Actual Rating: 3.5 Stars
This was the first novel by William Somerset Maugham that I read; hitherto my only brush with him was with his charming book on Spain, "Don Fernando", last year and a little of his Ashenden spy stories and I had been impressed, if not completely won over by him yet. But "Cakes And Ale" had been lingering in my mind for a while - I had been intrigued by the premise of a novel that, as the blurb and numerous other reviews here on Goodreads said it, was a satirical story set in the English literary society of the early twentieth century and also a compelling character study of a rebellious, uninhibited woman through the eyes of an author and also of his own tumultuous relationship with the same. And Mr. Maugham's reputation as one of the most compelling masters of realistic fiction is well-known too and it was high time since I had embarked on discovering his fiction.
"Cakes And Ale" also carries with it some notoriety. Maugham was as interested in satirizing the cosy but stifling world of literary appraisal and praise and in carving out a spirited, effervescent and utterly unforgettable heroine who challenges and defies the norms of respectability of her times as he was in deconstructing, with blistering acid wit, the very idea and identity of a Grand Old Man of letters. The story, jumping forward and mostly backwards as a device of narrative flashbacks, that form most of the meat of the novel, is narrated by William Ashenden, Maugham's alter-ego, who also wields the same scabrous wit and biting tongue at fellow storytellers - the overly sycophant popular writer Alroy Kear is loosely based on Hugh Walpole who was even reportedly upset at this bit of blatant referencing while the late literary lion Edward Driffield, whose life Kear is about to chronicle and whose own innermost truths and memories Ashenden, associated with him since boyhood, revisits as well, was loosely based on Thomas Hardy himself. Maugham was never one to mince his words and through much of the novel, as Ashenden is reluctantly compelled to think and recall of his own memories and acquaintances with Driffield, and most notably with his first wife - the bubbly barmaid Rosie Gann - he also indulges fully his sarcastic views of the literary circles in which he himself moved and lends what could have been merely a wistful story of melancholia and lost love a hard, acerbic edge.
And yet, while I would have admired the same acerbic edge in any other novel, I could not help feeling that the writer's astute but also didactic soliloquies on the hypocrisy prevalent among popular writers, critics and their preening, earnest publicists get in the way of telling its real story - of an aging and disillusioned writer remembering and longing for a past of innocence, friendship and tumultuous love. It does not help that Ashenden is hardly a memorable enough character, let alone a memorable narrator - his voice is distinguished only because Maugham was a deft, elegantly crisp writer to begin with and not because he possesses any personality or distinction of his own. His subtly barbed observations and remarks about the people at whom he aims his cynicism bring welcome wit to the proceedings but they also turn didactic and self-indulgent; moreover, we are never really allowed to know Ashenden better to find out what really has made him so wary of people and this is why we never relate to him as a character.
And that is also a bit of a problem with the other characters in the narrative, in Ashenden's flashback narrative, that is. Almost everyone is one-note and one-dimensional and it does not help that they all appear either black or white. The society snobs and the respectable countrymen who frown and disapprove of Ted Driffield and Rosie's unorthodox ways in Ashenden's native hamlet of Blackstable as well as in London's intellectual gatherings are always devious and while Maugham balances that with a few chosen characters who still express a grudging admiration for these bohemians, it feels too weak to make a very strong argument in their favour. Much has been said about how Rosie, as the blurb itself puts it, is one of the writer's greatest female creations and indeed, from whatever we learn about her through the narrator's memories of first a boyish admiration for her charms and then a tempestuous affair at adulthood, she emerges as a fully fleshed woman, charming, demure, beautiful, sensual, free-spirited, enigmatic and gleefully rebellious. But again, the overbearing tenor of Ashenden's dislike of everyone else gets in the way in understanding or even experiencing her enigma to a greater extent.
It hurts, nevertheless, to lament these flaws of this novel because, despite all these failings, it is impossible to deny that Maugham was an extremely skilled writer - a storyteller gifted with dialogue and economy, with even the stirrings of atmosphere and milieu and inherently a storyteller who needed more room to cut loose and wield all his prowess more comfortably. "Cakes And Ale", when not rambling about how writers of limited talent become famous or how motherly society women lavish all their praise on novelists, is a deeply sad and exquisitely profound story of a bygone age and place, of a woman who was far ahead of her times, of a revered writer whom everyone admires slavishly but none understand and of a man who knew and understood both these people but cannot quite reconcile himself to what they meant for him in his life. It is about this spirit of freewheeling defiance, it is about honesty misunderstood for greatness or even notoriety and it is about the ecstasy and agony of falling head over heels in love regardless of consequences and losing it all in one swift stroke. The giddy thrill of defiance, the lingering melancholia of solitude and nostalgia, the heart-wrenching pain and jealousy of illicit - these are feelings that leak out through Maugham's clipped, concise but conversational prose and there are many small and vivid scenes that his words convey that linger indelibly in my mind.
The real broken heart and tortured soul of the novel, however, is one that is also criminally overshadowed by the writer's decision to remember only Rosie. Edward Driffield, the mildly eccentric writer to whom Rosie is married and whom she leaves, is that core of stifled pain and anguish that lies simmering at the crux of the novel. He is even more elusive and enigmatic than his wife and unlikely muse - we only see glimpses - and well-written glimpses at that - of a rebellious, free-spirited man trapped inside the entity of a venerated writer who has to be "respectable" and a hapless, melancholic romantic held at bay by his domineering second wife. Even as both Ashenden and Maugham don't quite linger to explore the troubled and pained genius of this man, the final chapter reveals a particularly poignant episode from his past wherein real life mirrors fiction and in the end, both the narrator and the author end up respecting Driffield and even themselves.
Yes, the writing is good, very good, and yet it's never good enough - at least for the story that it wants to tell. At times, Maugham stifles his own and his narrator's feelings too deliberately and after all that one feels, one yearns for more. This is not exactly a major fault with the novel, nor does it dim the emotional impact of the parts which succeed so admirably. It is just that great things are expected from great storytellers and I could not help feeling that at heart, "Cakes And Ale" is a story that deserved a bigger canvas to be told more convincingly and effectively. Or even a storyteller who could tell it with much more deftness even within the same length of two hundred pages (you would know whom I am referring to). Perhaps Maugham's bigger novels then are more rewarding. Still, as a first-time experience of his prose, this novel is far above the usual standard and deserves to be read by all.