Record Details
Book cover

Matters of honor

Begley, Louis. (Author).

Three Harvard freshmen form an unlikely friendship that starts to develop in the early 1950's and they grapple with life's issues as they grow older.

Book  - 2007
FIC Begle
1 copy / 0 on hold

Available Copies by Location

Location
Victoria Available
  • ISBN: 9780307265258
  • ISBN: 0307265250
  • Physical Description 307 pages
  • Edition 1st ed.
  • Publisher New York : Alfred A. Knopf, 2007.

Content descriptions

General Note:
"A Borzoi book"--T.p. verso.
Immediate Source of Acquisition Note:
LSC 30.00

Additional Information

Syndetic Solutions - Summary for ISBN Number 9780307265258
Matters of Honor
Matters of Honor
by Begley, Louis
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Summary

Matters of Honor


From the acclaimed author ofWartime LiesandAbout Schmidt,a luminous story of a brilliant but haunted outsider driven to transcend his past. At Harvard in the early 1950s, three seemingly mismatched freshmen are thrown together: Sam, who fears that his fine New England name has been tarnished by his father's drinking and his mother's affairs; Archie, an affable army brat whose veneer of sophistication was acquired at an obscure Scottish boarding school; and Henry, fiercely intelligent but obstinate and unpolished, a refugee from Poland via a Brooklyn high school. As roommates they enter a world governed by arcane rules, where merit is everything except when trumped by pedigree and the inherited prerogatives of belonging. Each roommate's accommodation to this world will require self-reinvention, none more audacious than Henry's. Believing himself to be at last in the "land of the free," he is determined to see himself on a level playing field, playing a game he can win. The ante is high--virtual renunciation of his past--but the jackpot seems even higher--long dreamed-of esteem, success, and arrival. Henry will stay in the game almost to the last hand, even after it becomes clear he must stake his loyalty to his parents and even to himself. Reserved and observant, Sam recounts the trio's Harvard years and the reckonings that follow: his own struggle with familial demons and his rise as a novelist; a coarsened Archie's descent into drink; and, most attentively, Henry's Faustian bargain and then his mysterious disappearance just as all his wildest ambitions seem to have been realized. Love and loyalty will impel Sam to discover the secret of Henry's final reinvention. An unforgettable portrait of friendship and a meditation on loyalty and honor--Louis Begley's finest achievement.