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| Klas Ostergen: Gentlemen |
| Monday, 21 April 2008 | |
“Presumably it’s a quiet spring rain that can be heard
drizzling over Stockholm at the moment, in the Year
of the Child, the election year of 1979”. So the scene is
set for a retrospective look at Swedish life post World
War Two and beyond the Cold War. Here lies author
Klas Ostergren, our twenty-five year old narrator barricaded
into his flat, ready to impart his time spent with
the older, enigmatic Morgan brothers.
Klas explains -
Henry and Leo Morgan have vanished.
Written in 1980, and translated into English in 2007,
it is a classic tale of love and adventure, mystery and
creativity. The story is less about Klas and his experiences,
and more about his fl atmates Henry and Leo’s
lives. Following a burglary in which Klas loses all his
possessions, he moves in with Henry
and a few months later meets his
brother Leo. Clearly fascinated by
the more experienced brothers, he
recounts their hedonistic and artistic
pasts.
Firstly, we follow the magnetic
Henry Morgan, a boxer and musician
desperately in love with the
beautiful, but older Maud –the novel’s
femme fatale. He deserts Maud
and a stint of national service, fl eeing
to Europe. Henry’s narrative
takes us through the 1960s and into
the 1970s, from his one-time secret
agent mission, to encounters with
famous artists and poets, and his
love affairs in between.
Some sections
are overly drawn out and intense,
as Ostergaren creates a series
of characters and situations, but
each scene eventually merges with
the novel’s main plot.
Alongside Henry, younger brother Leo’s tale is told
with similar gusto. His teenage years as a child prodigy
to revolutionary poet and disillusioned drunk are
beautifully written.
Snippets of his poetry are strong
and beautiful – it would be easy for the reader to believe
his work had a devastatingly powerful effect on
Swedish literature. Leo’s teenage years are evocative of
a bygone era– new Beatles haircuts and girls who look
like fi lm stars – “This spring smelled very different. It
smelled of cigarette smoke and perfume.” With Leo,
innocence gives way to love and idealistic rebellion.
Overall, Leo’s confused and sensitive nature is well
portrayed.
Gentlemen is a mass of fascinating encounters with
perfectly drawn characters - from
the obsessive teenager Verner who
cultivates fi les of missing persons,
to the mysterious W.S - Maud’s older
lover. Although a novel that examines
Swedish life in a particular era,
Ostergaren’s novel is far from staid
and preaching. Henry and Leo’s
personal experiences of the era are
coupled with darker themes of politics
and money. They stumble upon
a State secret from the past, taking
them beyond the sinister and on
towards a path of self-destruction.
Gentlemen is an imaginative novel,
full of suspense and adventure, but
don’t expect a perfect ending – by
default the Morgan brothers refuse
to conform.
Review by Catherine Niven
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“Presumably it’s a quiet spring rain that can be heard
drizzling over Stockholm at the moment, in the Year
of the Child, the election year of 1979”. So the scene is
set for a retrospective look at Swedish life post World
War Two and beyond the Cold War. Here lies author
Klas Ostergren, our twenty-five year old narrator barricaded
into his flat, ready to impart his time spent with
the older, enigmatic Morgan brothers.

