Product Details
Of Love and Hunger (Penguin Modern Classics)

Of Love and Hunger (Penguin Modern Classics)
By Julian MacLaren-Ross

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Product Description

The key literary figure in the pubs of post-war Fitzrovia, Maclaren-Ross pulled together his dispersed energies to write two great books: the posthumously published Memoirs of the Forties and this spectacular novel of the Depression, Of Love and Hunger - harsh, vivid, louche and slangy it deserves a permanent place alongside Coming Up for Air and Hangover Square.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #227253 in Books
  • Published on: 2002-08-01
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 224 pages

Editorial Reviews

About the Author
Julian Maclaren-Ross (1912-1964) is best known for his novel OF LOVE AND HUNGER and his MEMOIRS OF THE FORTIES.


Customer Reviews

Beautifully written and stunningly convincing5
I have just finished reading this book and found it enchanting and one of the finest novels I have read in a long time. The characters are wonderfully constructed, especially the two central characters Fanshawe and Sukie, whose affair comes about in such an understandable and believable way that I felt each emotion in the pit of my stomach.
Julian McClaren Ross never tries to do too much with his writing or the story itself and his style reminded me of Charles - it's easy to believe that he was perhaps an influence on Bukowski.
I wish there was more of JMR's writing available, on this evidence everything he ever wrote should be published.

Atmospheric slice of pre-war England.4
I was drawn to this book because it sounded similar to Patrick Hamilton's "Hangover Square", a book I like so much I re-read it every couple of years. I wouldn't personally say it was as good as Hamilton's novel, simply because it doesn't possess the same seering emotional intensity which runs through "Hangover Square", and which can at times make it such a disturbing read. "Of Love And Hunger" is an engaging piece though, about a guy called Richard, newly back from working in Madras, with a secret yearning to be a writer, but instead having to sell vacuum cleaners door-to-door in a dreary seaside town. When a colleague, Derek Roper, gets a job on a cruise liner he asks Richard to keep his attractive wife Suki company whilst he's away (which seems an incredibly naive thing to do!). At first Richard doesn't like Suki, but soon finds that he's actually in love with her, which is usually the way.

Like "Hangover Square" this is set in the months running up to the Second World War. It was written in 1947 though and this can make some of the pre-war references sound overtly self-conscious. We get a lot of references to "that Hitler" and "that Mussolini". Perhaps it's just me, but I found that with it being written in 1947 it didn't quite have the immediate feel of people living on the edge of the abyss, not knowing exactly what horrors were to come.

Nevertheless this gives an intricate detail of day-to-day life in a bygone age. A time when there was nowhere to go after 10 o'clock at night, where one of the sales reps is so hard-up he lives off raw onions and has to keep his coat on all the time because he's sold part of his suit, where people lived in genteel but shabby boarding-houses, and where wealthy people living in more upmarket suburban villas still had live-in servants.

I like this kind of book because it's a good riposte to all the oldies who would have us believe that this era was some kind of golden utopia for "Daily Mail" readers, where there was no crime or dodgy dealing, and everybody was thoroughly clean-living and highly moral! It's also laugh-out-loud funny in parts, particularly the dismal small-town zoo where Richard takes Suki on a date, and the training-school for vacuum cleaner salesmen. Think of a sort of 1930s version of "The Office"!

Every word counts5
I have just read this marvellous book and was so sad when I came to the end of it. The atmosphere is brilliantly realised and the dialogue so perfect that you could lift it un edited from the page into a screenplay.Unlike other reviewers, I did find that the pre war anxiety and uncertainty came across well.Every major character comes off the page into 3D form and you swear you can smell the boarding house, or the zoo !! I am eager to read his other work and learn more about him. As a fan of Patrick Hamilton, this author is a very welcome addition to the bookshelf.