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THE HOUSE OF DOORS by Tan Twan Eng

THE HOUSE OF DOORS

by Tan Twan Eng

Pub Date: Oct. 17th, 2023
ISBN: 9781639731930
Publisher: Bloomsbury

A historical novel about W. Somerset Maugham’s sojourn to Malaysia and the secrets he discovered there.

Eng’s third novel is mainly set in 1921, when the globe-trotting, world-famous author of Of Human Bondage visited the coastal province of Penang. He’s a guest in the sizable home of Lesley and Robert Hamlyn, a married British couple with a frosty relationship, and “Willie” is soon determined to figure out what’s under the ice. (It’s a useful distraction from learning he’s lost his life’s savings in a bad investment.) Lesley, we learn, was once close to the rising Chinese leader Sun Yat Sen; she was also a close friend of Ethel Proudlock, a woman who stood accused of murder, killing a man who attempted to rape her. (Maugham would use Proudlock’s sensational trial and other elements of his Malaysia trip as fodder for his 1926 story collection, The Casuarina Tree.) Alternating between Lesley’s and Willie’s perspectives, Eng tracks two inveterate gossips busily uncovering years’ worth of seductions, infidelities, marriages of convenience, and other secrets. (Willie’s status as a closeted gay man is a key part of the story, and he’s not the only one in the closet.) The title refers to a refuge Lesley finds where she might imagine becoming “a different woman, living a different life.” Yet for a story so suffused with matters of sex, violence, and long-running resentment, the novel operates at a surprisingly low boil and is mannered almost to a fault. Some of that effect is a tactic, Eng evoking Maugham’s subdued style in understated revelations of secret lives, and the writing is graceful and well-researched. Still, the novel at times labors to capture the passions that consume its characters’ lives.

A restrained look at a society working to keep up appearances.