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Greene on Capri: A memoir by Shirley Hazzard

by
October 2000, no. 225

Greene on Capri: A memoir by Shirley Hazzard

Virago, 149 pp

Greene on Capri: A memoir by Shirley Hazzard

by
October 2000, no. 225

Why I’m gripped by this book I don’t know. Well, I do know. When I was in Vietnam late last year, on a gourmet tour, I purchased a pirated copy of Graham Greene’s The Quiet American, my first Greene novel. (Why I hadn’t read Greene before I also don’t know, though I’d loved his wonderfully bizarre script for The Third Man.) In Saigon I took green tea in the Hotel Continental, imagining I was sitting where Greene might have sat in the early 1950s. At last, I thought, I’m doing a bit of cultural geography. When I returned to Canberra, I read it, and immediately decided it was a great novel, extraordinarily prescient of the Vietnam War. What also impressed me was the sensibility of Fowler, the English narrator, resigned to knowing himself undignified, unkempt, duplicitous, lying, opium-enveloped, absurdly deluded in love; an active accomplice in murder, of Pyle the appalling American intelligence agent come to do good in Southeast Asia, and always innocent in his own eyes, whatever he disastrously does.

John Docker reviews 'Greene on Capri: A memoir' by Shirley Hazzard

Greene on Capri: A memoir

by Shirley Hazzard

Virago, 149 pp

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