In
The Glamour (1984), a work of speculative fiction by Christopher Priest, a man wakes up one day with major gaps in his memory; he struggles to separate fact from fiction while piecing together the last few weeks of his life. The book received widespread praise for its highly unusual narrative style and surprising plot twist. A critically acclaimed novelist, journalist, and short story writer from England, Priest served as the vice-president of the H.G. Wells Society, and he once wrote for
The Times and
The Guardian.
The Glamour takes place in rural England. Richard Grey, a cameraman with BBC news, is currently hospitalized. Recently sustaining serious injuries after a terrorist bomb attack on a London street, Richard is now confined to a wheelchair. He has no idea when or if he will walk again, but this is the least of his problems. Richard’s main concern is that he cannot remember anything that happened to him in the weeks before the bomb blast.
As Richard struggles to remember his recent past, a young woman shows up at the hospital. Her name is Susan Kewley, and she claims to be Richard’s girlfriend. Richard has no way to verify whether she is telling the truth, because it is entirely possible that he began a relationship a few weeks ago and simply doesn’t remember. He wants to believe her because she is beautiful and charming, and he would love to have a girlfriend like her.
What is especially appealing about Susan is that she remembers Richard. She is the only person who shows up at the hospital looking for him. Until Susan arrived, Richard felt that he didn’t exist. He worried that no one cared about him and that he would spend the rest of his life alone in a wheelchair. Susan convinces him that he is real, he exists, and that he is deeply loved.
Although Richard fancies Susan, he feels there is something odd about her. No one else seems to notice that she is there, and sometimes he feels that he is talking to himself. Susan explains that she has the power to make herself invisible. There is a whole world out there inhabited by invisible people who only let normal humans see them when they feel like it.
Unsurprisingly, Richard is skeptical, thinking this is nonsense. He worries that he is going insane. Susan, however, convinces him that this world really exists on the fringes of society. She and her ex-boyfriend, Niall, spend most of their lives invisible. They don’t have normal jobs, surviving by breaking into houses to steal valuables that they sell for supplies.
Susan and Niall never get caught because, legally, they don’t exist—they don’t have IDs or official documents. People like them prefer to stay invisible, because it’s easier than joining the so-called ‘real’ world. They make exceptions for ordinary humans they care about, like Richard, but they know it is a big risk to reveal who they are.
As the weeks go by, Richard struggles to separate the truth from reality. He works with a hospital psychiatrist who doesn’t seem interested in Susan or Niall, but Richard assumes this is because they wear their invisibility shields around the hospital staff. The more time he spends with Susan, the more he retreats into this invisible world; he is worried that if he leaves the hospital, he will lose Susan forever.
One day, Richard asks Susan to tell him more about the night they first met. She explains they first met in a pub, and Susan was still in a relationship with Niall at the time. She planned to dump Niall because he always makes fun of normal people, wreaking havoc on their lives. Acting like a poltergeist, he terrorizes families, making people think that they are going crazy. He abuses his power, and Susan doesn’t want him in her life anymore.
When Susan sees Richard in the pub, she is immediately drawn to him. She dampens her invisibility and lets Richard see her. She can tell that he fancies her, and they soon arrange a date. Susan dumps Niall, telling him she doesn’t want him in her life anymore. Niall, however, doesn’t appreciate Susan dumping him. He is convinced that, even if they are not a couple, they should be best friends forever.
In the weeks prior to the accident, Niall stalked Susan incessantly, even spying on the couple sleeping together. Since Richard can’t remember anything about this, Susan explains that this was the first time she told him about her invisibility. Although Richard found it hard to accept, he continued dating her.
Just before the terrorist attack, Niall attacked Richard in a jealous rage. Richard fled his apartment, running straight into the bomb’s path. This is how he ended up in the hospital. Richard gives Susan an ultimatum—leave Niall behind forever, or he is dumping her.
Susan convinces Niall to leave them alone and he disappears. However, in the end, it transpires that Niall is the only “real” character. Both Susan and Richard are figments of Niall’s imagination. Niall doesn’t have invisible power, either. He is an ordinary man who invented the story to make better sense of his own world.