Allan Hollinghurst Ordre des livres (chronologique)
Alan Hollinghurst est un romancier anglais célébré, connu pour sa prose exquise et ses observations pointues sur les strates sociales et l'identité sexuelle. Ses romans explorent avec maestria des thèmes tels que le désir, la mémoire et le paysage changeant de la société britannique. Par un langage précis et des descriptions riches, Hollinghurst crée des récits captivants qui plongent les lecteurs dans des relations humaines complexes et des explorations intellectuelles.







Our Evenings
- 496pages
- 18 heures de lecture
A 'Book of the Year' for multiple prestigious publications and featured on Radio 4's 'Book at Bedtime,' this novel is hailed as the best portrayal of contemporary Britain in the past decade, blending humor with deep emotional resonance. Alan Hollinghurst, the Booker Prize-winning author, presents a darkly luminous and wickedly funny exploration of modern England through one man's unsettling experiences. The narrative delves into themes of race, class, theatre, sexuality, love, and the harsh realities of violence. Thirteen-year-old Dave Win visits the sponsors of his scholarship at a local boarding school, where a weekend of games and challenges introduces him to new possibilities while revealing the envy and aggression of their son, Giles. Over the next fifty years, their paths diverge dramatically: Dave becomes a talented actor facing societal challenges, while Giles rises as a powerful and dangerous politician. The story intimately chronicles Dave's journey from schoolboy to student, his first love affairs in London, and his time with an experimental theatre company, culminating in a transformative late-life romance that brings him newfound happiness and a precarious sense of security. The novel debuted at #9 on the Sunday Times Fiction Hardback chart.
"A multi-generational story of fathers and sons during the second half of the twentieth century in England"--.
L'enfant de l'étranger
- 724pages
- 26 heures de lecture
En 1913, George Sawle amène en week-end aux Deux Arpents, la maison familiale, un camarade de Cambridge, Cecil Valance. Cet aristocrate poète fait forte impression sur les Sawle, et notamment sur la jeune sœur de George, Daphné, éblouie par l’aisance et la liberté de ton de Cecil. Alors qu’il est l’amant de George, Cecil séduit Daphné et lui dédicace un poème, Deux Arpents . A partir de ce point de départ, l’auteur développe l’histoire de ces deux familles en une grande fresque qui couvre presque un siècle, avec pour fils rouges le déclin de l’aristocratie et l’évolution de la société anglaise dans son approche de l’homosexualité, les deux se rejoignant dans le destin posthume de Cecil, mort en 1916, à 25 ans, sur les champs de bataille. Ses poèmes, notamment Deux Arpents , lui valent une grande popularité dans l’immédiat après-guerre. Cette gloire éphémère, sa mort précoce, sa romance avec Daphné, mais aussi le soupçon d’une homosexualité scandaleuse, aiguillonnent la curiosité des biographes pour ce personnage qui semble sans cesse se dérober derrière le mur du discours officiel de ceux qui l’ont connu. Et le secret de Cecil disparaîtra, enfoui dans les ruines des grandes demeures désormais à l’abandon.
Offshore
- 141pages
- 5 heures de lecture
On the Battersea Reach of the Thames, a mixed bag of eccentrics live in houseboats. Belonging to neither land nor sea, they belong to one another. There is Maurice, a homosexual prostitute; Richard, a buttoned-up ex-navy man; but most of all there's Nenna, the struggling mother of two wild little girls. How each of their lives complicates the others is the stuff of this perfect little novel.
The Line of Beauty
- 501pages
- 18 heures de lecture
In the summer of 1983, 20-year-old Nick Guest moves into an attic room in the Notting Hill home of the Feddens: Tory MP Gerald, his wealthy wife Rachel, and their two children, Toby – whom Nick had idolized at Oxford – and Catherine, always standing at a critical angle to the family and its assumptions and ambitions. As the Thatcher boom-years unfold, Nick, an innocent in the worlds of politics and money, finds his life altered by the rising fortunes of the glamorous family he is entangled with. Two vividly contrasting love-affairs, with a young black clerk and a Lebanese millionaire, dramatize the dangers and rewards of his own private pursuit of beauty, a pursuit as compelling to him as that of power and riches to his friends. Starting at the moment The Swimming-Pool Library ended, The Line of Beauty traces the further history of a decade of change and tragedy. Richly textured, emotionally charged, disarmingly comic, it is a major work by one of the finest writers in the English language.
The Spell
- 257pages
- 9 heures de lecture
A comedy of sexual manners that follows the interlocking affairs of four men: Robin Woodfield, an architect in his late forties living with his younger lover Justin (a would-be actor) in Dorset; Robin's 22-year-old son Danny, who lives for clubbing and casual sex; and shy Alex
A fourth collection of contemporary British literature, including poetry, essays, short stories, and previews of novels in progress. Among the many contributors, including both new and established writers, are A.S. Byatt, Nadine Gordimer, Hanif Kureishi, Fay Weldon, William Trevor and Brian Aldiss.
Edward Manners -- thirty three and disaffected -- escapes to a Flemish city in search of a new life. Almost at once he falls in love with seventeen-year-old Luc, and is introduced to the twilight world of the 1890s Belgian painter Edgard Orst.
The Swimming Pool Library
- 304pages
- 11 heures de lecture
Alan Hollinghurst's first novel is a tour de force: a darkly erotic work that centres on the friendship of William Beckwith, a young gay aristocrat who leads a life of privilege and promiscuity, and the elderly Lord Nantwich, who is searching for someone to write his biography.




