Audiobook (abridged)2 hours
Kipps
Written by H. G. Wells
Narrated by Christopher Timothy
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
3.5/5
()
About this audiobook
When I read through the final draft of my autobiography, I decided to take out several anecdotes about my personal life, simply because they seemed a sort of indulgence, and didn’t add to what I wanted to say about my life and my career. They were hiccups along the way with some attacks worse than others, but all were finally ‘got rid’ (as my cousin Lillian used to say). I put them in a file which I called BASTARDS for my own amusement, and thought no more about them until my book came out and I was being asked what my next writing project would be. For want of anything else to say I would reply BASTARDS, and the response was so positive that what had started as a whim began to take on substance. So here it is. Since you ask (and you will) the bastards were all my own. Some were short, as are some of the tales, and some tall, which, in spite of your incredulity, none of the tales are. Well, I've said it before and I’ll say it again, I couldn’t make them up! Could I?
Author
H. G. Wells
H.G. Wells is considered by many to be the father of science fiction. He was the author of numerous classics such as The Invisible Man, The Time Machine, The Island of Dr. Moreau, The War of the Worlds, and many more.
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Reviews for Kipps
Rating: 3.4788732394366195 out of 5 stars
3.5/5
71 ratings6 reviews
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This social novel started out well enough, but soon began to drag and fall by the wayside. The premise was intriguing, and there seemed to be a good set-up, but then the novel did not deliver what was expected and seemed to haphazardly lead in all different directions. For these reasons, I do not recommend it.2.5 stars.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A wonderful tale of a not-very-bright, not-very-advantaged young man who gets caught up in the world of wealth and good manners. The basis of the musical Half a Sixpence.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The story of Artie Kipps; a simple soul whose attempted climb up society's rigid ladder is mocked unmercifully by Wells in one of his most popular novels. Kipps a lowly drapers assistant surprisingly inherits a tidy sum of money, which would be enough for him to live like a gentleman, he is taken in hand by those who wish to see him prosper and his befuddled attempts to live up to his means provide some laughs as well as some satire of Britain's class ridden society circa 1905.Unusually for H G Wells he spent a long time over this novel, it was over seven years in the writing and he and his publishers thought he was on to a winner and so it proved. It is a novel with a popular rags to riches story with a rich vein of comedy and such a likeable hero that many readers will want him to succeed despite laughing at him rather than with him. This was a re-read for me and this time round I could see the cracks in the novels structure, especially as the humour seems rather too gentle and Well's 'social issues' make the book a little disjointed. In the 21st century the set piece comedy situations appear a little quaint, it is though we are looking at an old British black and white film seen so many times on a Sunday afternoon, that it takes on the appearance of an old friend. It has lost it's bite. The best thing about the novel is Artie Kipps himself. This is a sustained piece of characterisation by Wells that doesn't let up throughout. Kipp's story is told in linear fashion, he features on every page, there is no mystery or suspense, even when the reader might wonder what is going to happen next with Kipps enjoying his new found wealth; Wells interjects to tell us that "One cannot hide any longer that all this fine progress of Kipps is doomed to end in collapse" (as if we could not see this coming.) Wells subtitled his novel the story of a simple soul and this is indeed what Kipps is. He knows his place as an honest drapers assistant and hardly looks beyond it. He is not particularly intelligent, has no great insight into the human condition and he knows his place. People like him for no other reason than he is a genuine sort and when he comes into his money, people are prepared to guide him because "he confided, he submitted,....... he had the realist, the most seductively flattering undertone of awe and reverence". Kipps is not blessed with any insight into other characters, he realises there are bounders and cheats around but he would never be able to spot them for himself. (although as readers we can see them). Wells uses plenty of dialogue and much of this comes from Kipps, but it is entirely in keeping with his character, short sentences spoken in working class language with appropriate spelling to boot. Kipps remains Kipps throughout, this is no bildungsroman and towards the end of the novel he reflects on his life in typical fashion:"I don't recollect.......No........ Life's jolly rum; that's one thing any'ow. And I suppose I'm a rum sort of feller. I get excited sometimes, and then I don't seem to care what I do. That's about what it was reely.............There are some other fine characterisations; Henry Chitterlow (Chit'low) an actor and would be playwright who runs into Kipps on his bike; Masterman the socialist agitator who Kipps thinks is so clever, but of course he doesn't hold with all this socialism and Kipps' fiancé (Helen) who aspires to climb the social ladder. The town of Folkstone as it was in 1905 comes alive as does the seafront along Romney Marsh and there is an excellent description of the newly built Crystal Palace. Wells cannot help tub thumping with his socialism and Masterman gets a speech in which he puts the world to rights and while Wells does not overdo the social commentary, in this case he does in part three of the novel, spend a little too much time telling us about the state of house building in England at the time and this produces a bit of an in balance in the flow of the story.Towards the end of the novel Wells interjects for the readers benefit, increasingly, and it feels like he wants to change the tenor of what has gone before; perhaps he has made Kipps too likeable, the satire too gentle. it is though he realises he might not have got the balance quite right he addresses the reader directly:What is the good of keeping up the idyllic sham and pretending that ill-educated and misdirected people 'get along very well' and that all this is harmlessly funny and nothing more? You think I am going to write fat, silly, grinning novels about half-educated, undertrained people and keep it up all the time, that the whole thing is nothing but funny.........Perhaps then Kipps is not the vitriolic satire on the class system that Wells wanted to write and he settled for a more gentle comedy that would not upset the majority of his readers. He did make people laugh whether he still does will depend on how far the reader can place himself in England at the turn of the century. Wells himself started his working life in "a crib" in a large drapers emporium, and he draws on his experiences to make Kipps' early career all too believable. He describes what is now a different world with an authenticity that is compelling. This is not my favourite novel by H G, but one can't help liking it. I rate it at 3.5 stars.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Hilarious 'rags to riches' comedy (literally, as the hero starts his career as a lowly apprentice in a drapers') with some excellent set pieces (the hotel scene is lovely, very funny but with a shade of pathos to it) and detailed observations (the shop, and the different residences of the characters). Another comic highlight is drunken playwright Chitterlow, a delightful farce writer with ambitions to outshine Ibsen by incorporating comic mishaps with insects into psychological dramas. I would love to see "The Pestered Butterfly"!
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Gentle, but authoritative, Wells' story is as real and compelling now as it was 100 years ago.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Lately, I've been on an H.G. Wells binge. It happened more or less by chance. I picked up Mr. Britling Sees It Through on a whim, and discovered that Wells was an author capable of more than science fiction. That novel was a moving exploration of the emotional growth of a complacent man of means (a British country squire) coming to grips with the tragic waste of life brought about by World War I. That read lead me to Tono-Bungay, The Croquet-Player, a couple of biographies of Wells, and Kipps (the subject of this review).Wells is a complex study. He was brilliant, blunt, brave, prophetic, and prejudicial. His life story is one of rags to riches. He struggled with early poverty and tubercular ill health until his popular tales like The Time Machine catapulted him to fame and wealth. He never forgave the class system which almost squelched his fortunes at the start. He flirted for a time with the Fabian Socialist movement but found it too timorous. He feuded with its leader, Bernard Shaw, and often made enemies unnecessarily with his demanding viewpoints. His amorous forays outside the boundaries of marriage scandalized many of his potential readers. His publishers, MacMillan and Co., refused some of his works because he wrote too autobiograpically of free love. As he became more polemic with age, his Darwinian bias led him to make unfortunate comments about Jews, Catholics, and non-white races. He died, after eighty decades, seeing some of his darkest visions of humanity confirmed when Hiroshima was bombed.Like Wells, Kipps is a young man who gains sudden wealth. Kipps, an illegitimate child, suddenly inherits a fortune from his true grandfather and is delivered from a career of drudgery as a draper's apprentice. He attracts a coterie of bourgeois friends, and a fiancee, who seek to "help" him "ascend" above his former social class - and help themselves financially in the process. The effort to transcend his roots makes Kipps uncomfortable, conflicted, and eventually miserable. He abandons them all for the love of a childhood sweetheart, and friends of his own class.Wells executes the story skillfully, almost as well as Dickens might have, with a paced narrative and close attention to dialogue. Kipps' chagrin as he struggles with mysterious new customs and snobberies are more painful, however, than comic. Wells himself once ran away from his own apprenticeship to a draper. It's hard not to read into Kipps, the origin of Wells own lifelong grudges against middle class morality and obedience to custom. The time is perhaps ripe for a re-evaluation, or at the least, a remembrance of Wells. Our age seems to be reliving the turbulence of Wells' day, if not the reemergence of an economic class system. Social Darwinism persists as a troublesome and treacherous force. We might do well to re-examine Wells insights and errors as he struggled with the unfairness of a system that seemed to have fate, if not science, on its side.