Still more to finish reading and/or belatedly review this week before the Novellas in November link-up closes – another, er, nine books after this, I think! I’ll save the short nonfiction for a couple of other posts. For now I have five novellas that range from black comedy to utter heartbreak and from quotidian detail to magic realism.
The House of Dolls by Barbara Comyns (1989)
What a fantastic opening line: “Amy Doll, are you telling me that all those old girls upstairs are tarts?” Amy is a respectable widow and single mother to Hetty; no one would guess her boarding house is a brothel where gentlemen of a certain age engage the services of Berti, Evelyn, Ivy and the Señora. When a policeman starts courting Amy, she feels it’s time to address her lodgers’ profession and Hetty’s truancy. The older women disperse: move, marry or seek new employment. Sequences where Berti, who can barely boil an egg, tries to pass as a cook for a highly exacting couple, and Evelyn gets into the gin while babysitting, are hilarious. But there is pathos to the spinsters’ plight as well. “The thing that really upset [Berti] was her hair, long wisps of white with blazing red ends which she kept hidden under a scarf. The fact that she was penniless, and with no prospects, had become too terrible to contemplate.” She and Evelyn take to attending the funerals of strangers for the free buffet and booze. Comyns’ last novel (I’d only previously read Who Was Changed and Who Was Dead) is typically dark, but the wit counteracts the morbid nature. It reminded me of Beryl Bainbridge, late Barbara Pym, Lore Segal, and Muriel Spark. (Passed on by Liz – thank you! Even with the hideous cover.) [156 pages] ![]()
Light by Eva Figes (1983)
I read this as part of my casual ongoing project to read books from my birth year. This was recently reissued and I can see why it is considered a lost classic and was much admired by Figes’ fellow authors. A circadian novel, it presents Claude Monet and his circle of family, friends and servants at home in Giverny. The perspective shifts nimbly between characters and the prose is appropriately painterly: “The water lilies had begun to open, layer upon layer of petals folded back to the sky, revealing a variety of colour. The shadow of the willow lost depth as the sun began to climb, light filtering through a forest of long green fingers. A small white cloud, the first to be seen on this particular morning, drifted across the sky above the lily pond”. There are also neat little hints about the march of time: “‘Telephone poles are ruining my landscapes,’ grumbled Claude”. But this story takes plotlessness to a whole new level, and I lost patience far before the end, despite the low page count, and so skimmed half or more. If you are a lover of lyrical writing and can tolerate stasis, it may well be your cup of tea. (Secondhand – Community Furniture Project?) [91 pages] ![]()
On Chesil Beach by Ian McEwan (2007)
“They were young, educated, and both virgins on this, their wedding night, and they lived in a time when a conversation about sexual difficulties was plainly impossible.” Another stellar opening line to what I think may be a perfect novella. Its core is the night in July 1962 when Edward and Florence attempt to consummate their marriage in a Dorset hotel, but it stretches back to cover everything we need to know about this couple – their family dynamics, how they met, what they want from life – and forward to see their lives diverge. Is love enough? “And what stood in their way? Their personalities and pasts, their ignorance and fear, timidity, squeamishness, lack of entitlement or experience or easy manners, then the tail end of a religious prohibition, their Englishness and class, and history itself. Nothing much at all.” I had forgotten the sources of trauma: Edward’s mother’s brain injury, perhaps a hint that Florence was sexually abused by her father? (But she also says things that would today make us posit asexuality.) I knew when I read this at its release that it was a superior McEwan, but it’s taken the years since – perhaps not coincidentally, the length of my own marriage – to realize just how special. It’s a maturing of the author’s vision: the tragedy is not showy and grotesque like in his early novels and stories, but quiet, hinging on the smallest of actions, or the words not said. This absolutely flayed me emotionally on a reread. (Little Free Library) [166 pages] ![]()
The Old Haunts by Allan Radcliffe (2023)
I was sent this earlier in the year in a parcel containing the 2024 McKitterick Prize shortlist. It’s been instructive to observe the variety just in that set of six (and so much the more in the novels I’m assessing for the longlist now). The short, titled chapters feel almost like linked flash stories that switch between the present day and scenes from art teacher Jamie’s past. Both of his parents having recently died, Jamie and his boyfriend, a mixed-race actor named Alex, get away to remote Scotland. His parents were older when they had him; growing up in the flat above their newsagent’s shop in Edinburgh, Jamie felt the generational gap meant they couldn’t quite understand him or his art. Uni in London was his chance to come out and make supportive friends, but being honest with his parents seemed a step too far. When Alex is called away for an audition, Jamie delves deeper into his memories. Kit, their host at the cottage, has her own story. Some lovely, low-key vignettes and passages (“A smell of soaked fruit. Christmas cake. My mother liked to be organised. She was here, alive, only yesterday.”), but overall a little too soft for the grief theme to truly pierce through. [158 pages] ![]()
With thanks to the Society of Authors for the free copy for review.
The Peculiar Life of a Lonely Postman by Denis Thériault (2005; 2008)
[Translated from the French by Liedewy Hawke]
{BEWARE SPOILERS} Like many, I was drawn in by the quirky title and Japan-evoking cover. To start with, it’s the engaging story of Bilodo, a Montreal postman with a naughty habit of steaming open various people’s mail. He soon becomes obsessed with the haiku exchange between a certain Gaston Grandpré and his pen pal in Guadeloupe, Ségolène. When Grandpré dies a violent death, Bilodo decides to impersonate him and take over the correspondence. He learns to write poetry – as Thériault had to, to write this – and their haiku (“the art of the snapshot, the detail”) and tanka grow increasingly erotic and take over his life, even supplanting his career. But when Ségolène offers to fly to Canada, Bilodo panics. I had two major problems with this: the exoticizing of a Black woman (why did she have to be from Guadeloupe, of all places?), and the bizarre ending, in which Bilodo, who has gradually become more like Grandpré, seems destined for his fate as well. I imagine this was supposed to be a psychological fable, but it was just a little bit silly for me, and the way it’s marketed will probably disappoint readers who are looking for either Harold Fry heart warming or cute Japanese cat/phone box adventures. (Public library) [108 pages] ![]()
Which of these catches your eye?
I actually can’t remember it at all, but at the time, I described The Peculiar Life of a Lonely Postman as a ‘satisfying and original read’. However, I have to admit that On Chesil Beach is better!
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It was definitely different and quirky, but I didn’t feel it lived up to the premise.
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No comment. Can’t remember!
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Wow–what a review. You’ve inspired me to re-read the McEwan, too. It’s been a long time.
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A lot of his work can be astringent. There’s a lovely bittersweetness to this one.
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Thanks, I may actually enjoy this book on Monet
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If you are interested in his life and work, this would be a different way to experience it.
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It is an awful cover, isn’t it! Glad you found something good in the novel, though.
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So bad it’s good 😉 This was a great one and I still have a few more from that parcel, I think.
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LOVE the sound of The House of Dolls (though I’ve not read any Comyns yet!) If you ever feel like passing your copy on, think of me 😀
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Aww, with that cover, how could I not keep it?! 😉 One of your uni libraries should have her books, I’d hope?
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Hah, to each their own! I’m sure Senate House has at least a few. Possibly not this one as it seems the most obscure, but I’ll check!
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Funny, I didn’t love On Chesil Beach when I read it (it was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize in 2007). It was probably my 5th or 6th pick along with the winner ‘The Gathering’. Goes to show what I know, lol. My favourites were Animal’s People by Indra Sinha and Mr Pip by Lloyd Jones. That was the year I really got into reading…
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It’s funny to look back and think what books meant to us at the time and how our opinions change over the years.
I often find that Booker longlistees stand out to me more than the shortlistees or eventual winner.
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Oh I agree wholeheartedly! My favourite ever book is The Gift of Rain by Tan Twan Eng, I think it was the same year (2007), but it didn’t even make the shortlist. I also loved The Welsh Girl. It was a year of reading awakening, but sadly not every year did I have so much love for such a large number of the book as I did that year.
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I was absolutely hooked on Chesil Beach too, just perfect but I also quite liked the one about the postman, I went around seeing everything in haiku’s for about a week!
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I do like a good haiku.
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[…] day of the month! The standouts were (nonfiction) Without Exception by Pam Houston and (fiction) On Chesil Beach by Ian McEwan, which was a reread for me. Other highlights included The House of Dolls by Barbara […]
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I’ve read several Comyns novels but not this one yet. I’ll have to look for it. The only other author I’m familiar with is McEwan, and I agree that this is one of his best. Some of the others sounded interesting at first, but the faults sound like things that would bother me, too.
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I’ve enjoyed the two I’ve tried by Comyns so far and I have a few more on the shelf — Liz passed on a bunch to me at once.
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Nice!
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[…] On Chesil Beach by Ian McEwan: A perfect novella. Its core is the July 1962 night when Edward and Florence attempt to consummate their marriage, but it stretches back to cover everything we need to know about them – their family dynamics, how they met, what they want from life – and forward to see their lives diverge. Is love enough? It’s a maturing of the author’s vision: tragedy is not showy and grotesque like in his early work, but quiet, hinging on the smallest action, the words not said. This absolutely flayed me emotionally on a reread. […]
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[…] book that made me cry: On Chesil Beach by Ian […]
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That’s the same edition of the Comyns novel I have: super cute. hee hee (Also posted by an English friend) I’ve really got to make more of a point to explore her now that they’re at hand.
I’ve heard a lot of disappointment about that McEwan novel/la. Although I’ve read a few, and enjoyed them well enough (despite the darkness in some, which we’ve chatted about previously), I rather lost the habit of chasing them down, after The Children’s Act-which I liked, so it had nothing to do with that book).
The Postman book is on my TBR, but the others sound good to me too.
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[…] happy day includes The Old Haunts (Allan […]
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