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The Julian Calendar

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A bright young Kiwi photojournalist returns to London with the aim of releasing himself from a profound love affair that has stalled without explanation.

Instead, he is derailed by memories of the secretive nurse who broke his heart, and rejuvenated by a much older man whose unexpected and intense friendship challenges the fundamental notion of love itself.

Heart-wrenching and heart-warming, this deeply moving story traverses four tumultuous seasons in the lives of two outwardly disparate men who have both lost the courage to love unconditionally.

330 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2018

17 people want to read

About the author

William Henry

1 book5 followers
William Henry is the fiction pen name of Simon Hertnon.

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Scott Whitmont.
73 reviews8 followers
February 1, 2019
Young Kiwi expat Daniel Jamieson is enjoying building his career in London but is haunted and somewhat obsessed by the memory of his first love Bridget. He is introduced to an old friend’s bachelor uncle, Julian Marriot – an intellectual man of culture who mentors Daniel in the world of classical music and literature. A deep and unlikely friendship develops between the two men, whilst Julian’s regard for Daniel grows to the point of unrequited and equally haunting love. In the meantime, Daniel meets two other women, sending him further down the uncertain path of potential love and relationship.
Narrated in alternate chapters in the voices and perspectives of Daniel and Julian, what ensues is a meandering rumination on a complexity of human interactions from love and friendship, obsession and passion to sexuality and identity, philosophy and fate.
Perhaps akin to the sometime journey of love itself, The Julian Calendar is by no means a pacey thriller but rather a slow-build story in which emotions, oft-derailed life plans and relationships gradually develop to the point that the reader becomes totally immersed in the narrative’s exploration of love, friendship and life philosophy.
In his Acknowledgments, the author William Henry reminds us of the words of Marsilio Ficino, the Renaissance philosopher oft-quoted in the book “Nothing is more full of grace in the human condition than the presence of a most excellent friend”.
In Daniel’s words, while discovering a “passionate friendship” he learns about “integrity, fidelity, enthusiasm, truthfulness and love”. The reader does likewise and is left cogitating on these rather welcome themes long after the book has been put down.
1 review
June 3, 2019
This is a fabulous and unusual story written with such heart and courage it takes my breath away. Thank goodness it finally made it to print because I now know I would be very sad to have missed it and thanks to the Listener for recognising its gift
Profile Image for Penny.
421 reviews67 followers
June 14, 2019
Official Review in 'The Read', Bookseller's Association of New Zealand, slightly longer version here:

I must confess – when I picked up this book I did something I don’t normally do – I read the author’s note in the back first and I’m so glad that I did. The postscript written in September 2018 particularly struck me: ‘On Saturday 12 May, I placed in John’s unsteady 89-year-old hands an advance review copy of The Julian Calendar. I was overcome with immeasurable relief; John just beamed. He was content. He knew this book would again change my life. He knew it had already changed his. Eleven days later, on a chilly Wellington evening, and only minutes after I had kissed his forehead and whispered suggestions for the sweetest of dreams, John died. An angel heading home...’ It made me cry then in anticipation of a novel that might change my life, and makes me tearful now, knowing that it has.

‘To own a beautiful new book is a tactile treat. The smooth feel of the jacket, the firmness of the hard cover, the quality of the paper, all make the fingers move over the book and seek out more messages than the words themselves can provide. The next best thing is to give such a book to someone who you know will appreciate it in just these ways.’ (page 173). This certainly is one such book, one such reading experience that I am grateful to have received to review, and I cannot easily compare it with any other.

Set in a period of history before mobile phones were everywhere, and before social media sites came to both join us and also disconnect us from real life, The Julian Calendar commences at the official start of the English Summer, June 1992. Daniel Jamieson is a heart-broken kiwi twenty-something looking for distraction in London, while Julian Marriot is a sixty-something classical music loving ex-patriot looking for companionship (whether he’d admit to that or not). The world is a place still reeling from the discovery and deaths of the horrific AIDS epidemic that began to sweep the world in the 1980s. Julian has watched friends wither and disappear from his life. When Daniel turns up at his door, an old university friend of his nephew’s, he is both nervous and attracted by the young man. What ensues over the length of the book is the blossoming of a friendship that despite sexual persuasion and a forty-year age gap, ever deepens, aided by the sharing of books and music between them.

This work is beautiful, the journey of two men (Simon Hertnon and John Henry Garmonsway), with two viewpoints, released under one made-up authorial name, William Henry. It is a kind of fictional record of the writer’s own experiences, twenty-five years in the making. That’s right, this book took twenty-five years to put out, and it is clear that the twenty-five years it took to write and edit were not spent idly. The two voices entwine wonderfully, giving complexity to the characters and to their wonderings about the friendship between them. The question is posed, ‘what is love and who can share it?’ Can a loving friendship between two men exist and flourish when one of them is heterosexual and the other is not? There are no boring moments here, every scene had me wrapped up in their world as if it were my own, or rather, as if I were somehow a part of their experience. When Daniel was bogged down in longing for the wrong woman I was right there with him, and when Julian gave his advice full of wisdom, I felt like I learned with Daniel too.

Then of course, there was the music. The book literally dripped with it. So I was pleased to discover that a soundtrack has been put together to go with the novel. You can find the playlist on Spotify under the title William Henry: The Julian Calendar. I thoroughly recommend downloading and listening to it while you read. It certainly heightens the experience of prose that flows like the poetry of music. I was particularly hooked on the music of the book when Daniel admitted that his favourite band was ‘Icehouse’. I actually yelled out ‘Me too!’ and enjoyed his interpretation of some of the lyrics. I’d love to discuss interpretations of Icehouse lyrics with the writer (Simon) as in the 2000s I was privy to Iva Davies’s recollections of what some of his songs are actually about and they bring whole new meaning to ‘Goodnight Mr Matthews’ for one!

I feel blessed to have read this book and shared this experience. If I could, I would buy the whole world this well written novel. So help me out readers of good kiwi fiction – go out and get a copy yourself. You can find or request ‘The Julian Calendar’ from any good bookstore, or order your own copy from the Nakedize Online Shop: www.nakedize.com/product/the-julian-c... . As ‘love will be my ink’ too, I promise you will not be disappointed.

Review by Penny M Geddis
‘The Julian Calendar’ by William Henry
Publisher: Marsilio Press
ISBN: 978-09582355-5-6
Profile Image for Susan Holt.
Author 5 books27 followers
November 30, 2018
An intriguing story of a deep friendship between two men that heals the hearts of both. One struggling to leave behind an addictive, failed love affair, the other looking for more in his current liaison.

A thought-provoking, musical journey set in London and New Zealand and it's all about love.

There's even a soundtrack!
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