75th out of 263 books
—
159 voters
Travels with My Aunt
The novel follows the travels of Henry Pulling, a retired bank manager, and his eccentric Aunt Augusta as they find their way across Europe, and eventually even further afield. Aunt Augusta pulls Henry away from his quiet suburban existence into a world of adventure, crime and the highly-unconventional details of her past.
Paperback, 272 pages
Published
1971
by Penguin
(first published 1969)
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Sep 17, 2011
Mariel
rated it
3 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
The Golden Girls
Recommended to Mariel by:
eenie meenie miney mo
Travels with My Aunt was my first Graham Greene (films don't count! Or do they?) . I didn't know which to choose because I didn't have internet access at the time of the big moment. The jacket said it was the only book that Greene ever wrote for the fun of it.
Maybe he had fun. I sure as heck didn't. Maybe it was the times (publication date is 1969) ... An old woman who proclaims way too loudly that she's having a great time to make her cliche of a stiff upper lip Englishman nephew feel more bef...more
Maybe he had fun. I sure as heck didn't. Maybe it was the times (publication date is 1969) ... An old woman who proclaims way too loudly that she's having a great time to make her cliche of a stiff upper lip Englishman nephew feel more bef...more
"I found myself to be a ghost returning home, transparent as water. Curran was more alive than I was. I was almost surprised to see that my image was visible in the glass."
So says Henry Pulling, a retired English bank manager who has lived life so prudently, safely, carefully and boringly that he comes to realize that he has left no consequential living memory in anyone he's ever met. His favorite thing in all the world is tending to his dahlia flower garden and reading dusty volumes of Wordswor...more
So says Henry Pulling, a retired English bank manager who has lived life so prudently, safely, carefully and boringly that he comes to realize that he has left no consequential living memory in anyone he's ever met. His favorite thing in all the world is tending to his dahlia flower garden and reading dusty volumes of Wordswor...more
I was very happy with this one, as middle aged banker Harry Pullings is yanked out of his dull, complacent retirement by his Aunt Augusta. Forced to travel with her across Europe and eventually Paraguay, he finds a world full of adventure and absurdity with all sorts of strange encounters, and shameless manipulation by dear Auntie. Overall, this gets five stars from me. Recommended.
For the longer review, please go here:
http://www.epinions.com/review/Travel...
For the longer review, please go here:
http://www.epinions.com/review/Travel...
I have mixed feelings about this book--it was recommended to me highly by a friend, and I could totally see why: Greene is a master of his prose (check out the opening lines) and there were brilliant chapters in the novel. The characters were great--this is an example of how if you can write great characters, a reader will stay loyal to your novel out of a pure desire to follow them for hundreds of pages. But the plot was sort of lacking (I skipped entire chapters out of impatience with the slow...more
This was my first Graham Greene's novel. Oh, the ashes. Anything funnier? I laughed so much with the wild aunt and her nerd nephew, I couldn't wait to read his other comedies. Naturally, I was disappointed with his following books, which goes to show how subjective is each reading. Anyway, I'm over it now, and loving his books.
What can I say about a book that begins with a funeral and the ashes of the recently departed being jumbled up with a stash of pot? One of my good friends (upon reading my post about this challenge & my proposed reading list) suggested that I start with this one. He said that I would enjoy it. He was absolutely right. I thoroughly enjoyed this romp which takes a boring, middle-aged man through an adventure of self-discovery with his rather risque Aunt Augusta. The book is totally worth it ju...more
The Aunt, Augusta Bertram, was duplicitious and manipulative.
The Nephew and Narrator, a middle-aged man whose only love in life was cultivating and nurturing his dahlias, Henry Pulling, was a character you often find in a Graham Greene novel. Self-obsessed, kind of clueless, sexually-frustrated; not knowing and realizing that he was being dragged into a some kind of conspiracy until something bad happened, or almost happened.
This was not a light-hearted novel, even though there were a few attemp...more
The Nephew and Narrator, a middle-aged man whose only love in life was cultivating and nurturing his dahlias, Henry Pulling, was a character you often find in a Graham Greene novel. Self-obsessed, kind of clueless, sexually-frustrated; not knowing and realizing that he was being dragged into a some kind of conspiracy until something bad happened, or almost happened.
This was not a light-hearted novel, even though there were a few attemp...more
Henry Pulling is a recently retired bank manager. He was offered an arrangement after many years of devoted service when his bank was taken over by another. He is looking forward to spending more time with the dahlias that are his pride and joy, and also rubbing shoulders with his former customers in Southwood, an unremarkable London suburb that seems to be populated entirely by retired officers from the armed forces. He mentions Omo quite a lot and is vaguely embarrassed by the fact that he sha...more
In matters of style, one of the most thrilling things I've read in recent memory, probably since last summer, when I read Brideshead Revisited. The writing was a pleasure all on its own, and the narrator, and the stories that make up the larger story, all beautifully done. I fault only the presence of perhaps two too many coincidences (maybe more), but I don't really grudge it--it just seemed like gilding a lily. Otherwise, this story of a retired banker whose aunt arrives at his mother's funera...more
Written with the humanity typical of Greene, this is a story of a relationship between two highly contrasting personalities. One a staid ex-bank manager who's favourite pastime is taking care of his dahlias and the other an elderly lady (the aunt of the title) who wants to continue grabbing life by its horns and thereby living with the maximum excitement. Their travels take them to countries which contrast with the English staidness so encapsulated in the bankers character, but where the aunt fl...more
This was a lot of fun and was a thoughtful portrayal of a man awakening to himself in middle age out of a dreary, gray clockwork life that he hadn't known before was unsatisfying because he had no basis for comparison until an irreverent whirlwind of an aunt plucked him out of the dahlias and onto the Orient Express in an adventure that culminated in his finding himself a continent away and in another life. It wasn't a ham-handed moral tale; while it was witty there was a brooding quality to it...more
Romanzo piacevole, scoperto per caso curiosando in giro su aNobii, racconta l'incontro del cinquantenne protagonista con la propria arzilla settantacinquenne zia, due personaggi agli antipodi come inclinazioni: bancario in pensione con la passione per il giardinaggio lui, la cui massima evasione sono le cene a casa di un ricco cliente nel quartiere adiacente al suo; avventuriera giramondo dai modi eccentrici e dal passato e presente sentimentale movimentato, la simpatica zia. Per me lo stile del...more
I wasn't sure what to expect of Graham Greene, whether I would find him dull or interesting. And I heartily enjoyed Travels With My Aunt. Apparently, Graham Greene described it as "the only book I have written for the fun of it" (which doesn't speak so well for his other novels), and it was quite amusing, but also somehow serious at the same time (in a way.) The narrator of the book is Henry Pulling, a retired bank manager with nothing much to do. He meets his Aunt Augusta at what he believes to...more
British humor. I get some of it (Monty Python,
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
, The Office) but not all of it (David Lodge, Sacha Baron Cohen). As for Graham Greene's Travels with My Aunt, let's say I got about 60 percent of it. At no point did I laugh out loud (as my dad does when he reads Anthony Trollope or the aforementioned David Lodge), but I did enjoy Henry's exasperation, early on, with his septuagenarian Aunt Augusta and her shall we say supralegal activities, not to mention the e...more
Graham Greene has a style to him that will inevitably catch you and keep you glued to the pages. The political and diplomatic background information he infiltrates can only be that accurate due to his experience as a secret agent in west Africa. The nuances and anecdotes are the salt and pepper of this brilliant travel journal.
He creates characters so vivid that the moment you set down the book the world around you seems grey and lifeless. You travel with his aunt and Henry at the same time, enj...more
He creates characters so vivid that the moment you set down the book the world around you seems grey and lifeless. You travel with his aunt and Henry at the same time, enj...more
A total departure from all others in the current list of Greenies I’ve been reading. It’s a, strangely believe it, comedy. And damned good. “I met my Aunt Augusta for the first time at my mother’s funeral” is the opener. Thus saith Henry Pulling, recently retired bank officer, dahlia cultivator, and all around stuffed shirt prude. Aunt Augusta, on the other hand, is a rip-snorting high liver with a criminal past and (as it turns out) future with a joie de vivre Henry can only dream of.
The main...more
The main...more
Originally published on my blog here in October 1998.
Henry Pulling meets his Aunt Augusta at his mother's funeral, after many years without seeing her. Travels With My Aunt is the account of how she inexorably drags him into her strange, hedonistic lifestyle, a lifestyle more generally associated with teenagers than with a woman in her eighties and her retired bank manager nephew. In her company, he travels bemusedly, first to Istanbul on the Orient Express, becoming involved with drugs and curr...more
Henry Pulling meets his Aunt Augusta at his mother's funeral, after many years without seeing her. Travels With My Aunt is the account of how she inexorably drags him into her strange, hedonistic lifestyle, a lifestyle more generally associated with teenagers than with a woman in her eighties and her retired bank manager nephew. In her company, he travels bemusedly, first to Istanbul on the Orient Express, becoming involved with drugs and curr...more
Though I very much enjoyed Graham Greene’s humor and the way Henry’s and his Aunt Augusta’s adventure unraveled, I felt detached from the characters. In that way, I suppose I was in the voyeur position that Henry was in as the story begins—as a bank manager just learning about clients’ lives but never becoming part of them. I also cannot say because Henry was winsome to me, I applauded his epiphanies. I liked that he stopped being a hermit as he began caring about people he encountered on his qu...more
Греъм Грийн тормози заклет домошар с екзотични пътешествия и шантава леля: http://www.knigolandia.info/2010/01/b...
“Пипи Дългото чорапче” е любимата ми детска книжка. “Пътешествия с леля ми” на Греъм Грийн спокойно може да бъде нарочена за продължение на приключенията на порасналата и вече поостаряла Пипи, макар че сигурно авторът би подскочил, ако чуеше това мое мнение.
Пенсионираният банков чиновник Хенри Пулинг е краен домошар и сухар. От всичко на света най-обича гергините си, а погребението...more
“Пипи Дългото чорапче” е любимата ми детска книжка. “Пътешествия с леля ми” на Греъм Грийн спокойно може да бъде нарочена за продължение на приключенията на порасналата и вече поостаряла Пипи, макар че сигурно авторът би подскочил, ако чуеше това мое мнение.
Пенсионираният банков чиновник Хенри Пулинг е краен домошар и сухар. От всичко на света най-обича гергините си, а погребението...more
Travels With My Aunt is the story of Henry, a retired banker and his aunt Augusta, who in her seventies is much more ‘alive’ than most people in their twenties! They meet after an entire lifetime at Henry’s mother’s funeral and from that instant, he finds himself, inexplicably and imperceptibly drawn to this woman who is both a blood-relative and complete stranger. Worse – she is everything that he is not and although he pities her initially and offers his companionship grudgingly, even condesce...more
Henry, a rather conservative, retired banker sees his long lost septuagenarian aunt at his mother's funeral. His Aunt Augusta is anything but conservative which he discovers within moments of meeting her. At Augusta’s whim, a force Henry is powerless to ignore, this odd couple take a simple trip through Europe. This short experience introduces Henry to the pitfalls and excitement of living life on the fringes of legality, an everyday occurrence for Augusta.
At the end of their brief trip Henry re...more
At the end of their brief trip Henry re...more
Off-the-wall, slightly revolting book with dubious themes padded heavily in comedy.
I honestly did't know what to make of this book. At times I was all into it, at times I wanted it to end, but after about four chapters, I was unequivocally tired of the self-absorbed, hedonist aunt and kept hoping she'd fade. She was a little too over-the-top. The more I got to "know" her, the more unsympathetic she became. By the end, I figured her to be completely selfish, yet the type that gets used badly by m...more
I honestly did't know what to make of this book. At times I was all into it, at times I wanted it to end, but after about four chapters, I was unequivocally tired of the self-absorbed, hedonist aunt and kept hoping she'd fade. She was a little too over-the-top. The more I got to "know" her, the more unsympathetic she became. By the end, I figured her to be completely selfish, yet the type that gets used badly by m...more
The title of the book and the description provided on the back of my edition were far from compelling, but I picked up the book nonetheless on the strength of the author alone. I consider Graham Greene a truly gifted writer and in the end found the book enjoyable, though it's fairly unconventional for a Greene work and should not be considered par for the course. The prose is not as well crafted as in his other novels, but the memorable characters and stories framed within the narrative carry th...more
May 19, 2012
Hubert
rated it
4 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
fiction,
boston-20s-and-30s
At first I found this book slight, superficial, and slow going; the only reason to read it, at the beginning, was to immerse oneself in Greene’s deftly constructed dark humor. The main character is a retired banker, Henry, whose mother has passed away. At her funeral, he meets his Aunt Augusta, a free-spirited woman in her 80s with whom he takes various trips around the world: to Istanbul via the Orient Express, to Brighton, to Paraguay / Argentina.
Throughout the book we learn of Augusta's illus...more
Throughout the book we learn of Augusta's illus...more
A nice read about a retired bank employee leading a peaceful life in some idyllic town of England. His life takes a turn when he passes away and meets his aunt, his mother's sister, at the funeral. He has not met her for many years. She draws him into her circle and starts taking him for her tours abroad. It is truly a different experience for somebody who had never traveled out of his town.
During these trips she relates details of her life which involve various escapades that she had with the d...more
During these trips she relates details of her life which involve various escapades that she had with the d...more
When Henry Pulling, a retired bank manager and a rather boring individual, meets his 75 year-old aunt Augusta for the first time in over 50 years at his supposed mother's funeral, he learns that his mother is not his mother, and that his aunt lives a bizarre life. Soon after, he leaves his dahlias, to travel with her to Brighton, Paris, Istanbul and Paraguay. I should have been aware of her low-key immorality when the cover calls her "a veteran of Europe's hotel bedrooms," but had to keep readin...more
You never know what you're going to get when you pick up a Graham Greene novel. This one's a comedy, with life and death overtones. Aunt Augusta prolongs her life by traveling, and looking up old friends....very old friends. She has no use for the dead. She is Catholic, but doesn't "believe what they believe". An old lover, an Italian Nazi-sympathizing swindler, arranged for her to be received into the Church. He wanted the best for her.
Critics say that this book is a romp -- unlike Greene's oth...more
Critics say that this book is a romp -- unlike Greene's oth...more
Clear 4*s. Life is full of coincidences - several happened to me this week! The one in this case is that the last book I read was the Comforters by Muriel Spark, and that book (a forerunner by about 10 years) also featured an elderly lady who is breaking the rules.
Travels with my aunt though features none of the painful catholicism that is always a feature in Muriel Spark's books. The writing is good prose, and evocative, the type of book that makes me drift off momentarily into little reveries...more
Travels with my aunt though features none of the painful catholicism that is always a feature in Muriel Spark's books. The writing is good prose, and evocative, the type of book that makes me drift off momentarily into little reveries...more
Ugh. I was so utterly bored by this book that I wanted so badly to abandon it. But I forced myself to continue, even though I skimmed big chunks of it.
It just seemed like nothing was happening. And the things that DID happen annoyed me. Seriously, the "manservant" of the aunt you JUST met put marijuana in the urn containing your just-that-day-fresh mother's ashes, and that's just that? And then, when the police come to claim the urn for testing, they'll just need a tiny pinch so that they can t...more
It just seemed like nothing was happening. And the things that DID happen annoyed me. Seriously, the "manservant" of the aunt you JUST met put marijuana in the urn containing your just-that-day-fresh mother's ashes, and that's just that? And then, when the police come to claim the urn for testing, they'll just need a tiny pinch so that they can t...more
I wasn't sure what to make of this novel at first. I was all set to give it 2 stars, but after the tedium of Aunt Augusta's stories (she's highly offended later when Henry, pleading tiredness, doesn't want to listen to one of her stories at the moment, but I understood why completely!) has passed into the background, the story picked up considerably and I was able to go with its flow.
This is a 'comic' (in both senses of the word) novel and it works as such -- it's just not a favorite genre of mi...more
This is a 'comic' (in both senses of the word) novel and it works as such -- it's just not a favorite genre of mi...more
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Graham Greene was an English novelist, short story writer, playwright, screenplay writer, travel writer and critic whose works explore the ambivalent moral and political issues of the modern world. Greene combined serious literary acclaim with wide popularity.
Although Greene objected strongly to being described as a “Catholic novelist” rather than as a “novelist who happened to be Catholic,” Catho...more
More about Graham Greene...
Although Greene objected strongly to being described as a “Catholic novelist” rather than as a “novelist who happened to be Catholic,” Catho...more
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“They think my mother's ashes are marijuana.”
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7 people liked it
“I have never planned anything illegal in my life,' Aunt Augusta said. 'How could I plan anything of the kind when I have never read any of the laws and have no idea what they are?”
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3 people liked it
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