Indeed it gradually begins to rival ‘Old’ England and threatens to supersede it. The project is monstrous, risky, and vastly successful. Starting from the premise that most tourists are interested only in the top attractions and are as satisfied with a replica as with the real thing, he constructs on the island ‘The Project’, a vast heritage centre containing everything ‘English’, from Buck House to Stonehenge, from Manchester United to the White Cliffs of Dover. In Julian Barnes’s new novel, the grotesque, visionary tycoon Sit Jack Pitman takes the saying literally and does exactly that. Because it is Saturday and I am a bit lazy and it’s quite decent, here’s the blurb from the cover:Īs every schoolboy knows, you can fit the whole of England on the Isle of Wight. Also, the premise of this book is fascinating. Why did I buy it if I was not amazed by his other books? Because I like how Barnes uses the language, his rich prose is almost tasty, even if I am not moved by the plot or characters. I think I have Levels of Life on my Kindle and England, England I bought last year in a second-hand bookstore. I only read two books by Barnes: The Sense of an Ending, which I liked, but not loved and Keeping an Eye Open: Essays on Art, which I loved at the beginning, but it became a bit repetitive by the end (it’s a collection of essays, so probably better suited to read over a longer period of time than in one go, as I did).
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