May 9th was Brenda’s turn to host our
meeting. Brenda now lives
outside of Houston, so she had to be creative in planning our get
together. She made arrangements for us
to meet halfway in the quaint little town of Round Top. Diana was kind enough to drive us girls to
Royers Round Top Café. Salads and pasta
dishes were enjoyed before Brenda ordered a tray of decadent pies to be shared
with everyone. Then Brenda generously
paid for all our meals – thank you, sweet friend! We stopped on the café porch, decorated with
flea market and antique finds, for a photo opportunity.
We then had the pleasure of walking over to the Round Top Library where we sat in the shade of their beautiful community garden to discuss our book. Once our discussion was complete, we met the librarians at the Round Top Library and received a quick history of the converted Lutheran church building, shopped their book sale, and became card carrying members of their library :) If you have never visited their library, I highly recommend it. Round Top Family Library
Synopsis:
In The Sense of an Ending, Julian Barnes introduces the
reader to the main character, Anthony (Tony).
In the beginning of the book, he is at prep school pompously debating
philosophical questions and theories with his 3 best friends. By the end of the book, Tony is retired and
still trying to answer questions, the main one being why one of his best
friends, Adrian, committed suicide while in college. As he journeys towards that answer, more
questions are created, and Tony finds himself more and more unsure about what
is genuinely the truth in his memories of the past.
Comments:
Brenda came to our meeting prepared with a list of
thought-provoking questions. The first
one she asked: What does the title of
this book mean? We found various
meanings depending on which way you understood the word ‘sense’ to mean in that
title. Was it ‘sense’ as in a feeling?
Or was it ‘sense’ as in making sense? We
agreed that either way could be appropriately used and fit well with the story.
Another quandry: Tony’s ex-girlfriend, Veronica, repeatedly
told him, “You just don’t get it. You
never did, and you never will.” What exactly
was it he was not getting? The
dysfunction in her family? Or what
motivated Veronica to behave the way she did?
And why did she expect him to be able to figure it out when five
intelligent, cultured women sure couldn’t figure it out, either?!
Veronica’s mother, Sarah, bequeathed five hundred pounds to
Tony in her will. Tony had only met her
once when he visited over a weekend during his college years and had no more
contact with her in the years afterwards.
Therefore, Tony is baffled as to why she left him that sum of money upon
her death. When Veronica mentions it she
calls it “blood money”. Was Sarah
feeling guilty for Adrian’s death or for misleading Tony or for how Veronica
treated Tony when they dated?
If there was a timeline of events, it would show that Adrian
was only three months into his relationship with Sarah when he committed
suicide. So did he know at that time
that she was pregnant with his child? We
have to assume the answer to that question is ‘yes’, because in the small
portion of his diary which Tony receives there is an equation which alludes to
his knowledge of a baby on the way. This
is the one interesting facet which kept our attention the longest and made us
feel like we at least comprehended one portion of this book! One of the formulas a2 + v + a1
x s = b seems to be Adrian’s way of connecting the people who played a
role in the creation of baby. Anthony (a2)
dated Veronica (v) and introduced Veronica (v) to Adrian (a1) who
then dated Adrian (a1) and gave reason for introduction to her
mother Sarah (s). Up until Adrian (a1)
is connected to Sarah (s) the formula uses addition, but once Sarah (s) comes
into the equation, he uses multiplication, an operation of higher magnitude
than addition. The result of this
relational formula is b for Baby. Did
Adrian use multiplication in that portion because he truly felt that his
relationship with Sarah was the strongest and most powerful or because its
result was the most impactful in the form of a new life?
Other unsolved mysteries for us included the odd
horizontal wave that Sarah gave Tony when he left from his visit to her home
and the two references to “the mother” by Veronica’s brother, Jack, when
speaking to his mum.
We came away from this book and discussion with more
questions than answers! However, we did
find a couple of important reminders about life and how we should approach
it. As Adrian’s relational formula
showed, one event can change the course of many lives. If Tony had not introduced Veronica to Adrian
and then later challenged Adrian to visit with Veronica’s mom and written the
hateful letter to them both, then perhaps Adrian would not have participated in the adulterous affair and ultimately committed
suicide. The other life lesson it seems
Tony learned too late was not to settle for the realities of life and so become
average in every way: “Average, that’s what I’d been, ever since I left
school. Average at university and work; average
in friendship, loyalty, love; average, no doubt, at sex….Average at life;
average at truth; morally average.”
(Chapter 2, p. 73) Perhaps all
that over-philosophizing Tony and his friends indulged in for years with the idea
of being superior in thought and idea actually created a jaded view of life and
left him with the inability to find joy and adventure around him. He appears to have settled without much
emotion for whatever life handed him, including his own divorce.
Memorable Quote:
In keeping with the
theme that life should be truly lived and not merely endured or philosophized
about, Tony reflects, “Had my life increased, or merely added to itself? This
was the question Adrian’s fragment set off in me. There had been addition – and
subtraction – in my life, but how much multiplication? And this gave me a sense
of unease, of unrest.” (Chapter 2, page 65).
FAB Rating:
**1/2
(2-1/2 stars out of 5)
When a storyline
leaves you with more questions than answers, then your book discussion is
mainly composed of unanswered questions...lots of them! There was very
little meat to chew on other than the dissecting of Adrian's formula. Ultimately, for the
FAB ladies there really was no sense of an ending with this book!
I loved reading this book. It is short but perfectly formed, populated with wonderful, thought-provoking observations and intriguing (if perhaps not fully realised) characters. The theme throughout is history, the way we form our beliefs about its arc and the way we sometimes need to re-evaluate events. The first two thirds of the book were close to perfect. My only disappointment was the ending, in the sense that I wished such a well written book had amounted to more. Ultimately I was left with questions: would that really have happened? why the legacy? why couldn't Veronica be a more communicative person? couldn't Julian Barnes have come up with something better?
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