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Hangover Square

Patrick Hamilton

The seventy-fifth anniversary edition with a new introduction by Anthony Quinn.

'I recommend Hamilton at every opportunity because he was such a wonderful writer and yet is rather under-read today. All his novels are terrific' Sarah Waters

'If you were looking to fly from Dickens to Martin Amis with just one overnight stop then Hamilton is your man' Nick Hornby

Patrick Hamilton's novels were the inspiration for Matthew Bourne's new dance theatre production The Midnight Bell.

London 1939 and in the grimy publands of Earls Court George Harvey Bone is pursuing a helpless infatuation. Netta is cool contemptuous and hopelessly desirable to George. George is adrift in a drunken hell except in his 'dead' moments when something goes click in his head and he realises without a doubt that he must kill her. In the darkly comic Hangover Square Patrick Hamilton brilliantly evokes a seedy fog-bound world of saloon bars lodging houses and boozing philosophers immortalising the slang and conversational tone of a whole generation and capturing the premonitions of doom that pervaded London life in the months before the war.

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  • Classification : General & Literary Fiction
  • Pub Date : AUG 4, 2016
  • Imprint : Abacus
  • Page Extent : 416
  • Binding : PB
  • ISBN : 9780349141565
  • Price : INR 699
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Patrick Hamilton

Patrick Hamilton was born Anthony Walter Patrick Hamilton in the Sussex village of Hassocks, near Brighton, to writer parents.

After a brief career as an actor, he became a novelist in his early twenties with the publication of Monday Morning (1925), written when he was nineteen. Craven House (1926) and Twopence Coloured (1928) followed, but his first real success was the play Rope (1929, known as Rope's End in America).

The Midnight Bell (1929) is based upon Hamilton's falling in love with a prostitute, and was later published along with The Siege of Pleasure (1932) and The Plains of Cement (1934) as the semi-autobiographical trilogy 20,000 Streets Under the Sky (1935).

His two most successful plays, Rope and Gas Light (1938, known as Angel Street in the USA), made Hamilton wealthy and were also successful as films: the British-made Gaslight (1940) and the 1944 American remake, and Alfred Hitchcock's Rope (1948).

Hangover Square (1941) is often judged his most accomplished work. During his later life, Hamilton developed in his writing a misanthropic authorial voice which became more disillusioned, cynical and bleak as time passed.

Hamilton had begun to consume alcohol excessively while still a relatively young man. After a declining career and melancholia, he died in 1962 of cirrhosis of the liver and kidney failure, in Sheringham, Norfolk.

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