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Rating:  Summary: minor, but worthwhile Review: David Lodge is justly revered as both one of the best comic novelists of recent decades and as a writer who explores serious moral themes through his satire. Folks then were somewhat disappointed when this novella was published, because it's not quite up to the standards of his novels. Perhaps they're being a tad fanatical. As Mr. Lodge acknowledges up front, Home Truths began life as a play and for purposes of this novelization he did not make major alterations. This leaves it with all the unnaturalness of theater--a single setting, just four characters, and a reliance on dialogue--despite the new format. You can either accept the limitations this imposes and be grateful for a chance to read an awkward but worthwhile piece that wasn't coming to a theater near you anytime soon, or you can dwell on the matter and not enjoy the book. Adrian Ludlow is a somewhat accomplished but now mostly silent author who's "retired" to an isolated English cottage with his wife, Eleanor. Over breakfast one morning they agonize over, and thrill to, a newspaper interview their old friend, screenwriter Sam Sharp, gave to an up and coming journalist, Fanny Tarrant, who's made her reputation by eviscerating the self-absorbed celebrity subjects of her profiles. A representative sample from the story on Sam reads: The first thing you notice about Samuel Sharp's study is that it's plastered with trophies, certificates and citations for prizes and awards, and framed press photographs of Samuel Sharp, like the interior of an Italian restaurant. The second thing you notice is the full-length mirror on one wall. "It's to give the room a feeling of space," the writer explained, but you can't help thinking there's another reason. His eyes keep sliding sideways, drawn irresistibly by this mirror even while he's speaking to you. I went to see Samuel Sharp wondering why he had been so unlucky in matrimony. I left thinking I knew the answer: the man's insufferable vanity. It gets worse. But the truth is even these old friends are enjoying seeing him get his comeuppance, because he is just as vain as he's made out to be in the article. However, Sam soon arrives at the cottage and enlists Adrian's help in a scheme to get back at Ms Tarrant. Adrian will submit to an interview too, but even as he's being profiled he'll secretly profile her and sell the resulting hatchet job to a rival paper. The middle portion of the book--Act II, if you will--consists of the counter interviews. Ms Tarrant turns out to be not only quite attractive and a decent enough sort but also an unabashed fan of Adrian's best known novel. Adrian remains guarded as he digs into her life and eventually convinces her to try his sauna. Eleanor, who'd not wished to be a party to the charade, arrives home at a guilty-looking moment and, when Adrian is out of the room, simply unloads on him to the eager journalist. In particular, she's devastating in regards to the difficulty that his inability to duplicate the success of that early novel had on their home lives. She tells a number of painful pent up truths, but tells them to someone who may now share them with the whole world. In the final act, Sam and Eleanor and Adrian,, who's stopped speaking to his wife entirely, anxiously await the arrival of the paper that will have the dreaded profile. But as they wait Ms Tarrant shows up unexpectedly. Unbeknownst to the cottagers it's just been announced that Diana was killed in a car accident while trying to escape the paparazzi, so no one's likely to read or remember a profile of forgotten novelist Adrian Ludlow. Unfortunately though, Ms Tarrant just happens to have a second piece in that morning's paper, one that's particularly harsh towards the suddenly martyred Princess. Mr. Lodge brings forward a series of interesting points here. There's the strange nature of our celebrity culture, which sees oceans of ink and film devoted to people who are rarely worth knowing about and who, more often than not, have done nothing of real value. As Fanny Tarrant says: I perform a valuable cultural function. [...] There's such a lot of hype nowadays, people confuse success with real achievement. I remind them of the difference. But there's also a strange symbiosis between the celebrity and the journalist such that there's truly no such thing as bad publicity and the supposed exposer of the ugly truths about the rich and famous ends up being just another celebrant. And what surprises all of them, people who should be wise to the rules of the game if anyone should, is how much they are affected by news of Di's death: As the sound of the TV news coverage became audible, Adrian sat down on the chaise lounge to watch with the other two [Eleanor and Sam]. "I don't know," he said. "A death can make a difference. Even the death of someone you never knew, if it's sufficiently..." "Poetic?" said Sam. "Yes, actually," said Adrian. "Arousing pity and fear, whereby to provide an outlet for such emotions." "Good old Aristotle!" said Sam. "What would we do without him?" "We pity the victim and fear for ourselves. It can have a powerful effect," said Adrian. "Be quiet, for heaven's sake," said Eleanor, who was sitting between them. "I can't hear what they're saying." A representative of some relief agency was discussing the Princess's work for victims of landmines with the anchorman. "You think we're in for a national catharsis, then?" Sam said to Adrian, leaning back and speaking behind Eleanor's back. "Conceivably," said Adrian. And when the papers finally come, with a story about their own lives, they stay glued to the TV instead. A full novel would have given Mr. Lodge an opportunity to spin out his own ideas about the strange vicarious lives we lead--where a modern nation can become obsessed by the murder trial of a former football star or by the death of an oft scorned royal--but he at least presents some questions for us to ponder. And, like all his work, it's very amusing. If you approach the book with a willingness to accept it for what it is, you'll certainly enjoy it.
Rating:  Summary: Minor (for Lodge) but still above average . . . Review: I'm a great fan of Lodge's novels, so I was surprised to find a title published in the UK in 1999 with which I was not familiar. Short, too -- only 115 pages. It turns out to be a novelization of a stage play, which means it's about 95 percent dialogue. Which is okay with me, since Lodge is very good at divulging character through dialogue. This one is about Adrian Ludlow, ex-novelist, now living with his wife in a cottage under the flight path from Gatwick, and his long-time friend, Sam Sharp, a financially very successful screenwriter. It's the early summer of 1997 and Sam has recently been savaged by a London newspaper interviewer called Fanny Tarrant -- one of those paparazzi-in-print whose reputations are built on making gleeful mincemeat of the famous. There are any number of editors who would like to see Fanny taken down a peg or three, and Sam has a plan for revenge. Fanny also had approached Adrian about an interview and he, being no fool, had declined. But what if he were to agree, and then write his own scathing counter-interview, turning her own methods back upon her? Adrian agrees, not entirely for Sam's sake, . . . but, of course, none of it goes quite according to plan. Not for Adrian, not for his wife, Eleanor, not even for Fanny. As Lodge quotes from the OED, a "home truth" is "a wounding mention of a person's weakness," and that's what this piece is about, in spades. This isn't one of Lodge's major efforts, but it's certainly worth reading.
Rating:  Summary: Light but interesting Review: Many excellent books have been adapted into good plays, but it often doesn't work quite so well when it's reversed. "Home Truths," originally a play penned by the same author, is not amazing but it is amusing and occasionally thought-provoking. Adrian Ludlow and Sam Sharp were best friends in the sixties, but now are merely "old friends." Adrian published one much-loved book and some mediocre ones before going into semi-retirement with his wife Eleanor; Sam, on the other hand, is a rising screenplay writer in Hollywood. But when the acid-tongued Fanny Tarrant writes a humiliating article about Sam, he entreats his old pals to help him. Adrian tries to dig some dirt on Fanny, while revealing personal details about himself -- that he and Sam both slept with Eleanor in the sixties, when everyone was experimenting with relationships. Eleanor is enraged when she learns of this, and Sam isn't too pleased either. Will Fanny publish the embarrassing story? It's not a huge or deep story, but it makes a sort of witty commentary on the media and how they affect and are affected by the people they report on. The rather exaggerated media article and the material on Princess Di (a woman whose death was partly attributable to the bullheaded press) add to the feeling. The writing is very spare, as if Lodge merely wrote down the basic movements like stomping out, pulling down a piece of clothing, opening a door and so on. The dialogue -- unsurprising for a play-turned-novella -- is the main force in this story. The characters aren't perfect, and become rather annoying at times -- Adrian is stuffy, Sam is a bit self-absorbed, and I felt that if Eleanor wasn't happy, she should have said so outright rather than drifting around in a sort of identityless cloud. It reads more like a play with action inserted and "he said" instead of the character's name. But "Home Truths" is a fairly amusing and well-plotted little story.
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