But what is often lost behind the sheer pleasure brought by his books is their layered Chekhovian subtleties: Boyd is abundantly talented at capturing life’s disconnections, in prose that provides no easy consolations. In such company, Boyd is sometimes seen as a more “accessible” or “commercial” writer. This has been a central question of many of the stronger novels by the contemporaries who joined Boyd on Granta’s famous 1983 Best of Young British Novelists list: Julian Barnes’s Flaubert’s Parrot, Kazuo Ishiguro’s The Remains of the Day, Ian McEwan’s Atonement, Martin Amis’s Time’s Arrow and Pat Barker’s Regeneration Trilogy could all be said to be about the leftovers of a life – and what remains of history. It is hard to think of another contemporary author who quietly marches his readers so relentlessly towards death The discovery of this manuscript supposedly led “W.B.” to wonder: “What do we leave behind us when we die?” Like the note that opens Yann Martel’s Life of Pi, another novel of outlandish adventure (and one that beat Any Human Heart to win the Booker prize in 2002), it suggests we are about to read a story based on one the author encountered in “real” life: the “unfinished, disordered, somewhat baffling autobiography of Cashel Greville Ross (1799-1882)”. The Romantic starts with a playful “author’s note” by “W.B.” that invites us to suspend our disbelief. What other hero in literature could have suffered the nicknames “the Cashelmite”, “Cash-Cash-Coo” and “Cashelnius the Great”? And who else could have been present for so many of history’s key moments? Along the way, trapped by “the vocabulary of sightseeing”, Cashel sometimes succumbs to every travel writer’s worst fear: “He was finding it hard to be original.” But as with Logan Mountstuart, the hero of Boyd’s masterwork, Any Human Heart, Cashel ultimately emerges as a one-off – an inimitable character, whether he knows it or not. As a guest of the Romantic poets in Pisa, he finds himself adrift in his own libido. As part of the East Indian Army in Sri Lanka, Cashel finds himself questioning his own ethics. His inclinations towards aloneness mingle with his restless, romantic nature to send him from his birth in County Cork, Ireland, in 1799 to Oxford, London, Brussels and Zanzibar. But like his creator – the author of 16 previous novels, five short-story collections, some nonfiction and several stage plays – Cashel Greville Ross covers great distances. T he protagonist of William Boyd’s new novel claims he is “not a gregarious traveller”.
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