Frederic Raphael is forensic in his description of the failures of successful people. He is enviously superior and he is partial to the clever oxymoron: ‘predatory caution’, ‘reticent curiosity’, ‘intimidating reassurance’. It is as though he cannot see an abstract noun without qualifying it with a contradictory adjective. It is a kind of shorthand cleverness, but a cleverness nonetheless. For Raphael is undoubtedly clever, and intelligent, and knowledgeable and smart (and, we learn, good at football, tennis and bridge). It is hard not to envy his certainties.
This is a thoroughly enjoyable read. Diaries promise indiscretions, and the joy of gossip. I imagine Raphael’s peers will revel in his malicious pen portraits and suggestions of misbehaviour. ‘Bob’ Redford ‘treats himself like a smart vintage car’, the veins in Dirk Bogarde’s face ‘map his discreet excesses’, Ken Tynan ‘was a parody of the elegance which he failed to posess’. These are barbs so pointed and enjoyable that it hardly matters whether they are justified or not.
There is campness in the extravagance of these put downs, as there is in the constant use of French forms: entre-deux-guerres, coureur, ecoeure, petit train, outré mer, valse d’hypocrites, points forts, as though cliché in French is somehow more writerly. This is not to say that FR is not a first-rate writer. He questions Anthony Burgess’s use of the word ‘sigh’ to describe the sound made when a tin is opened, and (rightly) suggests ‘gasp’ instead.
For readers of succeeding generations some of the names here will have only the force of echo: Malcolm Muggeridge, Denis Healey, John Fowles, Liv Ullman, Penelope Mortimer, Kevin Billington, Barbara Castle, Shirley Conran. More senior Spectator readers will enjoy being taken back 30 years. The book opens with a scarcely believable story about Shirley Williams ‘being taken for an adventuress and a whore on the same night’.

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