Stars and Bars

by William Boyd

Paperback, 1985

Status

Available

Call number

823.914

Publication

Penguin Books Ltd (1985), Paperback, 352 pages

Description

All Henderson Dores dreams of is fitting in. But America, land of the loony millionaire and the subway poet, down-home Bible-basher and sharp-suited hood, of paralyzing personal frankness and surreally fantasized facilities, is hard enough for an Englishman to fit in to. Henderson could never shed enough inhibitions to become just another weirdo.

User reviews

LibraryThing member YossarianXeno
Stars and Bars in one of Boyd's early novels. The story of a rootless English art expert, Henderson Dores, who has secured employment in the USA to aid his efforts to rekindle his relationship with his ex-wife, it comically recounts the tale of a disastrous trip to the American south to secure art
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works for his employers to sell. Things go from bad to worse as along the way we're introduced to the ex-wife's teenage daughter, a reclusive millionaire, the latter's near homicidal son and eccentric daughter. The style of writing Boyd uses in this novel is one he developed and refined for his later masterpieces like The New Confessions or Any Human Heart. Similar too is nature of the lead character: an intelligent British man searching for security and a fulfilling existence, yet somehow unable to seize control of the the events in which he becomes enmeshed.
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LibraryThing member raggedprince
An amusing novel. I laughed plenty, but it packs much less punch than most of his other books.
LibraryThing member Zohrab
Somewhat funny, good description of "white trash" America.
LibraryThing member sas
Quite funny, but not up to the standard of his later work.
LibraryThing member Oregonreader
I discovered William Boyd quite a few years ago and was very impressed with the two novels I read. Then he fell off my radar screen. Recently, I've begun reading more of his novels and I have yet to be disappointed. In Stars and Bars, Henderson Dores is unhappy with his life and after a brief
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self-analysis, decides all his problems are the result of his English tendency to "shyness", an extreme timidity in asserting himself. He admires Americans as the consummate models of confidence and self-assertion. He takes a job in New York with a private art dealer and attempts a reconciliation with his American ex-wife while simultaneously beginning an affair with another American woman. He is sent to a rural area of Georgia to acquire some valuable paintings and finds himself in a series of disastrous but humorous events which spiral out of his control. I was reminded of Bellow's Henderson the Rain King, where bizarre circumstances seem to bring out the man's every weakness. If you like British black humor, you'll enjoy this.
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LibraryThing member PilgrimJess
“The best often seem the worst”
― William Boyd

Henderson Dores, an English art historian fast approaching 40 has moved to New York in the belief that America will change not only his life but also his character. There he works for an auction house as a valuer.Henderson is a stereo-typically
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inept British gentleman constantly getting the wrong end of the stick, and getting into awkward situations entirely due to his own fault. In New York, he has become re-engaged with his ex-wife but is also involved while in a clandestine affair with another woman. When he is sent to the deep South to value an elderly recluse's collection of paintings he becomes involved with the recluses wacky family and entwined in their antics. These people, the prickly father, the angry son and his Southern gal wife, the enigmatic daughter, the Viet Nam veteran, the truculent housekeeper and her son can also be seen as pretty stereo-typical.

Now whilst I quite enjoyed this book and it did make me smile if not actually laugh I felt that there were some shortcomings. Personally I felt that Henderson was just far too innocent, too polite and well bred ever to express anything but bewilderment. I felt that the author was trying to so rigidly stick to the stereo-type that he had imagined that he stopped the character from really forming. In fact I just wanted to shout at him "to grow a pair and man up'. Also I found the angry eldest son very predictable and was not at all surprised as to reason why he disliked Henderson. However, as I said it did at least make me smile so that can be no bad thing.
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LibraryThing member Eyejaybee
I never properly came to terms with this novel, which surprised me as I am a huge fan of William Boyd’s books. I am also fairly sure that I had read this novel before, but I had no memory of the plot.

Unusually for William Boyd it is, as the title suggests, set in America, and follows the travails
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of English expat, Henderson Dores, as he heads from New York down in to the American Deep South. He is on a mission to review an eccentric millionaire’s collection of Impressionist paintings, with a view to staging a sale through the art dealership for which he works.

Dores has several similarities with Morgan Leafy, eponymous protagonist of A Good Man in Africa. Like Leafy, he finds himself ceaselessly manipulated by his associates into doing all sorts of things against his will, while all his own well-laid plans gang oft, and severely, agley.

Unfortunately, despite all this promising material, the novel just didn’t work for me. I think that the Southern setting, and Dores’s own personality traits were just that little bit too exaggerated for me to accept.
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Language

Original publication date

1984

Physical description

352 p.; 7.09 inches

ISBN

0140075968 / 9780140075960
Page: 0.2187 seconds