plot device: a man finds, in his boorish neighbor's house, a neglected painting be... Read more
Published on Feb 21 2001 by Falco Gingrich

4.0 out of 5 stars Fiction for the sake of art
This is a novel about art and obsession, written in turns as mystery and as farce. The mystery concerns how a long-lost painting by Pieter Bruegel the Elder could have turned up... Read more
Published on Jan 30 2001 by R. Griffiths

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