Newsnight Review discussed Personality, the latest book by Andrew O'Hagan.
(Edited highlights of the panel's review)
TOM PAULIN:
I think it is very, very poignant. I wish
there was more of her, but it's a great
sprawling, Joycean novel and a love
of language, love of dialogue and in
fact internal monologue in it. It is great
fun, but you keep thinking God help her
if she became a freak and that was what
she was reduced to. It was wonderful for
her to get on Mike Yarwood, but who
remembers him, what happened to him?
And then Hughie Green, interesting to see
him in a work of fiction and Les Dawson,
very interesting to read about him, but I
wanted more of her. I felt there was a bit
too much Hinterland, in terms of the family
before you got to her.
LAWSON:
I thought he does it well and it adds to it
that Terry Wogan is about the only one in
the book who still is a star. All the others
have gone.
Bonnie, there is no legal problem writing
about Lena Zavaroni because the dead can't
sue. There are moral questions here to write
a fictional version of someone's real life and
put real people into it did he bring it off?
BONNIE GREER:
I don't know what that means. An artist
has the right to do what they like with the
material that they shape. I didn't live here
in the 70s and Lena Zavaroni is only a bunch
of clippings to me. So I can't bring those kind
of things to the book. I approach it as a piece
of writing. He writes like an angle. There
are beautiful parts but what began to bother
me as I went through is that I got the third
person authorial voice and the first person
voice confused. I didn't know who was
talking. He would do all kind of things
with languages and I have for instance in
the third person: 'Maria jumped up and
made for the door'. It sounded like the first
person voices so I lost that a bit. Then on
page 239 some very bizarre and I think
this is the Michael Aegis section. I can go
into kinds of shrinky analysis and this is
her lover in relation to him but that turns
into this almost laddish type of depiction
of a guy who comes in obviously a writer,
falls in love with her and gets involved
with her and there is a two-page description
of their coupling that just jumps out of
nowhere. I have no idea what that is
about.
LAWSON:
Isn't he trying to get at the way that
celebrities, so many people have a
different purchase on them.
GREER:
To go back to what Tom said that can't
be ultimately what this novel is about.
It's a love letter to someone that this
author cares about. We lose this woman
in this book as this author meditates on it.
The meditation is not terribly interesting.
PAULIN:
She becomes a symbol of Princess Diana
at one point.
GREER:
She is a symbol at the beginning. We are
there at the beginning and we don't
necessarily progress, but the writing is
what is important. I felt she was supposed
to disappear in the way that she was taken
over. The American bits don't work.
CHARLES SAUMAREZ SMITH:
I enjoyed it, but I read it and I saw the
disclaimer at the beginning where it says
it bears no relationship to real life and
then I read the press clippings and it said
that it did bear a close relationship to real
life and I find that slightly disappointing
because it has such a magic, fictional aspect
to it that you assume it's a complete invention
and I found it unsettling and disturbing.
LAWSON:
I think there are all sorts of reasons why
you have to have those disclaimers at the
start. He's playing with real people.
SAUMAREZ SMITH:
I love the descriptions at the beginning,
the kind of shabby sea side resort and
the sense of the vocation of that as a place
and that period of Scottish history and the
attitude to television.
LAWSON:
Tom, there is a set piece of writing where
he moves up through a theatre where she
is performing and we get all the levels that.
Does he bring it of?.
PAULIN:
He does and the way he evokes London as a
Joycean mass observation, even a young man
walking through London who's just had a letter
from a literary editor excepting a poem. All sorts
of little details like that, absolutely fascinating
but I felt that the people who ran her needed
more attention. And who made her into the
freak.