Stuck-in-a-Book’s Weekend Miscellany

I started a new part-time job this week (still as a librarian, but this time in a Special Collections reading room, so the materials are suddenly much more fragile and valuable!) and I’m pretty tired.  Back to work today (Saturday) but with the not-very-valuable books instead… and mostly reshelving.  Such is the ignominy of being a library dogsbody!  Still, I made a chocolate cake this evening, so at least I’ll have something delicious in my lunch, though I says it as shouldn’t.

I seem to have wandered away from the book/blog post/link format of my Weekend Miscellanies of late, but that’s because each week seems to be bursting at the seams with goodies.  But I’ll try to remember to keep all three in somewhere…

1.) For those of you who can’t get enough of me here (ahem) you can read some of my writing somewhere else this week!  My review of Leonard and Virginia Woolf, The Hogarth Press, and the Networks of Modernism (phew) ed. Helen Southworth is in the CILIP Rare Books Newsletter.  Have a gander here (it’s in Issue 91) if you fancy it.  In summary, it’s a good book!  And my review starts by quoting E.M. Delafield.

2.) Linda Gillard’s A Lifetime Burning is a very good, strange, wonderful book.  I said that, in a few more words, back in a rather speedy review here.  It’s now available on Kindle here at the ridiculously cheap price of 88p.  It’s not the most comfortable read ever, but it is Linda’s masterpiece. Twenty-six reviews on Amazon; all five-star – that’s got to mean something.

3.) Peirene’s Short Story Month competition (PeiShoStoMo), which I mentioned here, is done and dusted.  Lots of congrats to Rose Rankin-Gee and her great story ‘London’, which you can read here.

4.) Some other lovely bloggers are joining in A Century of Books: see what Fleur Fisher, Read the Book, Geranium Cat and Harriet Devine have planned, and let me know if you post your own plans on your blog.  (Sorry if you’ve already told me and I forgot!)

5.) I keep linking to Claire’s reviews, but she keeps reviewing wonderful books wonderfully well!  I can’t believe another blogger has read Miss Elizabeth Bennet by A.A. Milne – read Claire’s lovely review here.  My plan for people to read and love AAM’s obscure adult plays/sketches/novels/essays is finally coming to fruition!  He wrote so, so much, I could fill up a third of A Century of Books with Milne alone…

6.) Finally, I was delighted with Slightly Foxed sent me the latest of their Slightly Foxed Editions: it’s Dodie Smith’s autobiography Look Back With Love.  One of her autobiographies, I should say, since I think she penned a fair few.  I’ve been wanting to read this for a while, since I love I Capture the Castle, and this beautiful edition is perfect.  I hope to get onto it soon, but for now – more info is here.

“Books are like people…”

Last quotation from Stop What You’re Doing And Read This!, promise.  Well, there definitely won’t be more than one after this, anyway.  Probably.  Back to Mark Haddon’s wonderful essay, definitely the jewel in this crown, and more book thoughts which both strike a chord and make me think more deeply about my reading.  I seem to have run out of bookish paintings very quickly, so instead here is a musical painting by one of my favourite artists: it’s Raoul Dufy’s Tribute to Mozart.

“What I didn’t yet understand was the importance of taste and timing.  Books are like people.  Some look deceptively attractive from a distance, some deceptively unappealing; some are easy company, some demand hard work that isn’t guaranteed to pay off.  Some become friends and stay friends for life.  Some change in our absence – or perhaps it’s we who change in theirs – and we meet up again only to find that we don’t get along any more, an experience that I had when I returned to both Gravity’s Rainbow and Armistead Maupin’s Tales of the City.  Unlike people, one can at least dump them or hand them to a friend without causing offence or feeling guilt.  Indeed, we forget sometimes that a vital part of loving literature is hating certain books and certain writers, just as hating Spurs is an important part of supporting Arsenal; and the embarrassing truth is that I have probably got far more satisfaction out of trying to persuade friends that The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo is a tawdry piece of misogynistic torture porn than I have out of discussing the reasons why Wolf Hall is a masterpiece.”

–Mark Haddon, ‘The Right Words in the Right Order’
Stop What You’re Doing And Read This!

The Poisonwood Bible: other views

I meant to include links to other bloggers’ views yesterday, but I was too tired by the time I finished exploring my own!  So today’s post is a little addendum to yesterday’s…


The world, it seems, is filled with bloggers who have written about The Poisonwood Bible.  I’ve just picked some of the bloggers I already know and love.  If you have an insatiable appetite for reviews, I recommend you check out Fyrefly’s wonderful blog search engine.  It’s invaluable!

“The writing was exquisitely well balanced, the story was absorbing and the Congo was portrayed as though it were another character rather than merely a place.” – Old English Rose

“It’s a story about religious beliefs, a story of the disintegration of a family, and a story about forgiveness.” – Bibliophile by the Sea

“Recommended to anyone with the patience to read a long, slow novel.” – Jackie, Farm Lane Books

The Poisonwood Bible is a brilliant, heartfelt and passionate love letter to Africa and the problems it faces. Kingsolver manages to combine a family saga, a political treatise and a love story into a wonderful book.” – Sakura, Chasing Bawa

“The setting is all-important in The Poisonwood Bible. The Congo is as much as character as any of the Prices.” – Curious Book Fans

“But then, after all of that emotion, everything petered out and the book just kept going.” – Eva, A Striped Armchair

“It’s a book that has stuck long in my memory, maybe because it paints such a remarkable picture based on reality and truth.” – Margaret, Books Please

The Poisonwood Bible – Barbara Kingsolver

Well, I finished The Poisonwood Bible (1998) with a couple of hours to spare before book group… and, having worked out what I think about it, I am ready to write my review.  It’s quite difficult to formulate my thoughts on this novel, because these thoughts do not all lean in the same direction.  Reviews feel like they should be unified, and that’s rather tricky when I have both positive and negative responses to a book.  So… bear with me.  I’ll bear with you bearing with me.  Hopefully by the end of the page we’ll understand one another, no?

First things first, The Poisonwood Bible ought to be about 200 pages shorter.  I don’t mean that careful and judicious editing throughout is needed, to compress the narrative (although this wouldn’t be a bad idea) – I mean that it should have ended on p.427.  There are 616 pages in the edition I read (rather more than the supposed 350 page upper-limit of book group choices) and there shouldn’t be.  I am astonished that any editor let Kingsolver keep going for those final 189 pages.  It was self-indulgent and unnecessary.  But, now I’ve got that off my chest, I can return to the review proper.  It gets more positive soon, promise.
The Poisonwood Bible follows the Price family from 1959 to the 1990s – Nathan is a Baptist minister from Georgia (the US state, not the country), and has brought his wife Orleanna and daughters Rachel, Leah, Adah, and Ruth May to the Congo.  They are there as missionaries, but all is not going to go entirely to plan… to say the least.  This is the basic premise of Kingsolver’s novel – and from such a simple idea, she weaves a long and complex novel.  Complex in terms of emotions, interactions, and gradual self-discovery, that is.  Not a lot really happens.  (Another reason why The Poisonwood Bible is difficult to write about.  Honestly, Barb!)
Five voices make up the narrative, each in the first person.  Orleanna Price speaks briefly at the beginning of each section  – which are named after Biblical (and Apocryphal) books – Genesis, The Revelation, The Judges, Bel and the Serpent, Exodus.  She speaks wearily, always in retrospect, and keeps her cards close to her chest.  Doubtless this is partly so plot points aren’t revealed too early, and her melancholy ambiguity includes one momentous hint which kept me gripped and guessing for hundreds of pages.
But it is the four daughters who are the mainstay of the novel.  The narrative is passed between them, and Kingsolver constructs their four voices brilliantly, distinctly, and consistently.  Her fellow American novelist, Marilynne Robinson, hugely impressed me with Gilead because of her ability to ‘capture’ a voice – and while Kingsolver has a rather different slant on a minister, she certainly writes beautifully for his daughters.  Since they are so thoroughly depicted, it’s difficult to summarise their characters – but, broadly speaking, I’ll try.
Rachel is the eldest, a white-blonde ingenue whose Malapropisms (‘never the train shall meet’) and simple, unimaginative nature are initially endearing, but eventually rather concerning.  She never loses the all-American slang expressions she brings with her to Congo, and I rather liked her indefatigable sassiness, even if it is accompanied with a lack of cultural awareness.  
Leah and Adah are twins – Leah desperately seeks the approval of her father, and carries with her the guilt that, in the womb, she ’caused’ Adah’s disability.  Adah limps badly, and almost never speaks.  She also has a fascination with seeing things backgrounds, and especially palindromes.  Silent to others, her narration reveals her cynicism and bitterness, but also her humour.
Ruth May, finally, is the youngest – and the simplest.  Not in terms of intelligence, but in the simple, contented way she adapts to her surroundings, making friends amongst the neighbours, and doing her best to understand her father’s teaching in their new environment.
For Kingsolver is not subtle about the clash of cultures.  Here, the welcome party for the Prices is interrupted by Nathan:
“Reverend and Mrs. Price and your children!” cried the younger man in the yellow shirt.  “You are welcome to our feast.  Today we have killed a goat to celebrate your coming.  Soon your bellies will be full with our fufu pili-pili.”At that, why, the half-naked women behind him just burst out clapping and cheering, as if they could no longer confine their enthusiasm for a dead goat.[…]”Nakedness,” Father repeated, “and darkness of the soul!  For we shall destroy this place where the loud clamour of the sinners is waxen great before the face of the Lord!” No one sang or cheered anymore.  Whether or not they understood the meaning of ‘loud clamour,’ they didn’t dare be making one now.  They did not even breathe, or so it seemed.  Father can get a good deal across with just his tone of voice, believe you me. 
This is, firstly, a great example of Kingsolver’s exceptional ability to convey individuals’ voices through minor verbal tics.  Perhaps it isn’t clear from just this excerpt, but only Rachel’s narrative would have that ‘why’ in the second paragraph; only Rachel would finish ‘believe you me’.  If Adah’s sections have the most obvious stylistic identifications, the others are subtly tied to their narratives too.  That is the greatest strength of The Poisonwood Bible, and the strength that encourages me to read more by Barbara Kingsolver – the ability to create a character’s voice.

Which makes it all the more frustrating that, in Nathan Price, she has done nothing of the kind.  The women of The Poisonwood Bible are drawn so well, so cleverly.  And, in the midst of them all, is Nathan.  He never comes alive, he is scarcely more than a Bad Man Who Does Bad Things.  His motivations aren’t addressed, he has no depth whatsoever – it is a shambolic waste of an opportunity.  I don’t think it’s simply my Christianity (and the fact that I know a lovely, hard-working, deeply loving missionary in D.R. Congo) that makes me feel this – others at book group certainly agreed.  Nathan is angry, selfish, insensitive, violent… it was when he started hitting his children that my eyes rolled so much that I felt a little dizzy. Doubtless there are other novels where one meets ogres – Barbara Comyns’ The Vet’s Daughter, for example, or any novel by Dickens – but in those books they are in the midst of the surreal and exaggerated.  Nathan Price is not, and, though all his attributes are individually believable, as a composite, without any redeeming features, they are not.  It is such a pity that Kingsolver allowed herself this laziness.  Had she made Nathan a character, rather than a two-dimensional face of Wicked Colonialism, The Poisonwood Bible would have been more interesting.  Then again, perhaps she just wanted Nathan as a catalyst to explore the reactions of the female characters?  That’s the most charitable conclusion I can draw.

As I said before, very little happens.  We see the daughters try to adjust to their situation – their interactions with neighbours, who are variously kind or antagonistic and endlessly curious – and the gradually altering politics of Congo.  Pages and pages go by without anything particularly occurring, but they are somehow engaging.  Ruth May introduces ‘Mother May I’ to local infants; Rachel’s hair is a spectacle to all; Adah is presumed eaten by a lion (but is not); Leah grows more and more interested in the teacher Anatole… mostly Kingsolver attempts the miracle of winding a narrative through emotions and thoughts without hanging them on events – and she succeeds.  It is beautiful writing.  It is also nigh-on impossible to review.  There is one odd thing… usually I jot down resonant or stand-out quotations whilst I read, or excerpts I think will help structure a blog post.  For The Poisonwood Bible, I wrote down nothing.  Kingsolver’s writing is all even and constant – it all weaves into one.

But, as I noted at the top, something very weird happens.  The Prices’ time in the Congo comes to an abrupt, tragic end.  And then, p.427, they leave.  After that it is as though it were another novel.   We follow the various daughters at occasional intervals for another couple of decades.  It is tedious and politically heavy-handed.  The points Kingsolver had previously shown through her story are now told through dialogue.  Show, don’t tell, Barb.  All the unsubtlety in her portrayal of Nathan sweeps across the others.  I still can’t believe that a novel can peter out quite like this one did.

So, there you are.  A confusing review, I daresay, but also a confusing read.  At its best, The Poisonwood Bible is phenomenally good.  Barbara Kingsolver is obviously an exceptionally talented writer.  The Bean Trees, which I read years ago, is also testament to this.  But at its best, The Poisonwood Bible is lazy, clumsy, unsubtle and poorly edited.  Overall I will say that Kingsolver’s talents outweigh her occasional mismanagement of them, but it is always a shame when a novel could have been great (and, to be fair, a lot of people do consider it great) but, to my mind, failed to reach its potential.

“Memory is talismanic.”

I’m on the home straight with The Poisonwood Bible, so expect a report on that later in the week.  For today, as the publishing date of Stop What You’re Doing And Read This! draws ever nearer, I shall tantalise you with another excerpt – this time from Jeanette Winterson.  Today’s painting is Carl Larsson’s ‘Woman Reading’.  [EDIT: Pat, thanks for reminding me that the book is Radio 4’s Book of the Week this week!]

“A medium other than the book could not achieve the effect of this book [The Living Mountain by Nan Shepherd] nearly so well.  A book lets you follow a writer’s mind.  Reading does not move in linear time in the way that a movie or even a radio piece does.  Of course there is a beginning, a middle and an end, but in ‘good’ books that is irrelevant.  We don’t remember the books that have mattered to us by the chronology of their story-telling, but by the impression and effect of the story and of the language used to tell it.  Memory is talismanic.  We hold on to what we need and let the rest go.  Just as in our lives events separated in time sit side by side in memory, so the effect of a book is to let us live nearer to total time than linear time allows.”

— Jeanette Winterson, ‘A Bed. A Book. A Mountain.’
Stop What You’re Doing And Read This!

Song for a Sunday

And now the first Sunday Song of 2012!  But before we get to that, something I forgot to post in my Weekend Miscellany.  Katie posted the following on the SiaB Facebook page, and I drew a blank, but perhaps you can help?
In my early twenties I read a book that referred to a family as “The Gannets” because this family loved to eat, go on picnics with copious ampunts of elaborately prepared food and enjoyed every moment, including the last lick of their fingertips. The family were all rotund. I think the book was written by a British writer and I read the book in 1980ish.  It would be super fun to reconnect with it. I recently travelled to New Zealand and watched the gannets as they enthusiastically torpedoed into the water to catch their dinner – this reminded me of the book and I laughed all over again thinking of that family.So… can you help?

Now over to Richard Hawley and his simply beautiful, gentle song ‘For Your Lover, Give Some Time’.  Happy Sunday!

Stuck-in-a-Book’s Weekend Miscellany

It’s the first Weekend Miscellany of 2012, and I hope you’ve got a pen and paper to hand, because there’s all sorts going on…

1.) Firstly – I do love a surprise book through the post!   Christmas was surprisingly low on bookish gifts (my parents and brother tried, bless ’em, but ended up giving me the same book… oops!) so it was a total and unexpected delight to get What There Is To Say We Have Said: The Correspondence of Eudora Welty and William Maxwell.  It came from lovely Heather, who knew that I adored the letters of Maxwell and Sylvia Townsend Warner (well, it’s no secret) and thought I’d love these too.  I always forget that I’ve read a novel by Welty (The Ponder Heart) because I don’t remember anything about it, but it’s definitely time I revisited her – and I’m thrilled to have this collection!  I tend to read books of letters very gradually, so it could be an age before this appears again on SiaB, but it certainly will do at some point.

2.) You won’t have missed my enthused posts about Stop What You’re Doing And Read This – well, the day is drawing ever closer when you can go and get your hands on a copy.  Even better than that, you can attend a launch party!  Mark Haddon (who wrote the best essay in the book) and Michael Rosen, along with people from the wonderful Reading Agency, will be discussing reading on Monday 23rd January, 7pm, at Canada Water Library.  It’s free, but you have to book – which you can do here.  The book also has its own blog, now: here.

3.) Increasingly, I get emails from publishers or authors saying “I don’t know if you have an e-reader, but…”  Well, as you probably know, I don’t.  But I’m happy to be an enabler, and so wanted to mention that Macmillan created Bello, their imprint of e-book reprints.  I’m all for access to neglected gems, even if only electronically, and so I’ll point you in the direction of their website.  They’ve wisely started off with a select few authors – Gerald Durrell, Eva Ibbotson, Frances Durbridge etc. – and, most excitingly to my mind, Vita Sackville-West.  The Heir, one of the titles they’re doing, is one of the loveliest novellas I’ve read, and I heartily recommend that that’s where you start.

4.) If you’ve somehow missed Kim’s Australian Literature Month, you’re already a week behind guys!  See what Kim has to say about it, and have fun.  I’ve hunted through my tbr shelves for an Australian author without luck, so… not sure if I’ll be joining in, but I’ll certainly be cheering from the sidelines.

5.) Don’t forget – Stu’s Henry Green Reading Week is coming up super soon.  You’ve got about a fortnight to get prepared…

6.) There have been so many wonderful reviews around the blogosphere since I last drew your attention to some.  Of course there have, there always are!  But I will send you off to read what Claire had to say about Rose Macaulay’s Crewe Train, what Tanya had to say about E.H. Young’s Miss Mole and E.F. Benson’s Secret Lives, and what Jane had to say about G.E. Stern’s Ten Days of Christmas.  I’ll even point you in the direction of Darlene’s thoughts on my much-beloved The Slaves of Solitude, even though I don’t agree with her.  That’s new year benificence for you.

Frankenstein and The Love Child

I’m very much enjoying your many and varied reading challenges/aspirations for 2012, do keep them coming!

Today I just wanted to share an amusing coincidence that I came across whilst preparing for my thesis.  I’ve just started writing up my latest chapter (I make enormously detailed plans – this chapter had an 18,000 word plan – and then build them into proper paragraphs) and it includes a little bit on Frankenstein.  Quite a few of you will probably be familiar with Mary Shelley’s account of how the inspiration for Frankenstein came to her, courtesy of the 1831 Preface she wrote to her 1817 novel:

When I placed my head on my pillow, I did not sleep, nor could I be said to think. My imagination, unbidden, possessed and guided me, gifting the successive images that arose in my mind with a vividness far beyond the usual bounds of reverie. I saw—with shut eyes, but acute mental vision, —I saw the pale student of unhallowed arts kneeling beside the thing he had put together. […] On the morrow I announced that I had thought of a story. I began that day with the words, It was on a dreary night of November, making only a transcript of the grim terrors of my waking dream.

At first I thought but of a few pages of a short tale; but Shelley urged me to develope [sic] the idea at greater length.
Well, having read that, check out what Edith Olivier wrote about The Love Child in her autobiography Without Knowing Mr. Walkley:

Ten or eleven years ago I woke up in the middle of the night with the idea of a story in my head.  I had not thought of it before that moment, but it struck me as being a very good subject, and I immediately sat up and scribbled away for three or four hours.  I thought at first that it would be finished in one chapter, but when I began to write I found that it was going to be a much bigger thing than that.  Before morning I had finished two chapters of The Love Child – my first book. […]  I was sleeping badly at that time and I wrote practically the whole of that first book during those feverish wakeful hours when the body is weary but the mind seems to let loose to work abnormally quickly.  I have often thought that in wakeful nights one is quite another person to one’s ordinary everyday self.  One ceases to be human and becomes a tangle of the super-human and the sub-human.

Curiously similar, no?

Just thought that might be of interest… well, it beats telling you about all the sheep puns my friend Clare and I made up today.  Actually, that sounds equally interesting, now…

Reading Projects 2012

A Century of Books, and my regular blogging, has hit rather an obstacle – in the form of doorstopper The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver.  I’m not going to be finished any time soon, and a lovely New Year’s Cold is putting paid to late nights. 

So I’m handing over to you to do my job for me today (ta!) – what are your reading projects for 2012? 

They might be group challenges, or tasks you’ve set in stone for yourself, or they might be vaguer hopes for your reading this year.  Perhaps you want to read more non-fiction, or older books, or… well, you fill in the gap!

As for me, alongside/within A Century of Books, I’m hoping to read more literature in translation, and more poetry.  Since I’ve read two or three books of poetry in the past five years, reading more shouldn’t be difficult…

Is there any single book you’re determined to read by the end of 2012?  For me, if I don’t finish Eye of the World by Robert Jordan, lent to me by Colin years ago, I’ll be pretty disappointed… I’m about 600 pages in.  And I started it nearly two years ago.

Book Society Review of Provincial Lady in Wartime

Every now and then I like to share contemporary reviews of much-loved books, and this review of The Provincial Lady in Wartime from a 1940 copy of the Book Society News looked like something you might all enjoy.  I like to make Stuck-in-a-Book have something of a scrap-book feel… and this is a fun way to do it!  Over to Edmund Blunden, and his review:

‘This is one of the occasions where expectation has been busy, and is to be abundantly rewarded.  Is the Provincial Lady as entertaining as ever?  There is no doubt of it.  Whatever else may be said about the past few months on the home front, they have been satisfactorily productive of the kind of conservations [sic] and encounters and minor comedies and tragedies which Ms. Delafield’s humour delights in.  From September onwards her quiet satire plays upon the worthies of village and town, and the experiences which have befallen (it may be) a good many of those who have been endeavouring to give their services to their country in the Emergency.

The Provincial Lady succeeded in the end, but it was a queer time until the official mind decided to make use of her talents; and meanwhile she had been filling her sketch-book with studies of Aunt Blanche, Our Vicar’s Wife, poor Mrs. Winter-Gammon (who claimed to have been, during the last war, a favourite of Lord Kitchener), the Blowfields, the mysterious but incompetent Monsieur Gitnik, and lots besides who will be seen to have flourished at this period.  There they are, doing so in her books, to be our recreation now and the discovery of future readers when the war has receded.  Let us hope to look back in some measure of serenity later on, and remind ourselves through these social pages that such were the themes, the rumours, the people of the second half of 1939; that there was a lighter side.

And, apart from all that the future will want to know about us, let all those who have recoiled from recent interviews with a sense of injustice – vague, burning or blatant – see how the Provincial Lady made them thoroughly enjoyable, and say, content with the artistic revenge, “Here’s my comfort”.  But sometimes a truly doleful note is struck, which may sound really like the horrors of war.  “An attractive pamphlet,” says Lady Blowfield, desirous of directing the literary energies of the Provincial Lady, “on the subject of Root Vegetables might do a lot just now.”

Then there is a Commandant who “lives in description” here so fiercely that some of us may be grateful for past mercies; but presumably the successful conduct of a canteen depends on such displays of energy and dictatorship as the Provincial Lady records with such unheroic candour.  Or does it?  There are signs of instability about this dictatorship by the fifth week of the War, and the Provincial Lady, when last engaged, appears to be winning the war of nerves.  But she finds other people who would be sufficiently difficult to disturb: the old lady, for instance, who arrives at Coxton Hall with a protest.  “She was paying a visit in Scotland when National Registration took place and her host and hostess registered her without her knowledge or permission. This resulted in her being issued with a ration book.  She does not wish for a ration book.  She didn’t ask for one, and won’t have one.”

But, naturally, this is a book of countless touches of the kind, and it is clear that the time we have just been living through was one particularly likely to offer Ms. Delafield the “minor calamaties of life” which she presents so easily and wittily.  I can scarcely think that The Provincial Lady in Wartime will fail of a big welcome even while we move from day to day under the vast gloom and insistent injuries of this war.  We may as well make the best of all the opportunities for cheerfulness and the pleasantly absurd while we can; and so, here is a first-class opportunity.’