Book description
'Arnold Bennett was born in a street called Hope Street. A street
less hopeful it would be hard to imagine.' Thus begins Margaret
Drabble's biography of a man whose most famous achievement was to
re-create, in such novels as The Old Wives' Tale and Clayhanger, the
life, atmosphere and character of the 'Five Towns' region in which he
was born and grew up. Arnold Bennett is a very personal book. 'What
interests me', writes the author, 'is Bennett's background, his
childhood and origins, for they are very similar to my own. My
mother's family came from the Potteries, and the Bennett novels seem
to me to portray a way of life that still existed when I was a child,
and indeed persists in certain areas. So like all books this has been
partly an act of self-exploration.' Of Bennett as a writer Drabble
says 'The best books I think are very fine indeed, on the highest
level, deeply moving, original and dealing with material that I had
never before encountered in fiction, but only in life: I feel they
have been underrated, and my response to them is so constant, even
after years of work on them and constant re-readings, that I want to
communicate enthusiasm.' Of Bennett as a man she paints an
affectionate portrait, not glossing over the irritability, dyspepsia
and rigidity which at times made him so difficult a companion but
reminding us too of his honesty, kindliness and sensitivity. 'Many a
time,' she writes at the end of the book, 're-reading a novel, reading
a letter or a piece of his Journal, I have wanted to shake his hand,
or to thank him, to say well done. I have written this instead.'