Saw this book with an intriguing title in McNally Jackson SoHo after a Saturday brunch and immediately added it to my reading list. This is a poetic dedication from the author (protagonist?) to his much older lover, the “King of Naples”.
One of those books that poetically talk about the ~ soft life ~ of the old moneyed who have monogrammed towels, throw dinner parties, and are surrounded by hanger ons. The protagonist takes many lovers in many countries throughout his life, but his recollections always shift back to the OG King of Naples, and how each person he’s met is a poor imitation of the King. It was nice to be wrapped up in the sumptuous if not overly flowery imagery of this ~ soft life ~.
Introduction to the book
This “you” is the “King of Naples,” though that phrase appears only in the title: a distinguished, cultured man held in esteem by a court of distinguished, cultured friends, the “saints” who will continue to cross the narrator’s path long after the relationship’s demise. The older man saves the narrator—they meet in Spain, where the narrator, seventeen years old, still a high-school student, has fled his despotic, drug-addled father—and supports him, financially and otherwise, training him both in gay life and in the ceremonies of high culture. The narrator feels at once grateful for the older man’s protection and trapped by the safety he provides: “you were the living barrier between me and the danger I didn’t want to digest, only devour.” He is constantly aware of the older man’s “full, powerful life,” and aware of his own power, too, the power of beauty, of the beloved.
Nocturnes for the King of Naples is an account of the narrator’s search for the older lover he has lost. This search is geographical, and will take him to the places they traveled together: Rome, Fire Island, Spain. It’s also sexual, the narrator’s promiscuity a process of seeking the lover “in the bodies of hundreds of men I’ve ransacked, tearing them open as though surely this one must be concealing the contraband goods.” Most profoundly, it is a search through the past, the narrator scouring his avowedly fragmentary, unreliable memories for fragments of the “you” he addresses.
Excerpts
I’ve searched for you and not found you, attempted to forget you and found you everywhere, in foreign children, in my own childhood memories, in the bodies of hundreds of men I’ve ransacked, tearing them open as though surely this one must be concealing the contraband goods, only to throw them aside, meaningless raffia, and I’ve watched my own face age as I waited for your return, fearing I would no longer attract you should I ever see you again.
A moody, fragile girl lifted out of her daydreams and instructed to say clever things to adults and to expose her shoulders to tall men.
The saddest thing, the thing that makes me groan and step off the hotel porch into the night, is remembering how modern we all thought we were way back then. Old money, old names, these old houses were the legacy we ignored. For us there was only the figure in the foreground, standing so casually and confidently, yours.
As I looked at the other passengers, I could easily pick out those expressionless expressionless, intriguing beauties I address as you, those same faces, dark or fair, brooding or elated, whom I’d always believed I could love, even if I’d seen them only for a moment on a train or a bus or passing me on the street.