Guardian Newspaper 1000 Novels discussion

This topic is about
Lucky Jim
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Lucky Jim - June 2014
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I'm going to include a weekly schedule for this book.
Each week I will post discussion questions, obviously feel free to discuss anything else about the book that is important to you.
June 1-7: Chapters 1- 6
June 8-14: Chapters 7- 12
June 15- 21: Chapters 13- 18
June 22- 30: Chapters 19- 25

My thoughts on week one. Not really sure about this book yet. Any thoughts? ..."
I plan to start today.



Sounds like a cute/fun book. I was disappointed my library was a bust on this one.

What were you teaching? And your thoughts on this book?
Leslie wrote: "I feel differently about Margaret than you did Lisa - [spoilers removed]."
The more I read, the more I agree with you Leslie. I'm finding it hard to like any of the characters right now.
I am REALLY struggling to get into this book. And I want to like it.

It may just not be the right time for you to read this. Sometimes I struggle with a book, then pick it up months (or years) later and whiz through it.


I started to enjoy it!
Week 2
(view spoiler)

The more I see of Jim, the funnier I find him.
He is now flirting with Christine & annoying the Wech's
Obviously, we are headed for trouble.

Any thoughts as to the showdowns in this section:
catch pole & Jim
Margaret and Jim
Bertrand and Jim

Jim is a bit of a dreaming drifter who seems to be a bit hapless and unconnected to most people. There hasn't been any mention of any real friendships, just colleagues and acquaintances. I get the feeling for all his joviality he is quite lonely. His emotional entanglements with women are on the surface laughable but deep down I feel he is trying to reach out to someone. He is kind-hearted although not that forward at apologising for his misdemeanours and mishaps (re- the Welch's party).
I completely agree with Leslie and Lisa about Margaret and her scheming manipulation of Jim. She seems an awkward, disruptive character and I don't like her one bit.I did empathise initially when we find out about her attempted (feigned) suicide. All screams of attention-seeking, not witnessed and contrived to be found by neighbours by playing loud music.
Anyways, I'm off for more.



*****
What a joy it can be to have one's preconceptions about a classic novel utterly confounded. I'd always allowed my thoughts about the fairly unlikeable views and behaviour of Amis Sr and Amis Jr to cloud by judgement about their writing.
Because of this I had always avoided Lucky Jim, assuming it to be a mix of just the worst traits of Evelyn Waugh's farces and Iris Murdoch's cloth ear for dialogue with a hefty sprinkling of 1950s prejudice, misogyny and snobbishness. Given what I'd heard of Amis' poor behaviour and snobbish attitudes, I was convinced that book could never reflect the life it aimed to portray with the realism in the likes of Billy Liar, Saturday Night Sunday Morning, A Kind of Loving or A Taste of Honey.
But...
But, I was wrong. It is brilliant. It took me 50 pages to grudgingly realise just how good this book was. It wasn't what I expected it to be. This was not Ian Carmicheal foolishly flopping drunkenly from bed to bar to lectern. This was something darker, deeper and altogether wiser. And all the time so very funny indeed. It's particularly good with the ennui and centreless disappointments with life, the tendency to be pushed by circumstances into the "just about enough" life, where nothing really gives joy, nothing really gives misery. Life is grey.
Think Sartre's "Nausea" with better jokes.
So, sorry Kingsley Amis, you're a far better writer than I ever expected you to be. But, by all accounts, you weren't particularly pleasant.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Uncommon Reader (other topics)Lucky Jim (other topics)
The Uncommon Reader (120 pages) and Lucky Jim (251 pages) both won 8 votes, so we are going to offer the choice of reading either book or both.
Please come and join us in the read for June and the discussion threads.