Room at the Top
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Average customer review:Product Description
The bestselling story of Joe Lampton, the original 'angry young man'. The ruthlessly ambitious Joe Lampton rises swiftly from the petty bureaucracy of local government into the unfamiliar world of inherited wealth, fast cars and glamorous women. But the price of success is high and betrayal and tragedy strike as Joe Lampton pursues his goals.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #116081 in Books
- Published on: 1989-08-03
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 240 pages
Editorial Reviews
From the Back Cover
The bestselling story of Joe Lampton, the original 'angry young man'
'I was a devil of a fellow. I was the lover of a married woman, I was taking out the daughter of one of the richest men in Warley, there wasn't a damn thing I couldn't do.'
The ruthlessly ambitious Joe Lampton rises swiftly from the petty bureaucracy of local government into the unfamiliar world of inherited wealth, fast cars and glamorous women. But the price of success is high and betrayal and tragedy strike as Joe Lampton pursues his goals.
'A harsh, accurate, powerful piece of story-telling' Tribune
'Remarkable... Room at the Top communicates so successfully the mingled bitterness and bravery of youth' Sunday Times
'He has real talent' C.P. Snow
About the Author
John Gerard Braine (April 13, 1922 – October 28, 1986) was an English novelist. Born in Bradford, Yorkshire, Braine left St. Bede's Grammar School at 16 and worked in a shop, a laboratory and a factory before becoming, after the war, a librarian. Although he wrote twelve works of fiction, Braine is chiefly remembered today for his first novel, Room at the Top (1957), which was also turned into a successful film (1959). Braine is usually associated with the Angry Young Men movement.
Customer Reviews
Time-locked Glimpse Of English Class Structure
Despite being post-war, Braine's story of Joe Lampton (an ambitious young man in a milieu that despised ambition) could well have been set in any time between 1900 and 1930. It positively reeks of such strictures as 'knowing your place' and 'who do you think you are'. Although these may have been praiseworthy virtues in other novels of the time (Nevil Shute springs to mind), they are the slippery pole that Joe Lampton must climb to achive any measure of success.
The saddest part of Lampton's hubris, however, is his internalised struggle that opines his ambition as a shameful thing - struggling against the conditioning of childhood. We are also given glimpses of how others (mainly middle-class) view young Joe and his faux-pas - all of it grist to the Lampton mill.
Eventually, Joe is given the opportunity to climb and make-good by dint of some underhandedness and a plain-speaking father-in-law to-be recognising that Joe's rise mirrors his own. Thus, the stage is set for Braine's sequel (the ultimately unsatisfying 'Life At The Top') and the continuation of the story of a big-ish fish in a small pool.
As an historical anomaly in the roll-call of those 1950's English works that are worth re-reading, 'Room At The Top' must take its rightful place.
A social climber, our Joe
It's fifty years since A Room At The Top first appeared. Against a backdrop of post-war Britain, a period when people really did believe that a new future, a different kind of society was just around the corner, Joe Lampton, born January 1921, aspired to social and economic elevation. Though competent and already promoted, as a local government officer in a grubby northern English town, with spare time interests in amateur dramatics, cigarettes and beer, even he himself rated his prospects of success as very poor.
But Joe's other passion was the ladies. Two in particular caught his eye. Alice Aisgarth was married, older than him, and had a local reputation for being a bit "forward". Basically she wanted love and passion to light up her dull, unhappy life with excitement. Susan Brown was a different prospect entirely, being nineteen, virginal and daughter of a rich businessman. If Joe Lampton could never work his way to wealth, he might just be able to marry it. His problems arose out of Susan's desire to remain pure during their courtship, a position that meant Joe had to continue seeing Alice to satisfy his needs. Further complications arose when Susan relented and fell immediately pregnant.
Well Joe achieved his goal. He and Susan married and he attained what he had sought all along, a meal ticket for life. He was not entirely without conscience, however. So when the rejected Alice, who deeply loved him, is killed in a car crash after a drunken night trying to drown her sorrows, Joe Lampton does suffer some remorse. But eventually, like many social climbers, he achieves his heights by trampling on others.
What remains enduringly intriguing about Room At The Top is its portrayal of British society's obsession with social class. Joe perceives his best chance of social elevation is to marry money. And, in 2007, I re-read this novel in a week when a United Kingdom report declared that current day social class differences were widening, whilst opportunities for social mobility are actually decreasing. So John Braine's novel is also a social document. The book is very much of its own time. It reminds us, for instance, that in the 1950s everyone smoked - and smoked a lot. Men drank pints in the pub - some of which did not even admit women. Homosexuality was not only not tolerated, it was illegal, though remained visible. Some of the recorded individual aspiration now seems nothing less than quaint. Alice Aisgarth, for instance, declares that she would like to sleep with Joe. "Truly sleep," she qualifies, "in a big bed with a feather mattress and brass rails and a porcelain chamber pot underneath it." In the 1950s, most north of England houses did not have bathrooms and the potties were usually enamel.
But it is in the area of social class that A Room At The Top is bitingly and enduringly apt. Joe Lampton believes he lacks the capacity to succeed, lacks the necessary background, the poise, the breeding. He sees himself as essentially vulgar and possesses no talents which might compensate for this drawback. His rival for Susan Brown's affections, however, is one John Wales. He is studying for a science degree at Cambridge, and thus acquiring not only the knowledge which will ensure that he will become the managing director of the family firm, but will also endow the polish of manner, the habit of command, the calm superiority of bearing, the attributes of a gentleman.
Fifty years on, we might change an odd word, and the family firm might now be multi-national, but the spirit of contemporary Britain's class system is arguably the same. And so despite the aspiration for and perceived attainment of social change in post-war Britain, Room At The Top, juxtaposed with recent evidence, reminds us that very little, if anything, has changed - except for the cigarettes and the chamber pots, of course. Oh, and we might now also prefer lager.
The original "angry young man".
John Braine's novel about Joe Lampton is a standout classic. His method of writing about what the main character is thinking, doing and reacting is superb! You can almost smell and feel his descriptions of what Joe senses, physically and emotionally , whether in Dufton or Warley.
You don't know whether to root for Lampton or to despise his personal blind ambition. An interesting, thought provoking book that delves into the quagmire of the british social class system and a range of human emotions - envy, lust, anger and love. A decent read, in one sitting - this book was ripe to be made into the film.



