Nine Days in France and What I Read

Who would have predicted that the South of France would be colder and rainier than the England we left behind? Nonetheless, we had a pleasant, low-key week at the Limousin–Dordogne border. We stayed in a gîte at Le Moulin de Pensol, a complex run by an English couple who keep horses, donkeys and chickens but are otherwise rewilding their land (similar to the Wild Finca project we visited in Spain two years ago). Their site is known for butterflies, including multiple almost indistinguishable fritillary species, so there was plenty of insect and bird watching for my husband in brief bursts of sunshine between showers. When it was too wet to go out, we played board games, drank wine and read books.

However, we did manage a few short outings: the Trou de Philippou gorge; a peek at a Saturday morning repair café (I’m a volunteer doing admin and publicity for our local repair café, which started in February) and its “recyclerie” charity shop in a nearby village; and St-Jean-de-Côle, “one of the loveliest villages in the Dordogne” according to the Rough Guide. We were taken by the main square’s church, castle and screaming swift parties – so much bigger than back home – which we’d likewise watched circling the château in the attractive medieval town of Saumur on the Loire, where we stopped for a night on the way down. There were also fresh cheeses and produce, including the most delicious strawberries ever (the “Charlotte” variety), from the two closest markets. Piégut’s is the largest market in southwest France but we had to use our imaginations as the downpour kept plenty of sellers away.

The highlight of the trip was a visit to Grotte de Villars, a cave network with spectacular stalactites and stalagmites. Less well known than Lascaux, which is now inaccessible to visitors except via a reproduction, it too has prehistoric cave paintings of horses and bison, and 20,000-year-old bear claw marks. The paintings are gradually disappearing behind the constant calcite-creating drips; I pondered whether they will vanish before the human race does. We were lucky to find it so quiet that we got a private English-language tour. Proprietors were also so kind as to speak English to us when we shopped at a nano-brewery and did a tasting at a cider and calvados producer in Normandy on our way back to the ferry. Otherwise, we muddled through with the bare minimum of French at shops and eateries.

My other highlight was finding two Little Free Libraries, a walk-in one that we happened to pass in Saint-Martin-l’Ars on our initial drive down south and another in Abjat-sur-Bandiat. I felt slightly bad about taking a book at the first because of its insistence on returning or replacing once you’d read it, so I made up for it by donating Cold Spring Harbor to the book exchange box in Abjat when we returned to its crêperie for our one meal out of the holiday.

 

What I Read

Slammerkin by Emma Donoghue (2000): A slammerkin was, in eighteenth-century parlance, a loose gown or a loose woman. Donoghue was inspired by the bare facts about Mary Saunders, a historical figure. In her imagining, Mary is thrown out by her family at age 14 and falls into prostitution in London. Within a couple of years, she decides to reform her life by becoming a dressmaker’s assistant in her mother’s hometown of Monmouth, but her past won’t let her go. The close third person narration shifts to depict the constrained lives of the other women in the household: the mistress, Mrs Jones, who has lost multiple children and pregnancies; governess Mrs Ash, whose initial position as a wet nurse was her salvation after her husband left her; and Abi, an enslaved Black woman. This was gripping throughout, like a cross between Alias Grace and The Crimson Petal and the White. The only thing that had me on the back foot was that, it being Donoghue, I expected lesbianism. (Secondhand purchase – Awesomebooks.com)

 

Paris Trance by Geoff Dyer (1998): Only my second novel from Dyer, an annoyingly talented author who writes whatever he wants, in any genre, inimitably. This reminded me of Jeff in Venice, Death in Varanasi for its hedonistic travels. Luke and Alex, twentysomething Englishmen, meet as factory workers in Paris and quickly become best mates. With their girlfriends, Nicole and Sahra, they form what seems an unbreakable quartet. The couples carouse, dance in nightclubs high on ecstasy, and have a lot of sex. A bit more memorable are their forays outside the city for Christmas and the summer. The first-person plural perspective resolves into a narrator who must have fantasized the other couple’s explicit sex scenes; occasional flash-forwards reveal that only one pair is destined to last. This is nostalgic for the heady days of youth in the same way as Sweetbitter. I was intrigued to learn that random lines were sampled from Fiesta; though it is lad lit, I wouldn’t have expected a Hemingway homage from the style. (Secondhand purchase – Awesomebooks.com)

 

Sanctuary in the South: The Cats of Mas des Chats by Margaret Reinhold (1993): Reinhold (still alive at 96?!) is a South African psychotherapist who relocated from London to Provence, taking her two cats with her and eventually adopting another eight, many of whom had been neglected by owners in the vicinity. This sweet and meandering book of vignettes about her pets’ interactions and hierarchy is generally light in tone, but with the requisite sadness you get from reading about animals ageing, falling ill or meeting with accidents, and (in two cases) being buried on the property. “Les chats sont difficiles,” as a local shop owner observes to her. But would we cat lovers have it any other way? Reinhold often imagines what her cats would say to her. Like Doreen Tovey, whose books this closely resembles, she is as fascinated by human foibles as by feline antics. One extended sequence concerns her doomed attempts to hire a live-in caretaker for the cats. She never learned her lesson about putting a proper contract in place; several chancers tried the role and took advantage of her kindness. (Secondhand purchase – Community Furniture Project)

 

Why Willows Weep: Contemporary Tales from the Woods, ed. Tracy Chevalier and Simon Prosser (2011): These 19 short fictions, rather like Rudyard Kipling’s Just-So Stories, imagine how certain tree species developed their particular characteristics. I wasn’t expecting the fable setup and probably would have preferred a miscellany of essays and various fictional approaches. However, there is a run of great stories in the middle: from Susan Elderkin on “How the Blackthorn Got Its Flowers” to Terence Blacker on “Why Elms Die Young.” The stand-outs for me were by Rachel Billington and Maria McCann. It was a cute touch to have each author’s mini-bio end with their favourite tree, except, um, bamboo isn’t one (it’s a giant grass). I’ll probably keep this for the randomness of where I found it and the Leanne Shapton illustrations. (Secondhand purchase – La Monnerie recyclerie)

And the first two-thirds of Daughters of the House by Michèle Roberts (1993): Thérèse and Léonie are cousins: the one French and the other English but making visits to her relatives in Normandy every summer. In the slightly forbidding family home, the adolescent girls learn about life, loss and sex. Each short chapter is named after a different object in the house. That Thérèse seems slightly otherworldly can be attributed to her inspiration, which Roberts reveals in a prefatory note: Saint Thérèse, aka The Little Flower. Roberts reminds me of A.S. Byatt and Shena Mackay; her work is slightly austere and can be slow going, but her ideas always draw me in. (Secondhand – Newbury charity shop)


A DNF: Claudine at School by Colette (a free download), which was dull and in way too small a print on my e-reader.

Plus portions of: various e-books for paid reviews, two May review books, and several library books including Moominpappa at Sea by Tove Jansson and The Invention of Hugo Cabret by Brian Selznick.

I’m happy to be home with my cat and canal, the two things I miss most when we’re away.

24 responses

  1. Your pictures are fabulous (clearly you took advantage of the moments when the sun was out!).
    I love reading travel posts on book blogs – yes, I know there are plenty of travel blogs out there but I have no interest in those – bookish friends highlight the important stuff 🙂 like free libraries (and that one you visited is the most substantial I’ve seen).

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks! I always love the travel posts you and Susan do. Yours are especially exotic, featuring landscapes I am totally unfamiliar with. I enjoyed taking photos on my new (first) smartphone, which reliably takes great shots; my old digital camera, on which I have to physically hold the battery compartment closed, takes really crummy pictures by comparison.

      I was very impressed by the walk-in free library. I think it used to be a weigh-station.

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  2. Shame about the weather – especially since it sounds like happened during the one sunny week we had in the UK. But at least you got lots of reading done!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Truly ironic! I’ll have to experience the south of France in more typical weather another time.

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  3. Glad you enjoyed yourselves despite the weather. You certainly chose a lovely place to stay.

    I’ve not read Slammerkin but your comparison to The Crimson and the White makes me think I’d like it.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Donoghue’s historical fiction is hit and miss but this one was a standout for me.

      Liked by 1 person

  4. Slammerkin sounds great, despite the lack of lesbians 🙂

    I’d love to visit Grotte de Villars, sounds amazing.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I was fully prepared for it to go all Fingersmith. Oh well! Her more recent historical fiction has been hit and miss for me, so it was great to find a really good one from her back catalogue.

      The caves were amazing. No photos allowed, alas, but there are probably images online.

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  5. Such a shame you had such bad weather – but drinking wine isn’t a bad pastime, I guess. Glad you managed to have a good time anyway. 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Can’t complain! It’s always good to get away and have a reset.

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  6. What a lovely holiday! I really should read Slammerkin. It’s interesting that the plot turns on Mary’s past in prostitution coming back to bite her; generally, historically, when women of the working-class entered prostitution, especially as young women, it was a much more fluid and transient state of being—you might do sex work for a bit, low-paid shop work for a bit, seamstress work for a bit, return to sex work for a time, back and forth—and it generally does not seem to have stopped women from marrying and/or entering “respectable” trades, up to a point. It’s a much bigger problem for women who start off middling-class or have aspirations to attain that status.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Without spoiling anything for you, I can confirm that what you have set out does indeed characterize Mary’s trajectory. I did think it would be research-adjacent for you!

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      1. Oh, fantastic! That makes me keener to read it, really.

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  7. Looks like a lovely trip

    Liked by 1 person

    1. How nice to hear from you! Hope you’re doing well.

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  8. I’m glad you liked Slammerkin! I think I read Room and Slammerkin before any of Donoghue’s other books, so the expectation of lesbians in her books wasn’t there from the start 🙂 The cat book sounds cute too.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I can see why you are such an evangelist for it!

      It was a cute cat book. I’ll probably seek out the sequel secondhand.

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  9. Beautiful pictures! Glad you had a lovely trip despite the weather.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks! We made the best of it. Can’t complain, really.

      Liked by 1 person

  10. Looks like you had a lovely holiday Rebecca!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. It’s good to get away from the monotony of home routines every once in a while.

      Liked by 1 person

  11. Lovely post and a curious assortment of books. Agree that Dyer is annoying talented and genre-less or genre-ful. The sad cat parts would have interfered for me with that one, but I can see the appearl. And Slammerkin I loved (her earlier books remain my favourites, including Hood but also Stir-Fry); I’m happy she’s found so much success, but I did enjoy the less commercially styled writing. Slammerkin is dense with detail and characterisation (and the original hardover from Virago had a beautiful red ribbon for its marker). That Willows book….I have never heard of it, but it sounds beautiful. And I failed with my first attempt at Cherie because of tiny print in an omnibus edition (a standalone with proper print secured my interest). Was the DNF on Michele Roberts just a matter of timing? She was a MRE author for me at one point but then it became too hard to find her over here. Thanks for the reminder, maybe I’ll try to resume! Is the meadow totally wild then, or are you standing on a desire path, just wide enough for one? Gorgeous. (Also really love the river with the mossy stone in it. Not to say the other photos aren’t also wonderful.)

    Liked by 1 person

    1. With so many cats, I knew there were bound to be some that fell ill. I was grateful she didn’t narrate through to all of their deaths (as in Seven Cats I Have Loved, which was very gloomy indeed)!

      I’ll definitely read more early Donoghue.

      I suppose it serves me right for downloading a pirated (perhaps, I’m not sure) version of the Colette.

      I haven’t DNFed the Roberts; I just didn’t manage to finish it during the trip, which is a shame as I’m more likely to read challenging books if there’s a good reason for them, such as being on location. I seem to see her books secondhand all the time; in fact, I have had to stop myself from buying several more as I already had three unread on the shelf and any more seemed ridiculous.

      The photo of me in the meadow: all their fields were quite muddy and boggy because of the recent rain. This was a good path on high ground, but still we were lucky that we could borrow wellington boots from the owners.

      The gorge was spectacular given I had no idea at all what “Le Trou de Philippou” was. I expected a hole in the ground! Which I guess this is, technically…

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  12. A walk-in little free library is a lovely thing to find! I’m glad you drew plenty of joy from your holiday even though the weather wasn’t great. I’ve had plenty of wet holidays in France in my time!

    Liked by 1 person

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