The Oakleyites by E.F. Benson

I’m not doing well for A Century of Books choices at the moment, because I keep deciding that I ABSOLUTELY MUST read something written at the wrong time. Recently I was convinced that nothing would suit except for an E.F. Benson, and all the remaining slots of my ACOB list come after he died – so, sorry ACOB, but I turned to 1915’s The Oakleyites. For context, this falls roughly in the middle of Benson’s extraordinarily prolific output, and a few years before he started what would become the Mapp and Lucia series.

There are definitely marks of Lucia et al all over this, particularly in the first half of the novel. Oakley-on-Sea has the same sort of community – dimly aware that the rest of the world exists, but also certain that the only part of the world worth considering is Oakley. People vie for dominant position in society, and a newcomer is treated like the epoch-altering event that it is – especially when the newcomer is a noted (albeit not necessarily respected) novelist, Wilfred Easton.

There are even events in The Oakleyites that are directly repeated in the Mapp and Lucia series – such as an exhibition of paintings in the village hall that are judged by the community. A brief mention of a guru shows that Benson had such things on his mind. I don’t recall a replica of the three daughters squabbling over what they’ll receive as inheritance when their father dies (even while one of them, a Christian Scientist, maintains that he is not ill and could not be) – but it’s all of a piece. And it’s all great. Benson has such an eye for politely feuding communities. And that seeps in the narrative, as well as the dialogue – as a vegetarian, I self-deprecatingly laughed at the following:

Mrs Andrews had a sharp nippy way of movement and speech, and the brightness of eye which is noticeable in vegetarians and is attributed by them to their perfect health and entire absence of toxic ferments in the blood, might apart from that be supposed to have a sort of hungry look about it, which no amount of cauliflowers wholly dimmed.

Our focal point is Dorothy, who is nobler and less ambitious than other Oakleyites. No Lucia she. She is a bit subtle in her interest at Easton’s arrival, but not deceptive – and furiously embarrassed that she once read a paper about how unworthy his novels were to be feted. If Oakley has a moral compass, it is Dorothy.

It is also Dorothy who takes us into a different world within Benson’s oeuvre. For she is a spinster (of all of 35) and wishes that her life had not turned out quite as it has – and starts to wonder if Easton might make her a suitable husband. In Dorothy’s storyline, Benson gets rather more serious and earnest than one might expect. Increasingly so, as Dorothy’s sister Daisy arrives – selfish and dramatic, and not necessarily in an amusing way.

Benson was not a novice novelist at this point, but I did find that The Oakleyites wasn’t a universal success. It’s a curate’s egg. But too many scenes – whether comic or not – lingered too long, so it felt a bit odd to move between them. And the mix of sombre and comic tones didn’t quite work, for me. They remained too separate, as though they belonged in different novels.

I still enjoyed reading it, and it’s always interesting to see a novelist do something a bit different – but I wouldn’t recommend you seek it out over Benson’s zillions of other novels, and I doubt I’ll re-read. But, still – a mediocre Benson is better than no Benson at all.

7 thoughts on “The Oakleyites by E.F. Benson

  • October 5, 2018 at 5:11 pm
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    Even with your reservations this sounds wonderfully entertaining. I really haven’t read enough E F Benson and I have not even (you may need to sit down Simon) not yet finished all the Mapp and Lucia books which I came to very late anyway. I’ve had them on my kindle, probably since I first got a kindle.

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  • October 5, 2018 at 11:13 pm
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    I would like to read some E.F. Benson novel’s. By the way, I hadn’t heard “curate’s egg” expression before and don’t know what it means.

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  • October 5, 2018 at 11:15 pm
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    Oops, in my comment that should be “novels”, I find it annoying when possessive ‘ are misused. Just a typo on my part.

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  • October 6, 2018 at 7:37 am
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    I’ve also read this, and agree about the rather awkward changes in tone. I did enjoy it, though, and seeing a first draft of Tilling was interesting.

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  • October 11, 2018 at 2:57 am
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    What are your favourite EF Benson novels? I’ve loved the ones I’ve read: the Mapp and Lucia ones and the shorts with ‘the female author/impresonator’ (who appeared in M&L) in and one set in a guest house that was described as similar. Sorry to be vague but I’m on holday and don’t have my list of books read with me.

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    • October 12, 2018 at 1:36 pm
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      I’ve only read a handful of his non-M&L books, but I really liked Secret Lives and Daisy’s Aunt. Basically, anything a bit more flippant and snarky by him seems to be up my street!

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