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Maiden Voyage (1943)

par Denton Welch

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2288119,627 (4)10
A moving coming-of-age novel based on the author's adolescent experiences in China  At sixteen, Denton Welch was attending school in Derbyshire, England. One morning, instead of taking the train to school, he caught a bus traveling in the opposite direction with no real plan except to start a new adventure. Although he reluctantly returned to school at his family's bidding, he soon received a letter postmarked from Shanghai--a letter from his father suggesting that Denton join him China.   So began a momentous journey that would shape young Denton Welch's life. Leaving behind his companions at school as well as the life he had known, he traveled across the globe to China, where he was seized with a sense of wonder completely new to him. It was there, so far from his roots, that young Denton began to explore his ambitions, aspirations, and secret desires.   Written with an artist's keen sensibility for observation and inspired by J. R. Ackerley's Hindoo HolidayMaiden Voyage is an unforgettable tale of growing up and discovering oneself.… (plus d'informations)
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Memoirs of a keenly aware young man who decides to run away from school. A sensitive soul to whom the absurd customs and degrading milieu of a boys public school (Repton, in this case) is just too much to put up with. Welch gives a good account of the underlying homo-erotic fug that envelops boys' boarding schools, as well as the institutional meanness that permeates them.
Luckily for him, his father suggest he come out to Shanghai. So begins an account of people met, an opportunity for him to pursue his love of objets d'art, in this case Chinese and often loot, and for some minor travel adventures. It all takes place in the thirties, an interesting time just before the Japanese invasion and the consequent European abandonment of their concessions.
It was not a relaxed time to be in China and there are incidents that illustrate the Chinese loathing of the foreign presence and the privileges the interlopers enjoy.
Excellent writing with an attractive simple style, this is an unique memoir of a short stay in thirties China.
  ivanfranko | May 4, 2024 |
I really must stop reading front-cover blurbs. Penguin did Denton Welch's Maiden Voyage a disservice by labelling it "Frank, fresh and spontaneous, a young man's account of China in the thirties". It is actually an account of Denton Welch being a callow but endearing youth against various backgrounds. His account of the absolutely putrid boarding school which he fled is vivid, his account of his compulsive snooping in every house he enters is amusing. As for China, he never gains enough understanding of China to give any account of it, but it's a delightful book nonetheless. ( )
  muumi | Sep 6, 2020 |
I am not sure whether Denton Welch ever was widely read, but these days he seems to be mostly forgotten; most people (like myself, until recently) probably only know him by way of William Burroughs who called him an influence and dedicated The Place of Dead Roads to him. Welch died young (at Age 33 in 1948) and only wrote three novels of which Maiden Voyage is the first. Small British publisher Galley Beggar Press gratefully has re-released all three of them as affordable (if somewhat sloppily proofread) e-books and this is how Denton Welch ended up being more than a vaguely familiar name to me and became an author I have actually read – and, as it turned out, enjoyed rather a lot.

Maiden Voyage is a comparatively slim novel and a rather strange one. It is either a novel passing itself off as autobiography or autobiography masquerading as novel, or, most likely, a bit of both. Which was not all that unusual even though back in 1943 when the novel was first published nobody had heard of auto-fiction yet. What does make Maiden Voyage stand out is first all of its language, the way Welch observes and describes people, objects and landscapes – he has an infallible eye for the significant detail, capturing everything his gaze comes to rest on just so and then rendering it in a languid, dreamy way which drapes it in an aura of the fantastical.

Welch’s sentences are short and to the point, but possess a certain unearthly quality, a faint but persistent sense of irreality: There is a hallucinatory atmosphere pervading all of this novel, almost as if the narrator was running a fever that does not quite make it to the surface but still informs and distorts all of his perceptions, the effect reminding me somewhat of a gentle, mild-mannered Raskolnikov.

While it is a more (virtual) 264 pages long, Maiden Voyage feels like a much longer novel – not because it felt boring (which it emphatically did not) but because there is so much in it, such an immense wealth of observation and perception. I assume that the novel is based on journal entries which have been polished until they attained their peculiar, eerie shine and then placed into a rudimentary narrative framework whose sole purpose is to show them off to best effect. In consequence, not much really happens in the novel (the adolescent protagonist – called, of course “Denton” – making a rather clumsy attempt to run from school, then spending some time in Shanghai is pretty much the extent of the plot, if you even want to call it that) but I never felt the lack as I was strolling from precious miniature to striking vignette, as the glittering array of finely wrought showpieces kept my interest alive throughout.

Maiden Voyage is a novel which eschews anything grand and ostentatious, instead opting for the minute and seemingly insignificant, the small, tiny things which so often go by unnoticed. While the narrator’s feverishness imbues everything with an air of unreality, it also enhances his receptiveness, makes him more susceptible to even the slightest sensory impressions (and as different as the reading experience for both authors is, there is a certain resemblance to Marcel Proust concealed in this fever-induced hyper-sensitivity). Relinquishing his full attention to apparently trivial and trifling things and incidents, the narrator’s heightened perception traces their shape and texture to finally catch in each of them just that detail which makes them shine, solidifying their impact by rarefying their reality as he holds it up for our inspection bathed in the light of his febrile imagination – turns them into something magical for our wonder and delight.
3 voter Larou | Sep 17, 2015 |
A memoir of the author's first visit to China in the 1930s, while still a teenager (a troubled one as he had just run away from his boarding school, Repton). Written in a simple, unaffected style, it is a beguiling read. ( )
  DramMan | May 2, 2014 |
Denton Welch, artist and author, writes in part memoir, part novel, of the year at the age of fifteen he ran away from school, and subsequently left for China to join his father. He begins as he is due to set off for his return to Repton, his Derbyshire public school where his brothers also attend or attended. But instead of catching the train going north from London he buys a ticket for Salisbury. As his money runs out he is forced to make arrangements to return, with the outcome that he can eventually join his father in China.

Welch describes his escape, his brief return to Repton, and then his time in China. The account is filled with little adventures and encounters in which Welch reveals as much about himself as the people he meets and the places he visits. He writes with an artist's eye, his powers of observation creating strong images and bringing to life both people and places. Welch is an unusual youth, sensitive, something of a loner, with a great interest in the antique and especially small objects, and a sense of adventure. The honesty of his writing cannot but endear one to this young man who is clearly set apart from most, and who occasionally and subtly reveals through his writings his gay tendencies. ( )
  presto | Apr 22, 2012 |
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A moving coming-of-age novel based on the author's adolescent experiences in China  At sixteen, Denton Welch was attending school in Derbyshire, England. One morning, instead of taking the train to school, he caught a bus traveling in the opposite direction with no real plan except to start a new adventure. Although he reluctantly returned to school at his family's bidding, he soon received a letter postmarked from Shanghai--a letter from his father suggesting that Denton join him China.   So began a momentous journey that would shape young Denton Welch's life. Leaving behind his companions at school as well as the life he had known, he traveled across the globe to China, where he was seized with a sense of wonder completely new to him. It was there, so far from his roots, that young Denton began to explore his ambitions, aspirations, and secret desires.   Written with an artist's keen sensibility for observation and inspired by J. R. Ackerley's Hindoo HolidayMaiden Voyage is an unforgettable tale of growing up and discovering oneself.

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