Why did I love this book?
I read E.M. Forster's long-suppressed novel, Maurice, in college. It was the tale of an aristocratic university student in Edwardian England — the titular Maurice — who falls in love with a poor gamekeeper named Alec. Although Maurice and Alec ended up with each other at the end of the first book, I always questioned how their relationship could survive in repressive England. Alec is a modern sequel that attempts to answer just that.
As a working-class man, Alec enjoys some personal freedom in a society that thinks and expects very little of him. Yet maintaining a secretive gay relationship proves even more complicated when a world war interferes.
Written in an explicitly honest voice, this is probably the book about being gay and British that Forster could never have imagined writing.
1 author picked Alec as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.
William di Canzio's Alec, inspired by Maurice, E. M. Forster's secret novel of a happy same-sex love affair, tells the story of Alec Scudder, the gamekeeper Maurice Hall falls in love with in Forster's classic, published only after the author's death.
Di Canzio follows their story past the end of Maurice to the front lines of battle in World War I and beyond. Forster, who tried to write an epilogue about the future of his characters, was stymied by the radical change that the Great War brought to their world. With the hindsight of a century, di Canzio imagines a…