Martin Amis’s young adult novel
The Rachel Papers (1973) recounts the thoughts and desires of Charles Highway as he prepares for life at Oxford, struggling to understand himself and his ambitions as he teeters on the cusp between adolescence and adulthood. Writing a book in the style of Edna O'Brien and Blake to chronicle his desire to seduce Rachel, Charles ends up navigating the roots of his own black humor and cynicism as his seduction turns from lust into love.
As the novel opens, anti-romantic hero Charles Highway tries to seduce an older woman to jolt himself from his teenage years into the realm of manhood.
Not a particularly attractive or charming man, Charles has a dark sense of humor that frequently steps over the line into blatant cynicism. He is skinny, pimply, and has a slew of minor health problems that contribute to his average attractiveness. Charles is finicky, constantly popping his pimples, picking at wrinkles, and wringing out the handkerchief he brings with him everywhere he goes. He also has asthma, which mostly keeps him inside, reading books, rather than outside enjoying sports or the sun.
Fancying himself a writer, Charles has a writing project leftover from his teenage years that he plans to complete before he turns 20 and finally becomes a “man.” In addition to completing this project, Charles attends a prep school to prepare for exams and his subsequent life at Oxford. It is at this prep school that Charles meets the object of his affection and seduction, an older woman named Rachel.
Sleeping with an older woman is one of Charles’s few desires, accompanied by escaping his dysfunctional family (his father is estranged, and Charles doesn't have particularly strong feelings about his mother, whom he describes as dumpy and sagging). When Charles meets Rachel, he knows immediately that she is the perfect woman to help him shed his teenage years and move forward with his life. Rachel is older and taller with long dark hair. Charles initially suspects she might be half-Jewish, because of her complexion, and is immediately drawn to the idea that she is exotic. Charles quickly sets about planning to seduce Rachel, which resembles, in many ways, a blueprint for battle.
Rachel is unlike the other girls Charles has been with. Though he has had many girlfriends, Rachel isn't just seduced by Charles's love of poetry—she already knows it. Charles and Rachel share their love of poetry and writing, and because of their friendship, Charles begins writing a long letter to his absent father. However, Charles has one problem: Rachel has a boyfriend named DeForest. Charles doesn't let this get in the way of his plan of seduction; instead, he grows closer and closer to Rachel.
The novel culminates in friendship turned fling as Charles and Rachel meet each other's families, spend increasing time together, and eventually have sex. Rachel helps Charles when he meets his father's latest lover at his uncle's house, and as their friendship develops, Charles soon realizes that the object of his lust has become, unexpectedly, a woman whom he deeply loves.
British novelist Martin Amis is the son of famed British novelist Kingsley Amis. Martin Amis has written several novels, including
Money,
London Fields, and
The Information.
The Rachel Papers, his debut novel, was noted for its unique voice and Amis's thoughtful use of slang and teenaged
vernacular. Though Amis writes about real life, he is known for portraying the ugliness of the human condition, which
The New York Times calls “the new unpleasantness.” Amis has also written a memoir,
Experience.