20 Books of Summer, 18–20: Ayanna Lloyd Banwo, Sarah Hall, Meghan O’Rourke

Whew, it’s the final day of the challenge and I’ve managed to finish and write up a last batch of two novels and one nonfiction work: a magic realist tableau of love and death in Trinidad, a fateful romance set against the backdrop of the construction of an English dam in 1936, and a personal and cultural record of chronic illness and its treatment in contemporary America.

 

When We Were Birds by Ayanna Lloyd Banwo (2022)

I was sent a copy as part of the McKitterick Prize shortlist. The setting of a cemetery, Fidelis in Port Angeles, Trinidad, had vaguely attracted me even before its nomination. Emmanuel Darwin has turned his back on his Rastafarian upbringing to cut off his dreadlocks and work as a gravedigger (any contact with the dead is anathema in the religion). Meanwhile, Yejide, who lives in the hills, is losing her mother, Petronella, and gaining a legacy she’s not sure she wants: the women of her family are caretakers of the souls of the dead, keeping them alive in exchange for protection. Like the corbeaux, dark counterparts of tropical parrots, they tread the border of life and death. As All Saints’ and All Souls’ Days draw closer, Darwin and Yejide together have to decide whether they will be swallowed by the graveyard or escape it. While this was atmospheric and had alluring elements, the speculative angle was not notably well realized and the particular form of patois – eschewing all possessives and most verb conjugations – drove me nuts. I skimmed this one. (Free from the Society of Authors)

 

Haweswater by Sarah Hall (2002)

I bought this in Cumbria one year and started reading it in Cumbria the next. Once I got home, however, there was little impetus to keep going. Were it not for the temporary local interest, I likely would not have finished this debut novel, which lurches between dry and melodramatic. As it is, I had to skim to the end. Had it been my first taste of Sarah Hall’s work, it might have put me off trying her again.

The frame is historical: Haweswater was indeed dammed to provide water for the city of Manchester in 1936, flooding the village of Mardale. Hall focuses on the people of Mardale, specifically the Lightburn family, who have persisted with farming despite its particular challenges in this hilly landscape. When Jack Liggett comes out from the City on behalf of the waterworks, he meets with hostility, including from the Lightburns’ daughter, Janet, who negotiates for their tenancy to continue until the dam is actually built. Then, well, you know, Romeo and Juliet and pride and prejudice and all that, and they start an affair. Hall has always written forthrightly about sex, starting here.

There’s a climactic final 60 pages in which three major characters die, two in symbolic acts of suicide, but it was a little too much tragedy, too late, for me after the dull midsection. I was intrigued, however, that a plot point turns on golden eagles being in the valley, as Wild Fell, another of my Haweswater-set reads, opens with the presence of the ghost of England’s last golden eagle, who vanished in 2015. This related snippet shows how over-the-top Hall’s use of dialect is: “Golden eagles wud be mor’less gone, gone or illegal these days, like, notta funni bizniz t’be gittin’ mixed up in, eh? What kinda daft bugger d’yer take mi for?” It’s like Thomas Hardy rustics – hard to take seriously. (Anne-Marie Sanderson’s haunting song “Haweswater” is based on the novel.) (Secondhand – Clutterbooks, Sedbergh, 2022)

 

The Invisible Kingdom: Reimagining Chronic Illness by Meghan O’Rourke (2022)

Well before I was a devoted follower of the Barbellion Prize for books on disability and chronic illness, I was interested in these topics. For much of her forties and fifties, my mother struggled with fibromyalgia, one of a suite of illnesses misunderstood or even dismissed by the medical profession (as O’Rourke puts it, with a tongue-in-cheek nod to Jane Austen: “it is a truth universally acknowledged among the chronically ill that a young woman in possession of vague symptoms like fatigue and pain will be in search of a doctor who believes she is actually sick”). I hope this National Book Award nominee goes some way toward convincing skeptics that these are real conditions to be addressed by listening to patients and treating them holistically.

In 2012 the author became seriously ill and spent much of her thirties in a fog of pain, spending the equivalent of several days per month at doctors’ appointments and agreeing to ever more bizarre treatments in her desperation. Some of her issues were autoimmune and/or genetic: Hashimoto’s (thyroid), Ehlers-Danlos, POTS, endometriosis. She also dealt with infertility at the same time as she was trying to get well enough to contemplate having children. For her, the turning point was when she was diagnosed with Lyme disease and put on antibiotics. (Later she would travel to London to get fecal microbiota transplants to restore her microbiome.) Chronic Lyme is similar to long COVID, the true extent of which we’re only just beginning to understand; reading a list of the symptoms, I was tempted to remotely/retrospectively diagnose a few people I know with one or the other. It can be ever so slightly miserable reading about navigating all of these conditions, though nowhere near as miserable as it must have been for O’Rourke to live through them, of course.

I knew the author for her exquisite memoir of losing her mother to cancer, The Long Goodbye. Here the writing is more functional and journalistic, but I was still impressed by the attention she pays and the connections she draws; she’s also a poet, so she’s open to emotions and keen to capture them in words. In the face of the unexplained, she contends, chronically ill people are searching for meaning and narrative (restitution, chaos or quest, as Arthur Frank named the three options). She probes her own psyche: “had I become trapped in my identity as a sick person, someone afraid of living? If my mission in life had been reduced to being well at all costs, then the illness had won.” There’s a good balance of research, personal experience and general reflection in this one. (Passed along by Laura – thank you!)

Related reads: Ill Feelings by Alice Hattrick, It’s All in Your Head by Suzanne O’Sullivan, Waiting for Superman by Tracie White

 

And that’s a wrap! My summer reading was a little scattered and not as thematic as initially planned, but I stuck to my pledge to read only print books that I owned, and then cleared half of them from my shelves through reselling or donating to the Little Free Library. I’ll definitely call that a win.

My favourite from the 20 was a novel, Search by Michelle Huneven, then Making the Beds for the Dead by Gillian Clarke (poetry), followed by two chef’s memoirs, A Cook’s Tour by Anthony Bourdain and Dirt by Bill Buford, and Dorthe Nors’ nature/travel essays. The one DNF and couple of skims are unfortunate, but these things happen.

Next year I fancy a completely open challenge – just, again, getting through books from my shelves. (Maybe all hardbacks?)

17 responses

  1. margaret21's avatar

    Well, I’ve just got the Dorthe Nors from the library: but even getting through all my library books seems quite a challenge to me – and two more reserved ones arriving today 😦

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      A good problem to have 🙂 If you can’t renew them, you can always get them out another time?

      Liked by 1 person

      1. margaret21's avatar

        True. But by then, I’ll have another, different toppling pile.

        Like

  2. Elle's avatar

    Oh, well done! I actually really like the sound of Megan O’Rourke’s book—but what a huge shame about the dialect in Haweswater. That might have put me off reading SH for life, too…

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Very much a Cumbria book. Good to start with what you know, I suppose, but it seems to me a book for the local interest shelf of the bookshop.

      Like

  3. Cathy746books's avatar

    Congratulations on completing the challenge Rebecca! That Meghan O’Rourke sounds very interesting. Am definitely going to check that out.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      It was one of my most anticipated books of 2022 but I wasn’t sure I’d be able to access it in the UK. Laura bought a copy while she was in North America and kindly passed it on to me once she’d read it 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

  4. Laura's avatar

    I’m glad you liked Invisible Kingdom more than I did. I really wasn’t expecting it to be a memoir and I think that got me off on the wrong foot, though I did find some of her assertions about mental vs physical illness dubious.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I assumed the handwritten list in the back of the book is the countries you’ve been to? 🙂

      Have you read O’Sullivan’s It’s All in Your Head? Would be happy to send you my copy.

      Like

  5. Rebecca Moon Ruark's avatar

    I just ordered the Dorthe Nors–excited!

    Liked by 1 person

  6. Laila@BigReadingLife's avatar

    Congrats on reading so many of your own books!

    Liked by 1 person

  7. lauratfrey's avatar

    Phew, that dialect! I read a Lyme memoir a few years ago and liked it, though it made me question the validity of the chronic Lyme diagnosis… this one sounds like it directly addresses the sickness-as-identity thing though, which interests me a lot!

    Liked by 1 person

  8. Liz Dexter's avatar

    Well done! Have I told you my Lyme disease story? I watched the film The Punk Singer about Kathleen Hanna and her own Lyme disease and shortly after a friend from here, now up north, was battling with weird symptoms the doctors couldn’t fathom, I suggested Lyme, she got tested and yes it was! Which made me horribly hypervigilant about people’s weird symptoms, of course. Anyway. I got my 20 books done and was pleased to have read so many from the local bookshop but also realised how I rely on it to clear old books from the TBR so will probably go back to that next year!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Good for you! We think our mother was tested for Lyme before finally being diagnosed with fibromyalgia.

      It’s great that you buy so much to support your local bookshop.

      Like

  9. […] had too much of the patois + legends/magic realism combo recently (e.g., When We Were Birds) and Palmer tries too hard to root her stories in time through 1990s pop culture references. She […]

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  10. […] breaking new ground if they suggest ice packs or elevating her neck.) Like Meghan O’Rourke’s The Invisible Kingdom, this documents a quest with no natural end. Lohman’s health fluctuates, and medical […]

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  11. […] by Victoria Bennett and Floppy by Alyssa Graybeal) and another reference soon came my way in The Invisible Kingdom by Meghan O’Rourke. So overfamiliarity was a problem. And by the time I forced myself to pick […]

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