
And the Canadian reading continues! I read The Book of Eve (1973) by Constance Beresford-Howe on the plane home from Canada having picked it up in Fair’s Fair in Calgary. It was one of the bookshops that very considerately had bookcases dedicated to Canadian authors, and I spent a good while going through an awful lot of promising-looking books. I’d never heard of this author or title, but it had the magical words ‘boarding house’ in the blurb – and that was enough to swing it for me.
Here is the opening paragraph:
The real surprise – to me anyway – was not really what I did, but how I felt afterwards. Shocked, of course. But not guilty. You might say, and be right, that the very least a woman can be is shocked when she walks out on a sick and blameless husband after forty years. But to feel no guilt at all – feel nothing, in fact, but simple relief and pleasure – that did seem odd, to say the least. How annoying for God (not to mention Adam), after all, if Eve had just walked out of Eden without waiting to be evicted, and left behind her pangs of guilt, as it were, with her leaf apron?
That’s about the only time the Bible is mentioned, perhaps to justify Beresford-Howe’s attention-grabbing title, though there are also letters that the narrator writes to God scattered occasionally through the book. Eva (why not Eve?) Carroll is that narrator – a 65-year-old wife and mother who walks out of a marriage to Burt that, to external observers, seems ordinary and content. There is no other man or other women; there is no domestic violence. There isn’t even really unkindness. Eve has simply had enough of a world in which she feels constantly trammeled and stifled.
She takes herself to the other side of Montreal, where she lies low for a while. She phones her 38-year-old son, Neil, to let him know that she is ok – and agrees to meet with him.
My dear son, my Neil and his kind heart with its rare flashes of insight and clumsy tact. He was the enemy, not Burt; with his sweetness and reason he was the real threat. All his life I’d fought against loving Neil too much, and that was all that helped me now.
“No, dear. I’m not going to New York. Or to Florida. Or back to your father. So if that’s all you can suggest, we might as well let you get back to the office.”
Burt refuses to make her an allowance, and Eva has no legal claim to the house she has tended for decades. There is a small pension to live on, and she refuses her son’s offers of financial help – which she knows he can’t afford. A fair amount of the story involves Eva trying to make ends meet, so she can afford the rent on her tiny apartment and the daily necessities. She does this by finding discarded things on the street on pawning them, to complement her meagre pension. In the story of a woman walking out of her life and surviving in unlikely circumstances, I was reminded of The L-Shaped Room by Lynne Reid Banks and The Swamp Angel by Ethel Wilson. But those women are (respectively) much younger and rather younger than Eva. There is still something so shocking, so taboo, about a woman of Eva’s age choosing independence without a ‘good reason’. And that’s in inverted commas because, of course, Eva’s reason is fundamentally good in her eyes. In the 1970s, I’m sure that 65 felt much older than 65 does today – making Eva’s decision-making all the more unexpected.
While there are a handful of residents in the boarding house, it isn’t really a boarding house novel in the way I’d imagined – it isn’t, that is to say, a novel about a collection of unlikely people brought together. They are largely peripheral – with the exception of Johnny, a Hungarian immigrant a decade or more younger than her with whom she starts a love affair. Or is ‘love affair’ the right terminology? The Book of Eve is certainly not a romance novel, and while Eva’s connection with Johnny has excitement, passion, humour and intrigue, he is not a knight in shining armour and Beresford-Howe resists any simple conclusions about whether a different man is really a solution to whatever problem Eva is experiencing. But, again, how many 1970s novels have thoughtful scenes of passion involving a woman of Eva’s age?
The Book of Eve really rests on the character of Eva, and I think she was a real success. Beresford-Howe concentrates on making her a nuanced character rather than necessarily an empathetic one. This is no Lady Sloane in Vita Sackville-West’s All Passion Spent, whom we unquestioningly cheer on. While no reader is likely to feel sorry for Eva’s abandoned husband, her son is more sympathetic and her granddaughter still more so. Eva treats other characters with occasional thoughtlessness, and can be frustrating in her refusal to address things head on.
And yet, and yet… I found her absolutely compelling. I loved spending time with her in all her complexities, and was fascinated to see how she would survive and what she would discover in this brave new world. I’d always rather read about interesting characters than morally upright ones – haven’t we all been annoyed by characters whose only purpose is to carry forth whatever message the author thinks is important? It is Eva’s moral grey area, and Beresford-Howe’s resistance to easy answers and pat plot points, that makes The Book of Eve such a brilliant read. I believe it is a Canadian classic, probably well known by readers in that nation – but I think rather less well-known in the UK. If you haven’t heard of it, and you love nuanced feminist novels about authentic, believable women – and, of course, if you a boarding house novel – then I urge you to lay your hands on it. If you are an aficianado of Canadian literature, do let me know what else I should read by her!








