Winter Reads: Claire Tomalin, Daniel Woodrell & Picture Books

Mid-February approaches and we’re wondering if the snowdrops and primroses emerging here in the South of England mean that it will be farewell to winter soon, or if the cold weather will return as rumoured. (Punxsutawney Phil didn’t see his shadow, but that early-spring prediction is only valid for the USA, right?) I didn’t manage to read many seasonal books this year, but I did pick up several short works with “Winter” in the title: a little-known biographical play from a respected author, a gritty Southern Gothic novella made famous through a Jennifer Lawrence film, and two picture books I picked up at the library last week.

 

The Winter Wife by Claire Tomalin (1991)

A search of the university library catalogue turned up this Tomalin title I’d never heard of. It turns out to be a very short play (two acts of seven scenes each, but only running to 44 pages in total) about a trip abroad Katherine Mansfield took with her housekeeper?/companion, Ida Baker, in 1920. Ida clucks over Katherine like a nurse or mother hen, but there also seems to be latent, unrequited love there (Mansfield was bisexual, as I knew from fellow New Zealander Sarah Laing’s fab graphic memoir Mansfield and Me). Katherine, for her part, alternately speaks to Ida, whom she nicknames “Jones,” with exasperation and fondness. The title comes from a moment late on when Katherine tells Ida “you’re the perfect friend – more than a friend. You know what you are, you’re what every woman needs: you’re my true wife.” Maybe what we’d call a “work wife” today, but Ida blushes with pride.

Tomalin had already written a full-length biography of Mansfield, but insists she barely referred to it when composing this. The backdrops are minimal: a French sleeper train; Isola Bella, a villa on the French Riviera; and Dr. Bouchage’s office. Mansfield was ill with tuberculosis, and the continental climate was a balm: “The sun gets right into my bones and makes me feel better. All that English damp was killing me. I can’t think why I ever tried to live in England.” There are also financial worries. The Murrys keep just one servant, Marie, a middle-aged French woman who accompanies her on this trip, but Katherine fears they’ll have to let her go if she doesn’t keep earning by her pen.

Through Katherine’s conversations with the doctor, we catch up on her romantic history – a brief first marriage, a miscarriage, and other lovers. Dr. Bouchage believes her infertility is a result of untreated gonorrhea. He echoes Ida in warning Katherine that she’s working too hard – mostly reviewing books for her husband John Middleton Murry’s magazine, but also writing her own short stories – when she should be resting. Katherine retorts, “It is simply none of your business, Jones. Dr Bouchage: if I do not work, I might as well be dead, it’s as simple as that.”

She would die not three years later, a fact that audiences learn through a final flash-forward where Ida, in a monologue, contrasts her own long life (she lived to 90 and Tomalin interviewed her when she was 88) with Katherine’s short one. “I never married. For me, no one ever equalled Katie. There was something golden about her.” Whereas Katherine had mused, “I thought there was going to be so much life then … that it would all be experience I could use. I thought I could live all sorts of different lives, and be unscathed…”

The play is, by its nature, slight, but gives a lovely sense of the subject and her key relationships – I do mean to read more by and about Mansfield. I wonder if it has been performed much since. And how about this for unexpected literary serendipity?

Yes, it’s that Rachel Joyce. (University library)

 

Winter’s Bone by Daniel Woodrell (2006)

I’d seen the movie but hadn’t remembered just how bleak and violent the story is, especially considering that the main character is a teenage girl. Ree Dolly lives in Ozarks poverty with a mentally ill, almost catatonic mother and two younger brothers whom she is effectively raising on her own. Their father, Jessup, is missing; rumour has it that he lies dead somewhere for snitching on his fellow drug producers. But unless Ree can prove he’s not coming back, the bail bondsman will repossess the house, leaving the family destitute.

Forced to undertake a frozen odyssey to find traces of Jessup, she’s unwelcome everywhere she goes, even among extended family. No one is above hitting a girl, it seems, and just for asking questions Ree gets beaten half to death. Her only comfort is in her best friend, Gail, who’s recently given birth and married the baby daddy. Gail and Ree have long “practiced” on each other romantically. Without labelling anything, Woodrell sensitively portrays the different value the two girls place on their attachment. His prose is sometimes gorgeous –

Pine trees with low limbs spread over fresh snow made a stronger vault for the spirit than pews and pulpits ever could.

– but can be overblown or off-puttingly folksy:

Ree felt bogged and forlorn, doomed to a spreading swamp of hateful obligations.

Merab followed the beam and led them on a slow wamble across a rankled field

This was my second from Woodrell, after the short stories of The Outlaw Album. I don’t think I’ll need to try any more by him, but this was a solid read. (Secondhand – New Chapter Books, Wigtown)

 

Children’s picture books: 

Winter Sleep: A Hibernation Story by Sean Taylor and Alex Morss [illus. Cinyee Chiu] (2019): My second book by this group; I read Busy Spring: Nature Wakes Up a couple of years ago. Granny Sylvie reassures her grandson that everything hasn’t died in winter, but is sleeping or in hiding beneath the ice or behind the scenes. As before, the only niggle is that European and North American species are both mentioned and it’s not made clear that they live in different places. (Public library)

The Lightbringers: Winter by Karin Celestine (2020): An unusual artistic style here: every spread is a photograph of felted woodland creatures. The focus is on midwinter and the hope of the light coming back – depicted as poppy seed heads, lit from within and carried by mouse, hare, badger and more. “The light will always return because it is guarded by small beings and they are steadfast in their task.” The first of four seasonal stories. (Public library)

 

Any wintry reading (or weather) for you lately?

15 responses

  1. whatmeread's avatar

    Winter’s Bone is such a good book. I wasn’t aware that Claire Tomalin wrote a play! I haven’t read her biography of Mansfield yet.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I’ve only read her Dickens and Hardy biographies, and her own memoir. I also own her Austen and Pepys biographies. I’d be interested to read her full-length Mansfield book. There’s been another recent Mansfield biography, too.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. whatmeread's avatar

        I have read Austen and Pepys, and I think Dickens.

        Like

  2. Laura's avatar

    I think I’ve seen Winter’s Bone but I’ve completely forgotten it – it doesn’t sound like I need to rush out and read the novel.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Both book and film are atmospheric, and the book is pretty short at 190-some pages.

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Davida Chazan's avatar

    Well… I had NO idea that Rachel Joyce was an actor before she became one of my favorite writers. Wonders never cease!

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Isn’t that a fun coincidence?!

      Liked by 1 person

  4. Cathy746books's avatar

    I’ve had Winter’s Bone on the TBR for ages, have started it several times but it has never stuck. Must try again.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I have a few books that have been like that. A question of timing, I guess! But it’s also fine to admit defeat if a book just isn’t drawing you in.

      Liked by 2 people

  5. margaret21's avatar

    I like Tomalin’s biographies, but don’t know this play. I’m not fond of reading play scripts, but maybe I should get over myself. Not sure I need a violent read just now, so maybe the Woodrell isn’t for me. Here, up int’ frozzen north, we’ve had snowdrops since January 7th!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      It was so short that I didn’t mind reading the script format.

      I envy you the snow! I saw my first open daffodils yesterday.

      Liked by 1 person

  6. Marcie McCauley's avatar

    Good on you for digging into the stacks and really loving your library! 🙂

    Browsing the children’s section is great for seasonal ideas, isn’t it. I should do that more often.

    Hmmm, the only wintry read I can think of is Jon Kalman Stefanson’s new novel (due in March) Your Absence is Darkness. It feels snowy, though there’s not quite as much snow as one might guess for a novel set in Iceland.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I picked out another stack of children’s books, animal themed this time, at the library yesterday.

      I once tried a Stefanson (Summer Light, and Then Comes the Night) but it was a swift DNF for me.

      Like

      1. Marcie McCauley's avatar

        That would appeal to me too. Which reminds me, I was planning a Brambley Hedge reread while it was still wintry. Guess I should get on that.

        Oh, really? I just flipped through the library copy and there are enough similarities to the new one that it’s safe to assume you’d feel the same (if anything, the earlier one has more structure).

        Like

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