So, the Reading the End podcast is basically my life now

You probably know Jenny who writes the super blog Reading the End (previously Jenny’s Books) – from my most recent series of My Life in Books, if nowhere else. That gal is hilarious, as well as loving wonderful authors like Shirley Jackson and Helen Oyeyemi (and, whilst I remember, I must bug her to read Barbara Comyns if she hasn’t – she would definitely love her as the third piece in that triumvirate of Gothic brilliance).

Well, somehow I had not got around to listening to the Reading the End podcast that she does with her friend Jenny. Yes, two Jennys – Gin Jenny and Whiskey Jenny. The episodes are all here, or on iTunes. I have made up for lost time by listening to 8 episodes this week. That’s 6 hours of quality Jenny/Jenny time. And let me tell you, it’s a flipping brilliant podcast.

Right from the off, the ladies are so funny – and erudite and whatnot too, of course. They review books, they talk bookish topics (books as objects; genre classifications; Harry Potter. Always Harry Potter), they play book games (GAME! GAME! GAME!) I am about a year behind with episodes, so who knows what they’re up to now, but I’m enjoying every moment. I’ve giggled uncontrollably in the street and alarmed strangers. Just a ‘Sure’ from one of the Jennys is now enough to make me laugh.

Here’s the weird thing: I’ve listened to them so much, and know Gin Jenny through blogging already, that I now essentially think I’m their best friend. I’m just going to wander into the recording one day, shrieking GAME and telling anecdotes about polar explorers, and they are going to be mystified and/or mace me. For now, I’m just manically tweeting about things they chatted about in 2013.

And here’s the horrendous confession: I can’t tell their voices apart. I have tried so hard. And I can’t do it. So I now think of them both as a single, amorphous Jenny, with contradictory opinions (I particularly warmed to whichever Jenny it was who can’t form mental pictures of places or characters in books – something we all had a fun discussion about when I admitted the same thing). Sorry ladies. It doesn’t make me love you any the less.

So, basically, if you haven’t listened to it – dig out episode 1, download, and have a listen. I’m pretty sure you – like me – will then want to do nothing else for the next few weeks.

 

Nabokov’s Butterfly by Rick Gekoski

Nabokov's ButterflyDid I write, when I bought Nabokov’s Butterfly (2004) in the US, that it was called Tolkien’s Gown in the UK? It was one of those facts that I kept telling people when I was jet-lagged. Sorry to all those people.

Anyway, it was one of the books I bought from the books-about-books shelves in the US, and I believe Gekoski is American. So it felt a little less exotic than expected when I opened it to find Iffley Road, Oxford mentioned early on – since I live off it. He also mentions Cowley Road bookshop, which no longer exists, perhaps unsurprisingly.

This book has quite a lot in common with Old Books, Rare Friends by Leona Rostenberg & Madeleine Stern, in that Gekoski is a rare books dealer. Indeed, the Radio 4 series from which this book derives was called Rare Books, Rare People. Unlike those ladies, though, his main interest is the 20th century, rather than incunabula and the like. And it will come as no surprise that that was rather more up my street. This collection looks at 20 different famous works of the modern period, from The Picture of Dorian Gray (sneaking into the ‘long’ 20th century bracket) to Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone – discussing the genesis of each book, and also any notable copies that had ever passed through Gekoski’s hands.

I loved so much about it, even if a lot was already familiar. Those of us who love 20th-century literature – and particularly those of us who have studied it – will probably already know how Ulysses came about, or the events that surrounded The Satanic Verses. But, then again, I knew little about the background to Lord of the Flies or the little-known Graham Greene work After Two Years. And I am always willing to read somebody enthusing about A Confederacy of Dunces.

The potted histories of these works (and Lolita, Bridehead RevisitedAnimal FarmOn the RoadThe Tale of Peter Rabbit, etc. etc.; there is a lovely variety) is done extremely well. Nothing would astound a fan of each individual work, but having details together, concisely and well-managed, is a treat. And then we get to hear how Gekoski spent time with Graham Greene, was indirectly mentioned in the fatwa against Salman Rushdie, ordered a limit edition of a book and bought all of them, and so on. There is a personal angle that is unique to Gekoski’s perspective.

And that perspective is certainly unusual. I bemoaned, in Old Friends, Rare Books, that they prized books for their monetary value over the content; it didn’t sit well with a bibliophile like myself who cares little for condition or edition. And Gekoski is fighting this in himself, in seems. Early on, he says almost exactly that:

I knew very little about first editions at the time, and if you had told me I would spend a good part of my adult life dealing with them, I would have been astonished and horrified. Who cared about what edition you read? It was content that mattered.

And, later, when discussing why books must be pristine to be worth a lot of money, he writes:

All I ask, in the gleaming light of such perfection, is: why? With antique furniture we value the effects of time on the surface of an object, and call it patina; with paintings, we howl when inept restorers reproduce the way an oil painting would have looked on the day it was painted. The criterion that an object be in perfect, original condition is usually reserved for the collecting of piffling doo-dahs – of stamps, teddy bears, or dinky toys. But books? Books?

How did this happen? And for what reason? What, as an analyst might inquire, is the pathology behind it? because this ludicrous insistence on perfect condition strikes one more as a symptom than a rational goal.

He doesn’t have any answers. He is not a renegade in the book industry – at least not in this way. The nearest he gets in these laments, and pointing out that children’s literature that does well in the rare books world now must never have been appreciated properly by its intended audience.

So, yes, I didn’t much care when he listed how much various books had sold for at different points in his career – not least because (a) it’s at least ten years ago, and will all have changed, and (b) each time the amount was given in dollars in brackets, which got tedious. (Somehow the editors were able to do those exchanges, but didn’t bother removing various references to Tolkien’s Gown in the introduction.) (Did I mention it had a different title?) (Yes, of course I did.)

Basically, it would be difficult to find a book about books that I didn’t like a lot. Throw in humour and a focus on the 20th century, and I’m sold. It was also a perfect book to read on the aeroplane, because I could read it in bursts of concentration between bad films (Horrible Bosses 2 is fabs, guys) and being given endless tiny cups of water.

This review ended weirdly. Sure, ok. YAY BOOKS!

Auntie Mame by Patrick Dennis

Who first told me about Auntie Mame (1955)? A quick search through blog comments suggests that Vicki from Bibliolathas recommended her when I wrote about Abbie by Dane Chandos, but I already owned the book before that, so… who knows? Anyway, many thanks to whoever it was. Some years later, I took it off to America with me, and finished it on the ‘plane on the way back.

Auntie Mame

The narrator, like the author, is called Patrick Dennis – but it’s not entirely clear how autobiographical this novel is (indeed, it is the matter of much debate in the afterword by Matteo Codignola in the Penguin edition I have). It’s not even clear if it’s a novel or a series of short stories (more on that in the afterword too) – but what is clear is that Auntie Mame features the larger-than-life lady in question and her nephew going through various escapades over the course of many years.

We meet Mame when she takes in the young, recently orphaned, Patrick, against the better judgement of the staid Mr Babcock, who looks after Patrick’s finances. She is dressed in Japanese garb (she is always in garb of some variety; later she wishes to be thought Spaniard), hosting a party, and ushers impressionable Patrick into her socialite lifestyle. She is keen to educate him…

“My dear, a rich vocabulary is the true hallmark of every intellectual person. How now” – she burrowed into the mess on her bedside table and brought forth another pad and pencil – “every time I say a word, or you hear a word, that you don’t understand, you write it down and I’ll tell you what it means. Then you memorize it and soon you’ll have a decent vocabulary. Oh, the adventure,” she cried ecstatically, “of moulding a little new life!” She made another sweeping gesture that somehow went wrong because she knocked over the coffee pot and I immediately wrote down six new words which Auntie Mame said to scratch out and forget about.

You get a feel for the sort of thing. Mame is an irrepressible delight, and – as the novel progresses – we see Patrick both fond of and embarrassed by her. She gatecrashes his college ball; she looks after swathes of unpleasant evacuees; she becomes the unlikely nemesis of the horse-riding set. In one memorable episode, she launches into an anti-anti-Semitic tirade (an entirely admirable one – albeit one which changes the tone of the book quite suddenly). Each event is neatly tied up and self-contained, without any characters really changing – except in age and marital situation.

Each chapter also begins with the narrator-Patrick comparing Auntie Mame to the ‘Unforgettable Character’ of some hagoigraphic newspaper article. Every trait exemplified by this worthy woman is mirrored also, it seems, by Auntie Mame – mostly in an exaggerated and individual manner. This device for linking together unrelated stories isn’t, to my mind, entirely successful; although the afterword praises it for surmounting the difficulties of disparate tales, I think it just felt a bit forced and fake. It didn’t stop me enjoying Auntie Mame, but I’ve had enjoyed the book more without this touch.

But I still really liked Auntie Mame. Any novel about an eccentric spinster is likely to get a thumbs up from me. Perhaps she hasn’t joined Abbie and Miss Hargreaves and Patricia Brent (if one can really use the term ‘spinster’ about her) on the top tier, but it was a jolly fun read nonetheless.

Oh, and while I remember – I’ve figured out how to add those ‘like’ buttons to the bottom of posts! Of course, a comment is always best, but I thought it couldn’t hurt.

 

My Shelf: a challenge

Reading The Shelf by Phyllis Rose inevitably made me wonder how I could turn it into a personal reading challenge. I’m not usually a big fan of those that involve a specific list of titles – the moment I write them down, they lose their appeal. And picking a shelf at random from the library definitely didn’t appeal; reading about the experiment was fascinating, but I don’t want to be stuck reading piles of arbitrary books.

Annabel has come up with a great challenge – which you can read all about. That’s another fab idea, but one that won’t work for me. I’ll leave you to go over to Annabel’s blog to see all the details, but it won’t work brilliantly if your books are split between two counties.

So – I have simply picked one of my own shelves in Oxford. This also felt like a non-starter originally, because I didn’t want to end up reading many books by the same author. I also have old and new books on different bookcases. But then I remembered my shelf of small paperbacks, mostly Penguins, which had a nice variety across authors, periods, and fiction/non-fiction.

It’s nowhere near as random as Rose’s project, nor with as much scope as Annabel’s, but I’m still pretty excited about it. And I’m setting myself the vague target of having read them all (there are around 35, I think) before the end of 2016. The shelf includes five books I’ve already read (which are starred), so those may be missed off.

And what is on this shelf? Here is the list…

My Shelf

  • Take a Girl Like You – Kingsley Amis
  • Fair Stood the Wind for France – H.E. Bates
  • The Green Lacquer Pavilion – Helen Beauclerk
  • Zuleika Dobson – Max Beerbohm
  • Dandelion Wine – Ray Bradbury
  • The Napoleon of Notting Hill – G.K. Chesterton
  • The Other One – Colette
  • Memoirs of a Midget – Walter de la Mare
  • *One Pair of Hands – Monica Dickens
  • Joy and Josephine – Monica Dickens
  • The Millstone – Margaret Drabble
  • Maurice – E.M. Forster
  • The Snow Goose / The Small Miracle – Paul Gallico
  • Go She Must – David Garnett
  • Stately as a Galleon – Joyce Grenfell
  • The Bird of Night – Susan Hill
  • St Mawr / The Virgin and the Gypsy – D.H. Lawrence
  • The Spy Who Came in From the Cold – John Le Carre
  • Theatre – W. Somerset Maugham
  • *The Enchanted Places – Christopher Milne
  • Hons and Rebels – Jessica Mitford
  • Noblesse Oblige – ed. Nancy Mitford
  • Here Lies – Dorothy Parker
  • Owls and Satyrs – David Pryce-Jones
  • *Seducers in Ecuador – Vita Sackville-West
  • Tales From Tchehov – trans. Constance Garnett
  • The Secret Garden – Frances Hodgson Burnett
  • Stealthy Terror – John Ferguson
  • Moominsummer Madness – Tove Jansson
  • Free Air – Sinclair Lewis
  • Poor Relations – Compton Mackenzie
  • Speedy Death – Gladys Mitchell
  • *The Borrowers – Mary Norton
  • The Small Room – May Sarton
  • The Circus is Coming – Noel Streatfeild
  • *Mary Poppins – P.L. Travers

I shan’t be reading them in order, but over the coming months I’ll tag some posts as ‘My Shelf’, and you’ll see how my project is going. Any recommendations for the first off the shelf?

 

A Curious Friendship by Anna Thomasson

A-Curious-FriendshipIf you’ve been reading Stuck in a Book for a while, then you’ll probably have come across regular mentions of Edith Olivier’s wonderful 1927 novella The Love Child. It’s about a spinster who accidentally conjures her imaginary childhood friend into life – and it’s a moving, wonderful, beautiful little book. Large sections of my DPhil were on it, but I hadn’t expected many people to hear of Edith Olivier except through my yammering about it – and so I was thrilled and surprised when I saw that a biography of Edith Olivier and Rex Whistler was forthcoming.

This is all information I’ve blogged about before, but it’s my preamble to sending you over to Shiny New Books (a prompt which has taken me a while, what with heading off to America and suchlike) to read my review of A Curious Friendship and the fab piece Anna wrote for us about researching the book.

Do go and read those, but the summary is: whether or not you’ve heard of Olivier and Whistler, this book is a must. Definitely one of my reads of 2015.

 

Swimming in a Sea of Death by David Rieff

Swimming in a Sea of DeathA while ago I pulled a pile of novellas and other short books off my shelves, intending to do an intensive reading weekend. As it turned out, for reasons I forget, I only finished one book – and that book was David Rieff’s Swimming in a Sea of Death: a Son’s Memoir (2008). I’d bought it on a whim in Oxford’s £2 bookshop (now under the similar, but crucially different, name of £3 bookshop), with the assumption that I’d probably never actually get around to reading it. Yes, I should question my purchasing decision. But, in this case, I was wrong – and it was on my shelves for just under two years before making the cut.

Oh, and there is a quotation from Oliver Sacks on the front. I think I’d forgotten that, but it must have made me more likely to buy it in the first place; nobody writes about difficult subjects more sensitively than Sacks.

In case (like me) you didn’t know, David Rieff is Susan Sontag’s son. And I’m going to assume you know who Susan Sontag is, but, if you don’t, her Wikipedia page will fill you in. And it’s best to know about her beforehand, because we learn surprisingly little about Sontag from Rieff’s memoir. Because it isn’t really a memoir of her life. I’ve read a couple of books about grief – C.S. Lewis’s A Grief Observed and Calvin Trillin’s About Alice, which I wrote about together – both of which were as much about life (and/or theology) as they were about death. Rieff’s book really is swimming in a sea of death – the gruelling and cruel process of Sontag dying from leukemia, and his own anger, helplessness, and frustration. Which made it both a difficult book to read, and a very focused one.

Rieff’s anger is not just at the cruelties of fate but at the insensitivity of certain doctors and unhelpfulness of the information provided. His narrative moves between documenting the failing health of his mother, the ineptitude of certain parts of the medical system, and a broader philosophy of dying. Or perhaps not a philosophy of dying so much as an attempt to make an abstract sense of what was happening. Not a conclusive sense, understandably, but a way of formulating his thoughts and response.

How to reconcile the reality of human mortality with the reigning assumption in the rich world that every disease must have a cure, if not now then sometime in the future? The logic of the former is the acceptance of death. But the logic of the latter is that death is somehow a mistake, and that someday that mistake will be rectified.

And…

How, above all if you struggled to find the right doctors, and braved the most gruesome treatments, can you really say to yourself that none of this really had much to do with why you were still walking on the earth rather than dissolving under it? It is hard enough for any cancer patient to really resist the idea that some failure on his or her own part brought the illness on. After all, Reichian explanations of psychological repression causing cancer have in our time tended to give way to explanation based on one’s having eaten the wrong foods, the basis of such self-blame, and the assumption that the cancer patient is in a deep sense the author of his or her own disease is still very much in the air.

You can understand why I feel ill-equipped to write very much about this book – both because I have experienced nothing similar myself, and because – well – how can one write about it? (Yet somehow I managed with Simon Stephenson’s excellent Let Not The Waves of the Sea.)

What do we learn about Sontag? There was this tantalising tid-bit that I wish had been developed further…

She told me more than once that she believed that hope and will had been all she had to see herself through her alienated childhood, get herself out of the Southwest and on to the University of Chicago, where, at seventeen, she agreed to marry my father after knowing him for a little more than a week. Seven years later, that same sense of being able to remake her life no matter the obstacles – and not just remake it but also to make version two, or three, or four better than their predecessors – had given her the strength to extricate herself from the marriage.

Rieff iterates the description that she is ‘someone who loved reason (and, more crucially, loathed appeals to the subjective)’ – or words to that effect – throughout. I find people who loathe the subjective completely inexplicable – life is subjective! – and no characteristic ignores me more than those who use ‘logic’ as a cover for not considering emotion. All of which meant that I had the interesting experience of reading about the terrible circumstances surrounding a woman whose outlook on life was poles apart from mine; I couldn’t rely on natural empathy, which made the book all the more fascinating and moving to read, somehow. (Incidentally, Rieff mentions towards the end ‘I have preferred to write as little as possible of my relations with my mother in the last decade of her life, but suffice it to say that they were often strained and at times very difficult.‘)

So I didn’t come away from Swimming in a Sea of Death feeling the way I did to C.S. Lewis’s wife, Simon Stephenson’s brother, or Calvin Trillin’s wife; it’s not that sort of book. Rather, it shows precisely how witnessing dying and death are transformative experiences for a relative even when there isn’t a great relationship, and (obviously to a lesser degree) for an observing reader, even when the reader does not instinctively warm to the person in question.

Stuck-in-a-Book’s Weekend Miscellany

I’m off for the Bank Holiday Weekend, on yet another holiday. I am definitely spoiling myself this year! This time it’s to Gloucestershire – to the village next to the one I grew up in (although that one was in Worcestershire; we were right by the boundary. And when we moved there it was the county of Hereford and Worcester. England, amirite?)

I’ll leave you with some bits and bobs…

1.) I was excited to get an email from Ruth Franklin, who is writing a biography of Shirley Jackson – and there is a place where you can sign up for occasional updates, if that interests you.

2.) The other day, a man in his 60s on the London Underground leant over to me and said “Can I just say – my wife and I are fascinated by the fact that you’re reading a hardback!” I mean… sure? I showed him the book (Nuts in May by Cornelia Otis Skinner) and he said “I haven’t even heard of this book!” Did he think he’d hard of all the books?

3.) I was on the Underground to go and see Gypsy. Imelda Staunton was every bit as wonderful as all the reviews have said – and I believe the soundtrack album is now out.

4.) Darlene has written a fab review of Barbara Comyn’s excellent novel The Vet’s Daughter, and I’m not just saying that cos I get a mention.

5.) And I also get a mention here, but this link is because somehow I overlooked my friend Epsie’s insightful and delightful review of Boel Westin’s biography of Tove Jansson.

6.) Another review! Lyn of I Prefer Reading has made me desperate to read this book about Rex Whistler. Then I saw the price. It’s on my Christmas list…

7.) Reading reviews of The Shelf (don’t miss my eulogising about it here) made me go out and buy To The River by Olivia Laing (walking the Ouse and writing about Virginia Woolf) and The Whole Five Feet by Christopher Beha, about reading all the Harvard Classics. Anybody know anything about these? I mean, I’ve already bought them, but I’d still like to know…

FYI: anti-spam attempts

By the way, because I’m using WordPress.org rather than WordPress.com, I can’t use their built-in spam filter. So I’m trying a plug-in that may send proper comments to spam… I’ll experiment with it, and any others (recommendations welcome!) and we’ll see where we get to. If you do try to comment and it doesn’t work for ages, maybe let me know on Twitter @stuck_inabook :)