In January 2018 I had the wonderful opportunity to have a free bibliotherapy session at the School of Life in London with Ella Berthoud, one of the authors of The Novel Cure. I wrote about the experience in this post. I quickly got hold of all but a couple of my prescribed reads, but have been slower about actually reading them. Though I’ve read five now, I’ve only written up four, two of which I only managed to finish this week. (These 250-word reviews are in order of my reading.)
Heligoland by Shena Mackay (2002)
(CURE: moving house)
Heligoland is a Scottish island best known from the shipping forecast, but here it’s an almost mythical home. Rowena Snow was orphaned by her Indian/Scottish parents, and a second time by her aunt. Since then she’s drifted between caring and cleaning jobs. The Nautilus represents a fresh chance at life. This shell-shaped artists’ commune in South London houses just three survivors: Celeste Zylberstein, who designed the place; poet Francis Campion; and antiques dealer Gus Crabb. Rowena will be the housekeeper/cook, but she struggles with self-esteem: does she deserve to live in a haven for upper-class creative types?
The omniscient perspective moves between the Nautilus residents but also on to lots of other minor hangers-on, whose stories are hard to keep track of. Mackay’s writing reminded me somewhat of Tessa Hadley’s and is lovely in places – especially when describing a buffet or a moment of light-filled epiphany in a garden. There’s not much to be said beyond what’s in the blurb: Mackay is attempting to give a picture of a drifter who finds an unconventional home; in the barest sense she does succeed, but I never felt a connection with any of the characters. In this ensemble cast there is no one to love and thus no one to root for. While I didn’t love this book, it did inspire me to pick up others by Mackay: since then I’ve read The Orchard on Fire, which I liked a lot more, and the first half of Dunedin.
My rating:
Family Matters by Rohinton Mistry (2002)
(CURE: worry over ageing parents)
Retired professor Nariman Vakeel, 79, has Parkinson’s disease and within the first few chapters has also fallen and broken his ankle. His grown stepchildren, Coomy and Jal, reluctant to care for him anyway, decide they can’t cope with the daily reality of bedpans, sponge baths and spoon feeding in their large Chateau Felicity apartment. He’ll simply have to recuperate at Pleasant Villa with his daughter Roxana and her husband and sons, even though their two-bedroom apartment is barely large enough for the family of four. You have to wince at the irony of the names for these two Bombay housing blocks, and at the bitter contrast between selfishness and duty.
Perhaps inevitably, Nariman starts to fade into the background. An increasingly speechless invalid, he only comes alive through his past: italicized sections, presented as his night-time ravings, tell of his love for Lucy, whom his parents refused to let him marry, and the untimely end of his arranged marriage. I enjoyed time spent in a vibrantly realized Indian city and appreciated a chance to learn about a lesser-known community: Nariman and family are Parsis (or Zoroastrians). There’s also a faint echo here of King Lear, with one faithful daughter set against two wicked children.
As to ageing parents, this is a pretty relentlessly bleak picture, but there are sparks of light: joy in life’s little celebrations, and unexpected kindnesses. Mistry’s epic has plenty of tender moments that bring it down to an intimate scale. I’m keen to read his other novels.
My rating:
Maggie & Me by Damian Barr (2013)
(A supplementary prescription because I love memoirs and didn’t experience Thatcher’s Britain.)
Like a cross between Angela’s Ashes and Toast, this recreates a fairly horrific upbringing from the child’s perspective. Barr was an intelligent, creative young man who early on knew that he was gay and, not just for that reason, often felt that there was no place for him: neither in working-class Scotland, where his father was a steelworker and his brain-damaged mother flitted from one violent boyfriend to another; nor in Maggie Thatcher’s 1980s Britain at large, in which money was the reward for achievement and the individual was responsible for his own moral standing and worldly advancement. “I don’t need to stand out any more,” he recalls, being “six foot tall, scarecrow skinny and speccy with join-the-dots spots, bottle-opener buck teeth and a thing for waistcoats. Plus I get free school dinners and I’m gay.”
There are a lot of vivid scenes in this memoir, some of them distressing ones of abuse, and the present tense, dialect, and childish grammar and slang give it authenticity. However, I never quite bought in to the Thatcher connection as an overarching structure. Three pages at the start, five at the end, and a Thatcher quote as an epigraph for each chapter somehow weren’t enough to convince me that the framing device was necessary or apt. Still, I enjoyed this well enough as memoirs go, and I would certainly recommend it if you loved Nigel Slater’s memoir mentioned above. I also have Barr’s recent debut novel, You Will Be Safe Here, on my Kindle.
My rating:
The Monsters of Templeton by Lauren Groff (2008)
(A supplementary prescription for uncertainty about having children.)
I enjoyed this immensely, from the first line on: “The day I returned to Templeton steeped in disgrace, the fifty-foot corpse of a monster surfaced in Lake Glimmerglass.” Twenty-eight-year-old Willie Upton is back in her hometown, pregnant by her older, married archaeology professor after a summer of PhD fieldwork in Alaska. “I had come home to be a child again. I was sick, heartbroken, worn down.” She gives herself a few weeks back home to dig through her family history to find her father – whom Vi has never identified – and decide whether she’s ready to be a mother herself.
We hear from various leading lights in the town’s history and/or Willie’s family tree through a convincing series of first-person narratives, letters and other documents. Groff gives voice to everyone from a Mohican chief to a slave girl who catches her master’s eye. Willie and Vi are backed up by a wonderful set of secondary characters, past and present. Groff wrote this in homage to Cooperstown, New York, where she grew up. (If you’ve heard of it, it’s probably for the baseball museum; it’s not far from where my mother is from in upstate New York.) Templeton is “a slantwise version” of Cooperstown, Groff admits in an opening Author’s Note, and she owes something of a debt to its most famous citizen, James Fenimore Cooper. What a charming way to celebrate where you come from, with all its magic and mundanity. This terrific debut novel cemented my love of Groff’s work.
My rating:
I also have Ella to thank for the inspiration to reread a childhood favorite, Little Women by Louisa May Alcott, last year; the experiment formed the subject of my first piece for Literary Hub. I also worked my way through The Artist’s Way by Julia Cameron, another of my prescriptions, over a number of months in 2018, but failed to keep up with the regular writing exercises so didn’t get the maximum benefit.
My husband and I made a start on reading a few books aloud to each other, including Sum: Forty Tales from the Afterlives by David Eagleman, but that fell by the wayside after a handful of weeks.
(Incidentally, I had forgotten that Cutting for Stone turns up in The Novel Cure on a list of the 10 best books to combat xenophobia.)
Still to read: Jitterbug Perfume by Tom Robbins (CURE: horror of ageing)
And one I still have to get hold of but haven’t been able to find cheap secondhand because it’s a Persephone classic: The Victorian Chaise-Longue by Marghanita Laski (a supplementary prescription because I love Victorian pastiches).
I have to admit I was a little surprised at the Rohinton Mistry prescription but it’s a wonderful novel. Did you feel your concerns had been eased by the suggestions?
LikeLiked by 1 person
It’s an interesting question. Despite the title, I don’t think the book suggestions are meant to ‘cure’ you of your various worries and complaints so much as to allow you to spend time thinking about situations through the characters’ lives and find some catharsis. (My mum has some health challenges, but nowhere near as bad as the setup in Family Matters.)
LikeLiked by 1 person
I loved The Monsters of Templeton! Forgot it was about not having children – must re-read. This has reminded me to seek out the only Groff I haven’t read, Arcadia. Have you read that one?
LikeLiked by 1 person
Well, it’s about parenting in general: Willie’s situation mirrors Vi’s when she came back to Templeton pregnant, and then Willie’s looking for her father and her ancestors more broadly. There’s a spoiler re: Willie’s situation, which you might remember?
Arcadia was actually the first book I read by Groff (in 2012), and I didn’t think much of it at the time, but I’ve loved the latest three I’ve read by her. I only have Delicate Edible Birds left to read.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I’ve actually forgotten everything about it I think – time for a re-read (tbf I did read it in 2008!)
LikeLike
I always forget endings, twists, etc. 🙂
LikeLiked by 1 person
Plus…isn’t it also about the way that we (as human beings) make up stories to help us cope with fears (of things diving deep, resurfacing, then disappearing from view again) and how sometimes they are just over-the-top and how sometimes that over-the-top-ness is actually pointing to something surprisingly real? I loved this book, but I’ve never read on with her work, fearing that it might have just settled with me at exactly the right time and place. (And I spent a single night at a B&B in Cooperstown, by accident not intention: a charming region!)
LikeLiked by 1 person
Fates and Furies and Florida are both very different to this one, but equally good and better, respectively. I’m glad you enjoyed your incidental stay in Cooperstown! I’ve long known about the baseball museum because of it being not far from where my mother grew up and various uncles and cousins still live.
LikeLike
I bought The Novel Cure but haven’t done anything in terms of following up on the prescriptions. I have the Rohinston Mistry sitting on my shelf – not sure why I haven’t read it before now because I loved the other book I read by him: Such a Long Journey https://bookertalk.com/2016/01/05/such-a-long-journey-by-rohinton-mistry/
LikeLiked by 1 person
I have a copy of A Fine Balance I keep meaning to read.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Adding The Monsters of Templeton to my TBR immediately!
LikeLiked by 1 person
It’s a terrific read. Hope you enjoy!
LikeLike
Jitterbug Perfume is one of my favourite novels, but I would never have thought of it as being a book you’d enjoy. It does fit thematically though: perfectly!
LikeLike
Well, I’ve DNFed another of his novels before, so I can’t say I’m hugely looking forward to it, though I did dutifully buy a secondhand copy as soon as it was prescribed.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Oh, which one was that?
LikeLike
Still Life with Woodpecker.
LikeLike
I didn’t know Jitterbug Perfume was one of your favourite novels… I’ve never even heard of it! Now I’m very curious…
LikeLiked by 1 person
This is such a fun project. Do you think their choice of books were a good fit for your concerns?
LikeLike
The books gave me some time to think about those concerns, and two of them were terrific reads I’m glad I finally got the nudge to pick up. So I’d say yes, although the language of a ‘cure’ is probably never going to be completely accurate.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Still want to do one of these sessions (I refer to The Novel Cure frequently and often take it along to my book group to guide our choice for the following month.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I believe they still do Skype sessions for those overseas.
LikeLiked by 1 person
They do have a bibliotherapist at the School of Life in Melbourne. Actually, I’d like to be a bibliotherapist 😬
LikeLiked by 1 person
Oh cool, I didn’t realize there was another branch out there. (I would, too! — but I think you’re better qualified in terms of a therapy background.)
LikeLiked by 1 person
I do occasionally recommend books to my clients but would like to incorporate bibliotherapy more into my work.
LikeLiked by 1 person
[…] The Monsters of Templeton, Lauren Groff’s debut novel, Willie Upton is back in her hometown in upstate New York, partway […]
LikeLike
[…] Maggie & Me by Damian Barr […]
LikeLike
[…] Rebecca Foster is a freelance proofreader and book reviewer from Maryland, USA. She reviews memoirs for the Times Literary Supplement and blogs at Bookish Beck. […]
LikeLike
[…] den in the pallet factory. This is a lot like the account Damian Barr gives of his childhood in Maggie & Me. I left off on page 82 but will go back to this if it makes the […]
LikeLike
[…] 8/10! Another fine showing; only the Giffels and Winner remain to be read. Reviews of the Groff, one L’Engle, and Manyika & Richardson appeared on the […]
LikeLike
[…] decision to open with “Lucky Chow Fun,” a story set in Templeton, the location of Groff’s debut novel – it forms a thread of continuity between her first book and her second. Elizabeth, the only girl […]
LikeLike