UP at the Villa
J**T
I’ve been reading a great deal of W
I’ve been reading a great deal of W. Somerset Maugham lately; and I daresay it will continue. His tales of the human condition – of heartfelt mistakes and foolish blunders – juxtaposed against the matter-of-factness of imperialism in turn of the century Victorian England make for charming stories. They are so naturally international – about a time when Englanders thought of the world as their own and acted accordingly – that they teem with an unpretentious multi-culturalism.These days we are accustomed to reading political thrillers or crime stories set against the backdrop of this-or-that exotic location; authors attempting to prove their grandiloquence through expert, almost surgical use of the foreign. As if to show that simply through their ability to write about a dark corner of the world, the significance of their book is proven; and their use of these locations as the backdrop for grand moments of imperial import – this time American – confirm the multi-culturalism of the American artist in the new world. Yet somehow they do not ring true; they seem contrived, thereby losing their worth.Maugham’s novels shine because they do no emphasize the exotic in far-away places and try and shock with bizarre cultural rituals or the important geopolitical realities of life lived in significance in faraway places. His novels are in fact the opposite, as they emphasize the constancy of British civilization which was effortlessly employed even in the furthest corners of her empire.His stories are those of everyday British citizens who live ordinary lives – fraught with mischief and mistakes – as they carry out their business, live and love. In Up at the Villa, Maugham tells a story about a woman widowed from an unsatisfying marriage and who makes a careless mistake while on holiday in Florence that upends her life entirely. Rain is the story of a British missionary returning from furlough to his mission in the South Sea Islands when he confronts a worthy adversary in the form of a harlot from Hawaii and is bested in his attempts to convert her. Mackintosh is the tale of a colonial administrator of a small island in the pacific who misinterprets the changing times, and loses his life in the process.And there are many, many others.Each of these stories is so full of humanity, abounding in emotion and passion for life lived more abundantly; of the richness offered by the world around us; lives a spirit occasionally sweet but more often with a bitter bouquet, served indiscriminately in chalices both simple and majestic. Of the potential for great opportunity and of failure; of the ecstasy of forbidden and sometimes sordid love and the promise of redemption or at least the gentle salve of forgetting. These are Maugham’s stories, upon a canvas as vast as the world around us.I hope you pick up a book by W. Somerset Maugham, to find as I often do a new perspective or a refreshing moment. You will find yourself better for it.
J**O
"Up at The Villa" is a wonderful, entertaining
W. Somerset Maugham's, "Up at The Villa" is a wonderful, entertaining, thought provoking novel. Mary Panton, a wealthy, beautiful English widow, lives in her friend's villa overlooking Florence, Italy. In a strange twist of fate, the very thing she jokes about a few hours earlier suddenly becomes a nightmarish reality. The novel is amazingly suspenseful, lucid, and beautifully written. I highly enjoyed this novel.
A**R
A window to the past.
My first reaction was a yawn........not much happening here! The slow, deep rhythms of rich storytelling soon caught me and carried me into a recreation of the slower, more innocent time before television, before the frenetic mental functioning of the one minute ad and the 10 minute story entered our lives. These experiences and responses are those of a culture unchallenged by want of luxury and not blunted by cinematic carnage and bad behavior, people who are between wars and shocked that they should be restricted by crass politics. And so we have a story of a woman as innocent as a child in her depravity, as blind as possible in her choices......still a story told with recognition of beauty. The story itself is, however, blind in it's own time.....a writer of today would see the enabler in her, and understand the probable end of her romantic decision to leave with a man who has already hit her once and does not pretend to much of anything good. Excellent book if you are able to stand outside your "modern self" for a time.
L**U
Maugham wins again
This book began as a period novel set in a playground of the wealthy. A young woman plans to make a safe and very comfortable marriage with an admired military leader. Suddenly the effects of an earlier mass European migration became apparent and, following an intensely romantic scene with moonlight, beautiful gardens, et cetera, it descended into darkness and a death. The rest of the novel twists and turns as the ramifications of that death on her proposed marriage become apparent and she discovers other possibilities. Maugham could certainly write; the intensely romantic scene referred to above is so lucid I felt like I was part of the scene.
S**
One of my FAVORITE S. Maugham books!
Fast shipping!! Can't be without this book and I usually give it to a friend after I retread it. This book keeps you on the edge of your chair, bed,car seat. It's not a long book but it's packed full of suspense, great characters, and wonderful descriptions of the Italian countryside. Even though it's suspencefull, it's also an upbeat book and Somerset Maugham knows women's feelings in and out (men's too). That's a rare qualityin a writer. JUST BUY IT, ITS GREAT!!
C**Y
In Her Shoes, What Would You Have Done?
This is a smart little novella. Maugham paints a colorful picture of its main characters; Mary, Rowley and Edgar with swift, adept strokes. If you'd have fun reading about expats in pre WWII Italy struggling with moral choices, you might like this. Marry for convenience or wait for love?..., act on impulse or be prudent?... face scandal or slip out of town? You might find yourself in this novella. I did and it made me think about why, in the end, like a Lemming, heading toward a cliff, I was so drawn to Rowley. I love Maugham's novels, and this swift moving story is a nice taste of the master's work. I devoured it in one gulp, couldn't put it down.
W**D
Overdone
This melodramatic novella is not of the quality one expects in a story by Maugham, but it is interesting in that one of the principal characters, Rowley, is supposed to be a portrait of the author’s long-time lover, Gerald Haxton.
K**R
Villa-iny
Another stylistically flawless tale from a great writer, it perhaps doesn't resonate as deeply as some would with the same material but its the old Apollo/Dionysus or even Pan conflict where human love of a workable almost urbane surface wins over passions that outside , and at first inside, the bounds of the story seem grander. As always we must make our own minds up about the possible irony of that conclusion. The storyteller has told his tale.
R**.
very short
This is a good story but it's a novella or short story rather than a novel.
R**.
Good but....
Enjoyable...but not one of Maugham's best in my opinion
D**N
Four Stars
Quite slight in a way, but the undercurrent was well picked out.
M**N
Five Stars
super
L**E
Vintage Somerset Maugham
If you are a fan of Somerset Maugham, this is a winner. A compact story that grabs your attention, dealing as it does with the position of women in the 1930s. Mary Panton is at a crossroads and needs to make a decision. We view the three main protagonists somewhat differently by the end of the book, each of whom have undergone a change in our, and her, perception. It has a very satisfactory end.
A**N
Four Stars
Fascinating description, apparently resembling Gerald Haxton's style and approach to risk and life, of Rowley Flint
M**L
Excellent vintage style.
Thoroughly enjoyed it. Am enjoying all his stories
A**R
Four Stars
great
J**R
Four Stars
A masterclass in dialogue, even if somewhat dated.
M**S
Five Stars
All as advertised.
P**N
started well!
I was well Into the story and wham it finished - too early. I felt there was more to her!!
A**E
immer lesenswert
Auch dieser Roman von Maugham ist unbedingt lesenswert. Maughams wunderbarer Schreibstil fesselt den Leser und lässt keine Langeweile aufkommen. Wem dieser Roman gefällt, wird auch die anderen gerne lesen.
R**1
A sparkling novella
At 110 large-type pages, this is hardly more than a short story, but it has a plot and characterisation worthy of the best Maugham. The piece, set in 1940 in Florence, involves a young English widow who, about to accept the marriage proposal of a top-level imperial civil servant, finds her life and position turned upside down by the irruption of a young Austrian refugee. Nicely paced and well worth the couple of hours it takes to read.
K**6
Maugham
Gute Qualität, Zustand wie beschrieben.
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