Tuesday, 18 October 2016

Sweet Caress: The Many Lives of Amory Clay - not always so sweet!

When she was eleven, Amory Clay's father returned from the trenches of the First World War. But his experiences had broken him, and he was no longer the father who used to stand on his head just to amuse his family. Never was this more obvious than when he came to her school to take her out on a trip, and then drove the car into a lake in an attempted suicide. They both survived the ordeal and it may have been this event which triggered Amory to live her life to the full, which she definitely goes on to do. She loves photography and, despite all opposition, sets out to become a professional photographer with the help of her Uncle Greville. This profession takes her to 1920's Berlin, 1930's New York, the blackshirt riots in London and then, as a war photographer, to the Second World War. The reader gets to view her life while she is reflecting upon them as she compiles a journal during 1977. In her memoir, she relates the most intimate moments in an unflinching and unsentimental way - the way I imagine a photojournalist of the time would indeed take a picture - you shoot what's there, nothing more, nothing less. This, for me, sometimes made it hard for me to like Amor, but I did warm to her in the end. We hear about her lovers, the near-death experiences she had trying to get the shots she needed, and also her family. We also get a bit of the Vietnam War thrown in for good measure, almost as a last hurrah for a much older Amory. Sweet Caress: The Many Lives of Amory Clay is by no means a perfect book and I have to admit that I wasn't totally convinced by the ending. You do get to see much of the main events of the 20th Century through the lens of a female photographer, which is different, but at the same time, not totally believable that this one character would get to be there at all those crucial moments. Don't get me wrong, William Boyd is a tremendous author, and many of the passages were a joy to read, but for me, there were not enough of these to really make me gush about this book. I wish I'd liked it more!

My STAR rating: THREE.

Length: 465 print pages.
Price I paid: £2.92.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio download; ebook.

No comments:

Post a Comment