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H.M. Pulham, Esq

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good*

*Best Available: (missing dust jacket)

$9.79
Almost Gone, Only 1 Left!

Book Overview

A Harvard reunion prompts a Boston Brahmin's search for meaning in this comedy of manners by the number-one New York Times best-selling author of Point of No Return. In preparation for the 25th... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

From the Past

Recommend. Interesting insight into the WASP culture of early 20th century. According to the copyright page inside the book, "A serial version of this story appeared in McCall's under the title of 'Gone Tomorrow'" in 1941.

Near classic, nearly forgotten

John P. Marquand's 1940 novel "H.M. Pulham, Esquire," is the story of a man who is looking back on his life and contemplating the two women he has loved, one his wife and the other the woman he left long ago. Henry Pulham, the subject and narrator, is a blue-blooded Bostonian who seems to exemplify the proper American man in the first half of the twentieth century--a prep school kid who went to Harvard, served in World War I, and is now a successful investment counselor in the prime of his life and career.Given this premise, a more cynical, pessimistic novel might try to make Pulham out to be secretly miserable, and a more simplistic one might try to turn him into a moral paragon, a Promethean hero who suffers for a sacrifice; but Marquand's vision of him is what each of us could be, a little bit of every man. Pulham has a wife, Kay, and two teenage children, a son who is lazy and insolent and a daughter who is abnormally immature for her age. This seems to be the family that was always his destiny, and he is generally happy with the arrangement despite the occasional quarrel. After the war, Pulham's best friend from Harvard, Bill King, gets him a job at a New York advertising agency where he meets and falls in love with a beautiful, vivacious young woman named Marvin Myles, who is a completely new type of girl to him--an independent woman who triumphed over hardships to earn herself a professional career at a time when women rarely had the opportunities to do so--and nothing like the spoiled, sheltered, superficial girls he knew growing up, one of whom was Kay. Why he did not stay with Marvin may have had something to do with his family's prejudice that she wouldn't be the "right" girl for him to marry, whereas Kay was a part of his world and therefore a supposedly better choice. The life that could have been, and the suspicion that Kay, after all these years, may be having an affair with Bill King, are the conflicts Pulham examines in his narration. There are no shocking revelations and none of the violent drama that a tawdrier novel might try to contrive; instead, we get a very sincere and realistic look at a man who is laying his life bare without expecting sympathy or admiration. Marquand's language is crisp and unpretentious, giving his narrator an affable tone--wise, mature, sober, comfortable with his privileged upbringing but never snobbish. It is indicative of Pulham's state of mind that of all the books he could be reading, he is currently trying to finish the "Education" of fellow Harvard alumnus Henry Adams, also an aristocratic Bostonian who devoted himself to the study of the course of his baffling life. Unfortunately by now this novel seems to be almost completely forgotten, lost in the dustbins of twentieth-century American period pieces, struggling to stay in print in a new century that claims to have different values and urgencies. Granted, it does not approach the majesty of "The Great Gatsby" or the depth of "The So

Pulham examines his life before his 25th Harvard anniversary

An excellent book, if a trifle wordy. This could well be a continuation of "The Late George Apley," Marquand's 1937 Pulitzer Prize winning book. Harry Pulham examines his life prior to the 25th anniversary of his Harvard graduation. He thinks about what went right and what went wrong with business, his marriage, his kids, & life. Marquand's brilliant phrase from George Apley "I am the sort of man I am, because environment prevented my being anything else." applies as much to Harry Pulham as it did to George Apley, & Pulham examines his life along these lines. If you love Boston and Boston history, this is a must read along with Cleveland Amory's "The Bostonians," Edwin O'Connor's "The Last Hurrah," Joseph Dineen's "Ward Eight," James Michael Curley's autobiography "I'd Do it Again," and Marquand's "The Late George Apley."
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