The Making of Henry

The Making of Henry

by HowardJacobson (Author)

Synopsis

One day, out of the blue, Henry Nagel receives a solicitor's letter telling him he has inherited a sumptuous apartment in St John's Wood. Divine intervention? Or his late father's love-nest? Henry doesn't know, but he is glad to escape the North, where there is nothing and no one to keep him. After nearly sixty years of angry disappointment, Henry's life is about to change. Not that the ghosts of Henry's past are prepared to disappear without a struggle - his old school-friend and rival Osmond Hovis Belkin, currently enjoying a spectacularly successful career in Hollywood, his tragic great aunt Marghanita for whom Henry once entertained a dangerous passion, and his father Izzi Nagel, upholsterer turned illusionist, fire eater and origamist, whose shade Henry interrogates relentlessly. But the present clamours as loudly as the past. His dyspeptic neighbour Lachlan wants his sympathy, Lachlan's sloppy red setter, Angus, wants a walk, and Moira, the waitress with the crooked smile and custard hair who serves him cake and cappuccino, seems to want him. Kicking and screaming every inch of the way, Henry realises he might finally be falling in love. Will love be the making of Henry? Or will walking his neighbour's dog? Tender, funny and beautifully told, The Making of Henry is Howard Jacobson's richest novel to date. The writing makes you gasp with pleasure, the story builds effortlessly to its crescendo of revelations, and above all, it adds a new warmth to his reputation as the most exhilaratingly intelligent of contemporary novelists.

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More Information

Format: Import
Pages: 352
Edition: British First
Publisher: Jonathan Cape
Published: 03 Jun 2004

ISBN 10: 0224073524
ISBN 13: 9780224073523
Book Overview: Howard Jacobson is acclaimed as our greatest and most underrated novelist. He has just written his masterpiece.

Media Reviews
Jacobson is among the most exhilarating of intelligent contemporary novelists. -- The Guardian Painful, funny and highly readable. Jacobson is at the top of his verbal form here -- The Evening Standard Page for page and sentence for sentence, it confirms Jacobson as, by some distance, the cleverest, funniest, sharpest writer we have -- The Sunday Telegraph A rich, unrepentantly funny novel, full of vim and vigour and bolshie cleverness. Its prose pulsates with fresh images -- The Observer
Author Bio
Howard Jacobson is the author of seven novels and four works of non-fiction. He won the Everyman Wodehouse Award for comic writing in 1999 for The Mighty Walzer.