#1962Club: A Dozen Books I’d Read Before

I totally failed to read a new-to-me 1962 publication this year. I’m disappointed in myself as I usually manage to contribute one or two reviews to each of Karen and Simon’s year clubs, and it’s always a good excuse to read some classics.

My mistake this time was to only get one option: Pale Fire by Vladimir Nabokov, which I had my husband borrow for me from the university library. I opened it up and couldn’t make head or tail of it. I’m sure it’s very clever and meta, and I’ve enjoyed Nabokov before (Pnin, in particular), but I clearly needed to be in the right frame of mind for a challenge, and this month I was not.

Looking through the Goodreads list of the top 100 books from 1962, and spying on others’ contributions to the week, though, I can see that it was a great year for literature (aren’t they all?). Here are 12 books from 1962 that I happen to have read before, most of which I’ve reviewed here in the past few years. I’ve linked to those and/or given review excerpts where I have them, and the rest I describe to the best of my muzzy memory.

 

The Wolves of Willoughby Chase by Joan Aiken – The snowy scene on the cover and described in the first two paragraphs drew me in and the story, a Victorian-set fantasy with notes of Oliver Twist and Jane Eyre, soon did, too. Dickensian villains are balanced out by some equally Dickensian urchins and helpful adults, all with hearts of gold. There’s something perversely cozy about the plight of an orphan in children’s books: the characters call to the lonely child in all of us; we rejoice to see how ingenuity and luck come together to defeat wickedness. There are charming passages here in which familiar smells and favourite foods offer comfort. This would make a perfect stepping stone from Roald Dahl to one of the Victorian classics.

 

Instead of a Letter by Diana Athill – This was Athill’s first book, published when she was 45. An unfortunate consequence of my not having read the memoirs in the order in which they are written is that much of the content of this one seemed familiar to me. It hovers over her childhood (the subject of Yesterday Morning) and centres in on her broken engagement and abortion, two incidents revisited in Somewhere Towards the End. Although Athill’s careful prose and talent for candid self-reflection are evident here, I am not surprised that the book made no great waves in the publishing world at the time. It was just the story of a few things that happened in the life of a privileged Englishwoman. Only in her later life has Athill become known as a memoirist par excellence.

 

The Drowned World by J.G. Ballard – (Read in October 2011.) Quite possibly the first ‘classic’ science fiction work I’d ever read. I found Ballard’s debut dated, with passages of laughably purple prose, poor character development (Beatrice is an utter Bond Girl cliché), and slow plot advancement. It sounded like a promising environmental dystopia – perhaps a forerunner of Oryx and Crake – but beyond the plausible vision of a heated-up and waterlogged planet, the book didn’t have much to offer. The most memorable passage was when Strangman drains the water and Kerans discovers Leicester Square beneath; he walks the streets and finds them uninhabited except by sea creatures clogging the cinema entrances. That was quite a potent, striking image. But the scene that follows, involving stereotyped ‘Negro’ guards, seemed like a poor man’s Lord of the Flies rip-off.

 

Silent Spring by Rachel Carson – Carson’s first chapter imagines an American town where things die because nature stops working as it should. Her main target was insecticides that were known to kill birds and had presumed negative effects on human health through the food chain and environmental exposure. Although the details may feel dated, the literary style and the general cautions against submitting nature to a “chemical barrage” remain potent.

 

We Have Always Lived in the Castle by Shirley Jackson – I loved the offbeat voice and unreliable narration, and the way that the Blackwood house is both a refuge and a prison for the sisters. “Where could we go?” Merricat asks Constance when she expresses concern that she should have given the girl a more normal life. “What place would be better for us than this? Who wants us, outside? The world is full of terrible people.” As the novel goes on, you ponder who is protecting whom, and from what. There are a lot of great scenes, all so discrete that I could see this working very well as a play with just a few backdrops to represent the house and garden. It has the kind of small cast and claustrophobic setting that would translate very well to the stage.

 

Tales from Moominvalley by Tove Jansson – Moomintroll discovers a dragon small enough to be kept in a jar; laughter brings a fearful child back from literal invisibility. But what struck me more was the lessons learned by neurotic creatures. In “The Fillyjonk who believed in Disasters,” the title character fixates on her belongings, but when a gale and a tornado come and sweep it all away, she experiences relief and joy. My other favourite was “The Hemulen who loved Silence.” After years as a fairground ticket-taker, he can’t wait to retire and get away from the crowds and the noise, but once he’s obtained his precious solitude he realizes he needs others after all. In “The Fir Tree,” the Moomins, awoken midway through hibernation, get caught up in seasonal stress and experience Christmas for the first time.

 

The Snowy Day by Ezra Jack Keats – A perennial favourite from my childhood, with a paper-collage style that has influenced many illustrators. Just looking at the cover makes me nostalgic for the sort of wintry American mornings when I’d open an eye to a curiously bright aura from around the window, glance at the clock and realize my mom had turned off my alarm because it was a snow day and I’d have nothing ahead of me apart from sledding, playing boardgames and drinking hot cocoa with my best friend. There was no better feeling.

 

A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L’Engle – (Reread in 2021.) I probably picked this up at age seven or so, as a follow-on from the Chronicles of Narnia. Interplanetary stories have never held a lot of interest for me. As a child, I was always more drawn to talking-animal stuff. Again I found the travels and settings hazy. It’s admirable of L’Engle to introduce kids to basic quantum physics, and famous quotations via Mrs. Who, but this all comes across as consciously intellectual rather than organic and compelling. Even the home and school talk feels dated. I most appreciated the thought of a normal – or even not very bright – child like Meg saving the day through bravery and love. This wasn’t for me, but I hope that for some kids, still, it will be pure magic.

 

The Golden Notebook by Doris Lessing – I read this feminist classic in my early twenties, in the days when I was working at a London university library. Lessing wrote autofiction avant la lettre, and the gist of this novel is that ‘Anna’, a writer, divides her life into four notebooks of different colours: one about her African upbringing, another about her foray into communism, a third containing an autobiographical novel in progress, and the fourth a straightforward journal. The fabled golden notebook is the unified self she tries to create as her romantic life and mental health become more complicated. Julianne Pachico read this recently and found it very powerful. I think I was too young for this and so didn’t appreciate it at the time. Were I to reread it, I imagine I would get a lot more out of it.

 

The Pumpkin Eater by Penelope Mortimer – More autofiction. Like a nursery rhyme gone horribly wrong, this is the story of a woman who can’t keep it together. She’s the woman in the shoe, the wife whose pumpkin-eating husband keeps her safe in a pumpkin shell, the ladybird flying home to find her home and children in danger. Aged 31 and already on her fourth husband, the narrator, known only as Mrs. Armitage, has an indeterminate number of children. Her current husband, Jake, is a busy filmmaker whose philandering soon becomes clear, starting with the nanny. A breakdown at Harrods is the sign that Mrs. A. isn’t coping. Most chapters begin in medias res and are composed largely of dialogue, including with Jake or her therapist. The book has a dark, bitter humour and brilliantly recreates a troubled mind.

 

One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn – This was required reading in high school, a novella and circadian narrative depicting life for a prisoner in a Soviet gulag. And that’s about all I can tell you about it. I remember it being just as eye-opening and depressing as you might expect, but pretty readable for a translated classic.

 

A Cat in the Window by Derek Tangye – Tangye wasn’t a cat fan to start with, but Monty won him over. He lived with newlyweds Derek and Jeannie first in the London suburb of Mortlake, then on their flower farm in Cornwall. When they moved to Minack, there was a sense of giving Monty his freedom and taking joy in watching him live his best life. They were evacuated to St Albans and briefly lived with Jeannie’s parents and Scottie dog, who became Monty’s nemesis. Monty survived into his 16th year, happily tolerating a few resident birds. Tangye writes warmly and humorously about Monty’s ways and his own development into a man who is at a cat’s mercy. This was really the perfect chronicle of life with a cat, from adoption through farewell. Simon thought so, too.


Here’s hoping I make a better effort at the next year club!

17 responses

  1. I didn’t get on with The Golden Notebook at all. Much preferred the Children of Violence series.

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    1. I read the first of those, Martha Quest, earlier this year for book club. I enjoyed it but wasn’t tempted to read further. I’ve not yet found a better Lessing than The Grass Is Singing.

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      1. I read them as a teenager. Not sure how I’d feel about them now.

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      2. The first one was remarkable for how she captured the emotions of early adulthood.

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  2. Oh, The Wolves of Willoughy Chase! So wonderful to return to it from your writing about it here. A couple other favorites, too, and a reminder to read The Golden Notebook. Perhaps from what you write, it’s a good thing I’ll be reading it in my later years. Thanks for this wonderful return to 1962.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I’m glad you got so much out of a post I felt was a bit pathetic, just recycled from earlier reading. I do think appreciating The Golden Notebook probably requires a bit more life experience. I’ll see if I can put it on the rereading pile for next year.

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  3. The Mortimer and Jackson were both superb I agree. I must admit, I rather loved the Ballard though, yes – it’s of its time, but Strangman was a Bond-esque villain and there was an Apocalypse Now vibe going on…

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    1. I’m currently reading a Margaret Drabble novel that came out two years after The Pumpkin Eater and feels so similar it must have been partially inspired by Mortimer.

      I know you love your classic sci-fi! I was encouraged to try the Ballard as a potential festival big read, but we ended up going with something else.

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  4. There turned out to be so many big-hitters from 1962! Lovely that you’ve also enjoyed the Tangye – I’m kicking myself for leaving a lot of the rest of the series in Whitehaven when I picked this one up.

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    1. My library has a few of Tangye’s books (mostly in large print — making assumptions about the demographic there!), but others I’ll have to try to find secondhand sometime. I’d read another Tangye cat book before, Lama, and it wasn’t nearly as good.

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      1. I’ve been slowly trying to add to my collection of these as well. Lucky you can, at least, read them from the library (in the dark, with that nice big print heheh).

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  5. You’ve given me some ideas for books I can read with my son James! I’d not thought of the Moomin books or Wolves of Willoughby Chase. Thank you.

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    1. So glad I could give you some ideas!

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  6. These are some great ones! I started well and read and reviewed two, but I had David Kynaston’s On the Cusp, which is ABOUT 1962, and had got permission to use it for the Club, then didn’t manage to finish it, let alone review it, by the end of yesterday. The house renovations are not leaving me lots of reading time, even though they have taken away my working time, not sure what I’ve been doing!

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    1. Having people in to work on the house is always disruptive. We had solar panels installed on Monday. Luckily it only took them a couple of hours!

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  7. I’ve definitely had that happen, pinned all my hopes on a single volume for an event and, then, simply fell flat with it being entirely the wrong time for that book. But your round-up is quite inspiring, all the same, drawing attention to the many options for 1962. Other random thoughts: what a lovely snowy day memory for you, solar panels…yay, I was a talking-animals girl too but still loved Wrinkle, and I watched the film of The Drowned World not long ago and was quite confused but also couldn’t stop watching.

    In a short story I read recently, one of the characters makes the observation that Ivan Denisovich really didn’t suffer all that much after all as his suffering was actually just one day long, which I thought very funny (in a mostly not-funny story, this bit of humour was essential). Look, there, we have a bookish synchronicity between us, not between two of our own books though.

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    1. That’s just the kind of niche literary joke I love. Someone made a similar one at my birthday party, about me having a portrait in the attic that must be ageing for me!

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