Sunday 19 March 2023

The Paying Guests – Sarah Waters

March 2, Coeur de Lion

 The Paying Guests Sarah Waters. 020323

 As there was such a wide range of comments about this novel, the following is simply an (almost ) verbatim smattering of readers’ experience - and, after all, the writer having done her work it’s the reader who passes judgement.

A Marmite novel: 

•   …got so fed up with the 'Chick lit' story line….childish tosh……sounds like Enid Blyton….the characters were two-dimensional and … the book was very boring.

•   …experienced mixed feelings, ended up not liking very much… about twice as long as necessary …despite Sarah Waters’ undoubted literary talents and rigorous research into the period …  finding it in parts exploitative and unnecessarily sensationalist.

•   … long …maybe a bit too easy to read, and too simplistic……a good but not brilliant read

•   A long book…I struggled with at first….the first half oppressive, pernickety and debilitating. I had to stop reading it for a while as found it so stultifying.  But the sheer quality of the writing won me back  

•   …struck the right notes

•   …thought it was very good…. excellent descriptions

•   Enjoyable…some excellent writing, good storyline and well defined characters….probably a little over long.

•   … enjoyed this book a lot…. well-written, with well-drawn characters, both major and minor.

The period setting (1922)

•   They live in a rapidly decaying relatively large house in a well-established, comfortable middle-class road, Champion Hill, in South London.

•   Set against the social and economic aftermath of WW1 from a woman’s perspective…with themes of class and gender

•   liked the period detail and what life must have been like in the aftermath of the First World War. It also underlined how elderly people were! – Frances’s mother “ now, at fifty-five, she had the white head of an old lady” and was “simply tired and elderly”! 

•   The details are all there - the casual smoking, scalding the milk to keep it from souring, the class divide personified by the Barbers extended family.

•   … post-war South London suburbia with all its pettiness, little routines and memories was powerful and authentic but incredibly debilitating…. This rather gloomy world was not helped by descriptions of thwarted love and limited options for anyone outside the norm..

•   the contrast between the old middle class and the new so-called clerk class with a more energetic approach and a different set of values….highlights the class differences that were beginning to change after the First World War, the way in which working class suspects of crimes work given less protection and legal defence than those who are better off and the challenge of living as a gay person in a very traditional society.

•   One of the striking things was how important and ever-present ‘class’ was, and the ubiquity of people of that class having servants

•   There were a lot of details which I especially enjoyed.  The early parts, where the paying guests arrived and the impact their presence had on the house, was incredibly reminiscent of my own childhood.

•   … the references to old houses….the outside loos… and geysers, I remember them my grandmothers’ houses

•   …the settings were beautifully described in the slightly dilapidated house that mother and daughter had left from the father who had not looked after their money well,

The protagonists:

•   “She was all warm colour and curve. How well she filled her own skin! She might have been poured generously into it, like treacle.”

•   There was lots of internal thinking from Francis which enriches the book and gives a much deeper appreciation of what she was living through. Some would say maybe there was a bit too much of this.

•   …while the character of Lil was painted clearly and brightly, I found it harder to visualise Frances - all the description she shared of herself was down-beat, dowdy and put-upon by constant household chores. It was difficult to imagine what it was that drew Lil to Frances, other than the need for more interesting company than Len could provide.

•   …not sure about Frances – I increasingly came to worry about her as the central voice in the narrative.  She was an unreliable narrator. She was different and maybe difficult , as her mother said “what a fight you’ve made of everything” – she was never at ease with herself or her life.

•   No likeable men - apart from some of the dead ones. Len particularly conveniently unpleasant.

•   One thing that struck me was how young both two female protagonists were with a 26 year old already being described as a spinster. The mother who simply would not have been that old in modern terms comes across as someone with a very limited life and not in the best of health. This shows how much we have changed in terms of the life experience of people both in their 20s and in their 50s.

The love story:

•   …the love affair was delicately and rather beautifully described, and made very real to me. 

•   …some lovely descriptions of the burgeoning attraction between Frances and Lillian and the consummation in a sexual relationship.

•   The whole dancing at the party and what happened afterwards was very erotic and well done ….the long build-up to the kiss

•   The sexual tension was beautifully captured and the sex scenes were graphic but not at all gross

•   The love affair was so short lived before it was shattered. It needed to celebrated as a “glorious, a gift, to be enjoyed as long as it lasted” . But in reality, over the summer, it became “ever more tearing, ever more consuming, ever more frustrating

The Tragic Events:

•   And then it all went horribly wrong and for a while I was drawn in to reading about the appalling attempts to abort the child, the murder and the effort to cover it up. 

•   One of the most interesting things … linking this book to Russian Literature…..Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment …. where undertaking the crime is not that difficult, but where the guilt then starts to make the murderer feel more and more impelled to volunteer their own guilt

•   …my primary unease with the book, or the second half at least, was that, despite the ‘excuses’ presented in the book (self-defence, unbearable provocation, etc), Frances and Lil either committed or were inextricably involved in a murder, and they spent a substantial part of the book trying to get away with it. I felt that, back in 1922, a woman of Frances’ upbringing and background would have had a very strong moral code, which would have made it much more difficult justify her actions

•   As I reflect back on this book, I am uncertain what it was really about: was it a moral story about how a murderer gets away with murder: or a historical novel exploring the social mores of the 1920s; or is it a cautionary story of the consequences of adultery; or was it just the story of a failing love affair.  Maybe all of these…

Scores:

WM 8.5 , SC 5, JH 6.25, MW 6, MT 7, AA 7 (prov), RV 8.75, CB 8.25 , CW 4
Avge: 6.75



Sunday 5 February 2023

Small Things Like These – Claire Keegan

JH – Comments & score 8

A short spare novel in which each word seems to count – beautifully written, succinct, concise and powerful. Much to digest and wanting to be reread to capture the detail and nuances.

It is the story of Bill Furlong and his family living in the Irish town of New Ross. It starts in late autumn when it is cold and damp - “people unhappily endured the weather”. It was mid-1980s – a time of economic pressures with many “badly off” – such as Mick Sinnott “on the road again foraging for sticks” – who was “stotious at the phone box”. The story takes us up to Christmas and the challenge of whether Bill should help a young girl, Sarah, locked in the coal house of a convent and who just wants to drown herself. There is a sub-plot around his search for his father which comes to a head when he realises, he may well have been hiding in plain sight: Ned the farmhand, now ill in hospital.

Bill Furlong is a coal & timber merchant who has a head for business, “was known for getting along” – he had “developed good protestant habits”. He is married to Eileen with five daughters. Though Bill is successful, he doesn’t “feel himself to be getting anywhere or making any kind of headway”. He delivers coal to the local convent, which he sees as “a powerful looking place”, which among other things runs a laundry and a training school for girls “of low character” – a place about which people said lots of thing a good half of which could not be believed”.

Many convents across Ireland ran such Magdalene laundries, and their infamous reputation and the role of nuns who ran them is seared into the Irish psyche. Why did such women cause so much suffering to other women in the name of charity is unfathomable. Though it is worth remembering that these Magdalene houses were not just an Irish issue. Originally a mediaeval creation Magdalene Asylums were houses of refuge or reformatories for ‘fallen women’. They had existed for centuries as refuges for women but in mid-eighteenth century the British Isles witnessed a new wave of them. The first one opened in London in 1758 as the London Magdalene Hospital. One was established in Bath in 1805 which could house nearly 80 women. Historians estimate that by the late 1800s there were more than 300 Magdalen Institutions in England alone. They were also established across the US, Canada, Sweden and Australia.

Bill is delivering coal to the convent a few days before Christmas when he finds a girl, Sarah, locked in the coal shed who pleads with him to take him to the river so she could drown herself. He could/should have ignored her “the ordinary part of him simply wanted to be rid of this and get home”, but he took her to the front door of convent and had to deal with the Mother Superior “you’ll come in – I’ll not hear it otherwise”. When he returns home that evening his wife, who is tough and realistic, tells him it was “nothing to do with them”. She tells him not to alienate the nuns when they always paid what was owing – “if you want to get on in life, there’s things you have to ignore so you can keep on”. New Ross is a small town and news travels fast. Mrs Kehoe, who runs the cafĂ© where Bill and his workers have lunch, warns him to watch what he says about the nuns as best to “keep the enemy close, the bad dog with you and the good dog will not bite”.

Despite all this on Christmas Eve Bill goes back to the Convent and finds Sarah locked again in the coal shed. She walks home with Sarah back across town. Bill knows he will face much hassle and criticism, but he keeps walking on. The book concludes with an incredibly evocative commentary on Bill and his own emotions. He understands the enormity of what he was doing but asks himself “was there any point in being alive without helping one another”, and how he needs to be “brave enough to go against what was there”. He believes he is doing the right thing but also understands that there will be hell to pay for this small act of kindness, and that “the worst was yet to come… he could feel a world of trouble waiting for him behind the next door, but the worst that could have happened was also behind him: the thing not done, which could have been – which he would have had to live with for the rest of his life. Whatever suffering he was now to meet was a long way from what the girl at his side had already endured”….. “his fear outweighed every other feeling but in his foolish heart he hoped and believed that they would manage”.

WM – Comments & score 10

This deserves to be in the category of ‘a great book’. It fulfils the criteria of being beautifully descriptive of both the physical setting and social milieu, in as few words as necessary. The author has created a great sense of place, and well describes Bill’s dilemmas, uncertainties and fantasies. WM saw this as a brave book; it raises large issues of morality and humanity. It also challenges the reader with questions as to what would be their own behaviour in such circumstances. He couldn’t fault it and so on reflection upped his score to a well-deserved 10.

MT – Comments & score 7.8

I really liked this short book. He found it easy to read, well written, and in fact I read it twice. The second time around and picked up many things I had missed, and very much looking at the Ned connection, now knew he was the possible father.

I really liked Bill, and his longing to find his father, and his desire to give something back because of his mother’s good fortune with the Wilsons. His good thoughts and deeds contrast very well with the awfulness of the corruption and hypocritical nature of the church. The poverty and cruelty of the time and church was so well set out, as was the plight and place of women in their society. It was awful that they were totally to blame for pregnancy, never the men.

Bill’s family life and his daughters was well portrayed, as was the totally different outlook of Bill from his wife Eileen and maybe falling apart of his marriage. She was quite nasty in the end, and her using his mother’s hardside as a stone was hard and well described, as were her nasty racist comments and Bill’s involvement with the docks and foreigners.

The book is very reflective of the church and Bill’s Christian status, particularly the bit about the sermon on the stations of the cross, and him seeing all the awful things at the convent. Bill sees his Christian faith as in a mirror and how he must help the stray girls, Sarah in particular. The book ends of course with him taking the girl home, and what may happen. But he is hopeful - aware of Eileen’s comments about possibly inviting a boy for Christmas lunch, and she said, no problem it will just be another body on the table.

The author well captures Bill’s reflections about the drudgery of work and life. It made it sound so awful, work in the dark, back in the dark, quick supper, bed and repeat. I was grateful that my work was not like that, even when at times it felt to be on repeat all the time. I was very struck about the bit about sliding doors and how Bill could have another life, for example, when he meets the beautiful long haired woman one morning. What might have been… we all have been there.

AA - Comments & score 8.5

This is a novella – it is only the author’s fourth book in twenty years. I felt it had a terrific start – the setting of the place and its people in the opening paragraph. The writes with lyrical evocative prose. Story moves along seamlessly, beautifully crafted “he let out a breath he hadn’t realised he’d been holding”.

I liked the trees, the river, the crows and the doorways that Furlong was always passing through “Furlong stepped back – as though the step could take him back into the time before this”. He also liked the choice of Furlong, as the main protagonist – a man, a father of daughters, whose own mother had been spared the laundry by Mrs Wilson, but who had died young apparently after a fall in the yard, and who had fallen pregnant apparently to Ned, the farmhand of the woman who took in her and her baby – Bill Furlong.

The story is set against a backdrop of poverty and unemployment in 1985: “early one morning, Furlong had seen a young schoolboy drinking the milk out of the cat’s bowl behind the priest’s house”. It highlights the role of the Magdalen laundries were a crime against women who were already victims – of the system, of the Church, of men, of other women, and directly responsible for the deaths of tens of thousands of children. Tens of thousands of women and girls were incarcerated - until 1996. How the systems of power and organisation are accepted and taken for granted such as the Church, and not questioned. How people’s lives were easier if they just kept their heads down and got on quietly – as in most societies, oppressive or not: For example even Eileen, Furlong’s wife was loath to let her sympathies lie with the girls who got pregnant.

But perhaps it’s mostly the story of Furlong and his quest to show to someone the kindness Mrs Wilson had shown to him – which led him to realise that he mattered as much as any other child. Keegan goes further stating in a later interview that Bill may be having a mid-life crisis and having been loved in his youth wants to offer the same type of love to someone else. She has also said that Furlong is ‘a Christian who cannot practise his Christianity in Ireland’ – “He thought of Mrs Wilson, of her daily kindnesses, of how she had corrected and encouraged him, of the small things she had said and done and had refused to do and say and what she must have known, the things which, when added up, amounted to a life”.

This is a powerful short, but not small, book about power and institutions, kindness and courage, complicity and silence.

CW – Comments & score 8.75

I really enjoyed this book so much so that I finished it in one sitting. I loved the prose and easy style of the narration. Everything was very simply described and yet I felt completely absorbed by the atmosphere of this sleepy town just before Christmas and the day-to-day life of the local coal merchant and his family who are managing to prosper when others in the town are feeling the pinch.

Although the storyline about unwed pregnant mothers and their treatment in Irish convents is one which is well known about the fact that this was still going on in 1985 is all the more shocking. I liked the simplicity of the book and the main character who is presented with a decision which many others in his town have decided to turn a blind eye to. One wonders why it took so long for this abuse to be fully exposed and how much is still going on in one form or other not only in the Catholic Church but every other religious setting.

The book carried a simple message about whether one can go through life doing that which one considers is right and helping others generally or whether there is that extra commitment that one can make which will take you outside your comfort zone and potentially put you at risk. As they carried on along and met more people Furlong did and did not know, he found himself asking was there any point in being alive without helping one another? Was it possible to carry on along through all the years, for decades, through an entire life without once been brave enough to go against what was there and yet call yourself a Christian, and face yourself in the mirror?

A really good book

MW – Comments & score 8.00

A short but quite brilliant little story with a devastating subject matter that Ireland would prefer to look away from. It is easy for us in Great Britain to show wide eyed astonishment and disapproval of the Magdalen laundries and the Mother and Baby homes which seem like something out of the Middle Ages, but, incredibly, existed into the 1990s. However we all have our own skeletons in the closet and I am not sure that we can afford to be too complacent. He who casts the first stone…

For me, the complicity of both church and state is the most damming thing, and the way in which the power wielded by these two institutions was enough to make people look the other way. The fictional Christmas story that the author weaves around one such institution is written with such understated skill and subtlety, leaving much to the imagination and is all the more powerful for this. The ‘advice’ given to Bill to not rock the boat, and the general community peer pressure rings horribly true. Hard to see Bill’s life being particularly easy after freeing Sarah. Part 2 of the story would be very interesting indeed! In the end, it’s more of a symbolic gesture, the reality is more disconcerting but don’t get me started on that one.

RV – Comments & score 8.75

There was a lot to like: I very much liked the main character, Furlong; and the lovely, light but lyrical prose: “It was a December of crows. People had never seen the likes of them, gathering in black batches on the outskirts of town then coming in, walking the streets, cocking their heads and perching, impudently, on whatever lookout post that took their fancy, scavenging for what was dead, or diving in mischief for anything that looked edible along the roads before roosting at night in the huge old trees around the convent.”

I had a sense of foreboding throughout a lot of the book, in part because so much in the book and the characters was so lovely: I started to become quite tense, hoping that it all would continue, but tense, waiting for some disaster to befall them. Most books don’t simply tell you about real families, going about their daily lives, relating to each other – they set that up so that a disaster can occur! So I was half expecting one of the children to have a terrible accident – some external event that would de-rail their lives. I did not actually expect that the event would be something that HE did.

I felt that there were a number of important themes. One was people’s need to know where they came from – something most of us don’t feel very strongly because we KNOW the answer and hence take that for granted. But many people, either adopted or with no knowledge about one of their parents, have this keen desire, almost need, to know their roots, where they came from:

“Before going back into the house, he’d washed his face at the horse-trough, breaking the ice on the surface, pushing his hands down deep in the cold and keeping them there, to divert his pain, until he could no longer feel it. Where was his father now? Sometimes, he caught himself looking at older men, trying to find a physical resemblance, or listening out for some clue in the things people said.”

In my work as an expert witness for the family courts, I was often in the position of discussing adoption for children whose parents’ problems were such that it was not in the children’s best interests to live with those parents. But I was also keenly aware of this ‘need to know‘ about one’s roots, so I usually fought for an ‘open adoption’ where there would still be contact with these kids families; and usually the courts and the social services did not understand this, and they fought for closed adoptions, fearing it would cause more conflict and confusion for the children.

Another and certainly one of the most important themes was “What was it all for”? The fundamental question of life, I suppose, and one that is of central importance for Furlong, our protagonist. Related to that is the question that (I am sure) many of us have reflected on – what would we do in such difficult circumstance. We know that it is right to speak out; but what if the consequences of that are ruinous in some way.

Do you intervene in the attack that is happening before your eyes in the street, and risk being killed or at least badly hurt? Or do you stand back and let someone else be killed or maimed?

Do you intervene with these so-called nuns, and risk you own family and your entire livelihood, or not?

As he says: “He stood back then and faced her. ‘Surely they’ve only as much power as we give them, Mrs Kehoe?’ ‘I wouldn’t be too sure.’ She paused then and looked at him the way hugely practical women sometimes looked at men, as though they weren’t men at all but foolish boys. More than once, maybe more than several times, Eileen had done the same. ‘Don’t mind me,’ she said, ‘but you’ve worked hard, the same as myself, to get to where you are now. You’ve reared a fine family of girls – and you know there’s nothing only a wall separating that place from St Margaret’s.’ Furlong took no offence, softened. ‘I do know, Mrs Kehoe.’ ‘Can’t I count on one hand the number of girls from around here that ever got on well who didn’t walk those halls,’ she said, splaying her palm. ‘I’m sure that’s fact.’ ‘They belong to different orders,’ she went on, ‘but believe you me, they’re all the one . You can’t side against one without damaging your chances with the other.’”

This is the key moral point in the book, and is reflected in so many of the decisions we take, even in our protected society – it was a key issue in WW2 across Europe – stand up and be killed, or acquiesce, and let evil happen. The well-known adage: “The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing” or, as John Stuart Mill stated in 1867, “Let not any one pacify his conscience by the delusion that he can do no harm if he takes no part, and forms no opinion. Bad men need nothing more to compass their ends, than that good men should look on and do nothing. He is not a good man who, without a protest, allows wrong to be committed in his name, and with the means which he helps to supply, because he will not trouble himself to use his mind on the subject.”

The ending (and THAT it ended so quickly) was surprising (the book could have gone on for a lot longer, and she could have written much more about the consequences of his decisions) but it was also a great way to finish – he knew that his decisions would have as yet unforeseen but certainly very bad consequences, but as he says “the worst that could have happened was also already behind him; the thing not done, which could have been – which he would have had to live with for the rest of his life”. 

SC – Comments & score 9.5

A short yet very powerful book. to begin with, deceptively inconsequential - the proverbial iron fist in a velvet glove. For several reasons this resonated strongly with me. But first, I loved the stripped-down elegance of the prose - what an opening paragraph! ‘In October there were yellow trees. Then the clocks went back the hour and the long November winds came in and blew, and stripped the trees bare. In the town of New Ross, chimneys threw out smoke which fell away and drifted off in hairy, drawn-out strings before dispersing along the quays, and soon the River Barrow, dark as stout, swelled up with rain.’

About 45 years ago (maybe a few years before the events of the book), I was hitch hiking back from the west coast of Ireland with a girlfriend, heading for Rosslare and the ferry home. Unlike me, my girlfriend was a seasoned hitcher, but, as she frequently reminded me, it’s much harder with two and what I should really be doing is hiding behind a tree while she batted her eyelids at the passing traffic. For whatever reason, it was taking us days to get along the south coast and on night two we ended up camping in a sloping field just outside New Ross. As dusk fell we walked into the town in search of food and a couple of pints. The early September evening had an autumnal chill. Peat smoke drifted across the hazy streets exactly like Keegan’s ‘hairy drawn-out strings’ and the street lighting was dim and sporadic. Cutting back from the main street at the quayside, I was startled to find that not only did the street lighting give out almost as soon as you left the main drag, but the side roads weren’t surfaced. Just gravel, rutted and puddled. Visiting Ireland in those days often carried a sense of travelling back maybe thirty or forty years, but this was like stepping back a century.

So it felt particularly appropriate to me that this story covering a small but hugely significant stage in Ireland’s journey to greater self-awareness should be set here. New Ross always felt like a place out of time. I didn’t know anything about the convent, although it was certainly there. The Albatros fertiliser factory mentioned in the book was a huge and slightly scary presence for decades after it closed: demolition was problematic because of the extensive asbestos sheet cladding.

I think Keegan set the book up very skilfully. Furlong is a likeable, hard-working man with some intelligence but little self-confidence, despite running a moderately successful small business. A coal-merchant probably wouldn’t be the first candidate for expressing self-doubt and questioning what he sees around him - so Keegan makes him an orphan, with a background that only becomes clearer as we go through the book.

So many little touches that resonate: ‘The chipper’ - the chip shop, ubiquitous terminology throughout Ireland. ‘Joan, who had gone on ahead, was handing out carol sheets with other members of the choir, while the nuns walked around, supervising and talking to some of the more well-off parents.’ - Nuns directing their efforts where it was least needed but counted most to them.

Furlong’s self-doubt was thoroughly believable (despite reminding me rather distractingly of Raymond Briggs’ ‘Fungus the Bogeyman’, who had a similarly tedious, dirty job that he hated and constantly questioned his motives): ‘I’m not sure what I mean, Eileen.’ Furlong sighed. ‘I’m just a bit weary tonight, is all. Pay no heed.’ What was it all for? Furlong wondered. The work and the constant worry. Getting up in the dark and going to the yard, making the deliveries, one after another, the whole day long, then coming home in the dark and trying to wash the black off himself and sitting into a dinner at the table and falling asleep before waking in the dark to meet a version of the same thing, yet again. Might things never change or develop into something else, or new?’

And then the story develops around the children kept by the nuns - the kids’ people never see, who don’t get to come to the carol service and who it turns out don’t even have shoes on their feet. But despite his shock and sense of wrong, he finds himself playing the nuns’ game, falling into the accepted social patterns of the community and of the times, stopping for his breakfast, allowing himself to be pandered to as the nuns realise he has perhaps seen too much - and he was angry with himself that he did nothing about it at the time: ‘What most tormented him was not so much how she’d been left in the coal shed or the stance of the Mother Superior; the worst was how the girl had been handled while he was present and how he’d allowed that and had not asked about her baby – the one thing she had asked him to do – and how he had taken the money and left her there at the table with nothing before her and the breast milk leaking under the little cardigan and staining her blouse, and how he’d gone on, like a hypocrite, to Mass.’

Furlong achieves a kind of rebirth - perhaps indeed a mid-life crisis -,when he walks home with Sarah, and as he goes he knows he’ll get all the flak he’d expect from Eileen: ‘The fact was that he would pay for it but never once in his whole and unremarkable life had he known a happiness akin to this, not even when his infant girls were first placed in his arms and he had heard their healthy, obstinate cries.’

While in 2023 the RC church still dominates much of rural Ireland, among the younger generations at least there is far less blind faith. And to be fair, for many souls they still play a very important part in country life. Without the church, there would be a lot of lonely people. But the way individuals (mostly nuns) are still fighting the nuns’ corner, arguing ‘what else were they supposed to do’ shows how far they still have to go. Passing New Ross as I do several times a year, I still recall my hitchhiking stopover - a small town of dark and smoky back streets and muddy roadways. It seems entirely fitting to learn, even belatedly, that it concealed more sinister stories and one wonders how many other of the huge seminary buildings that one passes as you drive through Ireland had equally appalling histories. The last 'Magdalen Laundry' closed in 1996. 

For me, a quite brilliant short book.

CB – Comments & score 8.00

This is a charming novella, despite its dark story line. It is winter in the 1985, when “the people, for the most part, unhappily endured the weather”. Bill Furlong is doing a roaring trade in coal and timber, the coal imported by the Polish and Russian boatmen, “a novelty going about town in their fur caps and long, buttoned coats, with hardly a word of English.”

He is the lucky one as his mother, falling pregnant is looked after by her protestant employer who also takes the young Furlong under her wing. Unlike, the girls, separated from their babies and made to work in the convent laundry up the hill. “Now, [an orphan since 12] he lived in the town with his wife, Eileen, and their five daughters. He’d met Eileen while she was working in the office of Graves & Co. and had courted her in the usual ways, taking her to the cinema and for long walks along the towpath in the evenings. He was attracted to her shiny black hair and slate eyes, her practical, agile mind.”

Writing: This is a delight to read as it flows so easily with its descriptions of the town, the weather, the people, the leading characters and Bill’s thoughts. Always satisfying when ordinary lives are described so (apparently) effortlessly to be interesting “..chimneys threw out smoke which fell away and drifted off in hairy, drawn-out strings before dispersing along the quays, and soon the River Barrow, dark as stout, swelled up with rain”.

Characters: Like Eileen, Bill too has an agile mind which makes him a thinker and questioner as well as a doer. And he is a sensitive soul: “But it cut him, all the same, to see one of his own so upset by the sight of what other children craved and he could not help but wonder if she’d be brave enough or able for what the world had in store.” And this all led to some tensions: “But some part of his mind was often tense; he could not say why.” But he keeps on keeping on: “The times were raw but Furlong felt all the more determined to carry on, to keep his head down and stay on the right side of people, and to keep providing for his girls”

And concludes that living in the now with occasional poignant memories is better than worrying too much about the future: “Before long, he caught a hold of himself and concluded that nothing ever did happen again; to each was given days and chances which wouldn’t come back around. And wasn’t it sweet to be where you were and let it remind you of the past for once, despite the upset, instead of always looking on into the mechanics of the days and the trouble ahead, which might never come.” Yet he comes back to reflection: “Always it was the same, Furlong thought; always they carried mechanically on without pause, to the next job at hand. What would life be like, he wondered, if they were given time to think and reflect over things? Might their lives be different or much the same – or would they just lose the run of themselves?”

The other characters, Eileen, his daughters, his mother, Mrs Wilson, Ned are rather lightly drawn. The book is definitely about Bill and his response to the world around him and the plight of the girls at the convent.

Social setting: The setting of a struggling economy is well drawn (e.g. the boy drinking the cat’s milk behind the convent), albeit without comment except to keep on going. Eileen also expresses the view of many about how to respond to the goings on at the convent: “‘Where does thinking get us?’ she said. ‘All thinking does is bring you down.’ She was touching the little pearly buttons on her nightdress, agitated. ‘If you want to get on in life, there’s things you have to ignore, so you can keep on.’” It is Bill’s conscience rather than a political awareness that drives him to act: “As they carried on along and met more people Furlong did and did not know, he found himself asking was there any point in being alive without helping one another? Was it possible to carry on along through all the years, the decades, through an entire life, without once being brave enough to go against what was there and yet call yourself a Christian, and face yourself in the mirror?”

Not sure why Keegan chose a man as the leading character in a novel about women’s suffering? Will his “small thing” be the thing that opens up the cruel treatment and murder of women and babies by the church?

Lovely conclusion to the novel which sums up the message and meaning of the novel: “The worst was yet to come, he knew. Already he could feel a world of trouble waiting for him behind the next door, but the worst that could have happened was also already behind him; the thing not done, which could have been – which he would have had to live with for the rest of his life. Whatever suffering he was now to meet was a long way from what the girl at his side had already endured and might yet surpass. Climbing the street towards his own front door with the barefooted girl and the box of shoes, his fear more than outweighed every other feeling but in his foolish heart he not only hoped but legitimately believed that they would manage.”

Thursday 12 January 2023

Something to Answer For – P.H.Newby

Meeting 12/01/2023

For the first BBBC meeting of 2023 the book chosen was Something to Answer For by PH Newby, an author new to all of the book club members. The main reason for choosing this book was curiosity as it was the winner of the inaugural Booker Prize in 1969. The events of the book take place in Port Said around the time of the Suez Crisis in 1956. The author served in the Middle East with the British Army during the Second World War, but was released in 1942 and taught English Literature at King Fouad University in Cairo until 1946.From 1946 to 1978 he was employed by the BBC, going on to become Managing Director of BBC Radio.

A nice summary of the plot of this book was kindly provided by CB, whose selection this was:

The main character, Jack Townrow who tells the story is a likable rogue, looking for love and an angle to gain by and yet still wanting to do what is right by his friends (and enemies). He lives on the edge, often injured, tired, ill and in something of a dreamworld and yet ready to act decisively when needed. The other key characters include the attorney’s married daughter, Leah, the apparent “client” Mrs Khoury whose husband’s death leads to Townrow’s arrival in Port Said, Christos the fun bartender and gun runner and the fatalistic policemen, Amin. Everything happens though Townrow’s interaction with them.

Townrow gets a call from Mrs Khoury to come and help her discover who has killed her husband whom Townrow knew when he was a soldier in Egypt. Before he even gets to her house, he is beaten up, by persons unknown. This sets the tone for the book where Townrow is always in something of a state and yet carries on pursuing his own interests and gradually getting clearer about what might have happened to Mr Khoury.  It is bound up with running guns to Cyprus to support the Greek Cypriots, but in the end Townrow seems to believe that Mr Khoury died of natural causes maybe brought on by stress.  In between we have a romantic rough and tumble of a relationship with the married Leah, whose husband is in a mental hospital in the US, an interlude where Townrow escapes out onto the solitude of the lake, Townrow’s arrest and interrogation by Amin and the final chapters where the British are, much to Townrow’s disbelief and disgust invading Port Said.

Introducing the book Mark W added a brief bit of background on the Suez crisis, which he, and some of the book club, had heard about but knew very little of the detail.
The meeting itself was attended in person by seven of the nine members, although one (CB), came towards the end. In summary, the book was liked by two and disliked by seven, of which three didn’t finish it. Most found it to be a difficult and challenging book, even those who enjoyed it.

CB found it a rumbustious book, full of unexpected twists and turns with a mix of fantasy and fact, sliding morals and all based in a real time leading up to and including the Suez landings. It was fun and engaging to read. The plot seemed secondary to the development of the characters, except to stress them to the limit to see what they do, think and react. An incredibly rich mix of action novel, stream of consciousness and mix of realities (what is real e.g. when he loses Leah at the sailing club). Some nice reflections on life and relationships. Newby knows Egypt and paints a rich background of sounds, smells, sights and human behaviours as well as well -described interiors (the key characters’ homes, a prison cell, the changing rooms in the club). Some ideas: Things aren’t always what they seem, life is confusing and unexpected, morality ebbs and flows in individuals and in societies. Is Townrow just on the make or is he trying to help? Love is consuming and again ebbs and flows with people being kind and soft and then cold and aggressive The British invasion was wrong in principle and in practice.

MW found it an interesting, challenging, disconcerting novel, with an existential feel to it, not one that allowed him to ever feel comfortable and left him constantly questioning what he was reading.  An almost Kafkaesque journey, in which one is never entirely sure what is reality and what is fantasy. The ‘disappearance’ of Leah at the Sailing Club was one of the more obvious examples.

Interesting characters, all seen though Townrow’s perspective, including the very weird Faint, with his ‘oddly prominent eyes’ apparently mistaking Townrow for someone called Ferris from which it was never really clear whether he really had been in Cornwall or in a bar in Le Havre. There was an allegorical element of Townrow trying to establish his role and place in an unfriendly world, much like Great Britain trying to find its place in the world post war and post empire. The ignominious withdrawal of troops from Egypt after the invasion effectively ended Great Britain’s role asone of the world’s great powers. In fact Townrow was very defensive any criticism of Great Britain’s behaviour, notably  when challenged on the way to Egypt at the beginning of the book by a Greek and an Israeli about the government’s behaviour regarding the failure to warn the Jews about the death trains in World War 2.

There were a number of touches of dry humour (often politically incorrect) e.g. describing Faint:
'He might have been Armenian, because all Armenians had bulging eyes. Yet again, it might be a sign that the man was good at languages’. 

JH found the book  hard work – he struggled with it. At best you could call it surreal fantasy with the main character, Townrow, an unreliable narrator; or maybe it was just an allegorical stream of consciousness built around the fag-end of empire? Aat worst it was just a muddle of a book marked by a rather dense, convoluted style (which the publishers, Faber, called “beautifully intricate”…. tad OTT me thinks). It was built on a rather odd and unappealing cast of characters lead by Townrow (a conman/dodgy dealer who had been in the business of defrauding the Lydney disaster fund he ran) – cynical and unattractive. His dark side was well captured in the description of his rather sordid attempt to get into Leah’s bed and her attempts to get him off her (was it rape or what he described as “trying to make love to a dough-mixing machine”). This rather grotesque assault only ended with his discovery of bed bugs – two huge ones and a crowd of little ones. The character who seemed to shine out was the bar owner, gun runner Christou – helped by a wonderful vignette of him dressed as a woman sailing to Elie’s island. He also liked the description of the expat pilots sitting in the yacht club drinking themselves silly in the expectation of the failure of the Egyptians to run the canal convoys successfully – it had a real ring of truth to it. For John the most interesting aspect of this novel was, yet again, the way it shed a light on the fraught topic of what makes a great book. How come this odd muddle of a book won the first Booker Prize? Why did the judges pick this book? What did they get out of it? How come it stood out from all the others published in 1968? In fact, 1968 wasn’t that bad a year for new books – everything from le Carre’s Little Town in Germany, Barry Hines’ Kes, Quentin Crisp’s Naked Civil Servant to Solzhenitsyn’s Cancer Ward or even Arthur Hailey’s Airport…… How come this book, which seems to have sunk without trace, won this prestigious prize?????

SC found it an odd and puzzling book that was deceptively easy to start but harder and harder to finish. From the point at which Townrow is hit over the head it becomes increasingly dream-like, so that it’s hard to tell what’s really happening, and to follow the multiple time frames and narrative layers that Newby indulges in. Gradually as the book progresses, some of the strands start to come back together as Townrow  perhaps starts to re-invent himself, but by that time Steve had  lost any real interest he had at the start in Townrow’s future wellbeing. For Steve what  was most interesting about this book was  its historical perspective, both in respect of the Suez crisis, given that it happened in his  lifetime (just!) – and also culturally in respect of the era in which it was published. In 1968, the arts were in the grip of the 60‘s post-war ‘release’: psychedelia, revolution, a general anti-establishment freedom to say what you like in the way you wanted – perhaps even the MD of BBC Radio wasn’t immune?!

Townrow’s interactions with Leah initially bring to mind the seedier side of early Bond films; later his unpleasant behaviour verges on the downright abusive – though perhaps more commonplace in the ‘50s. Mrs K’s racist outbursts perhaps underline how fresh British colonial experience was for everyone in the ‘50s. Both she and Townrow express their bigotry with shocking casualness: “Unusually prominent eyes like this indicated some disease. Either that or the man was an Armenian (because all Armenians had bulging eyes).” On the plus side it’s beautifully written in places with some vivid descriptions of people, places and situations that stay firmly in the memory, e.g. “Townrow remembered driving through a tiny Cornish port handling china clay. The trucks and the railway stock, the sheds, the cranes, the derricks, were covered with the stuff. The ground was white and the dockers went about like millers. Out in the Channel the water might be turquoise. It was easy to think of some battered coaster, looking as though it had been dipped in flour and breadcrumbs, swimming into that turquoise water and making for the French coast with this gooseberry-eye soak in the galley."

Steve appreciated the book’s oddness and the insights into a time he didn’t know much about, but it was almost impenetrable at times and didn’t carry him with it – he had to work hard at it, and not in a way that he particularly enjoyed. How did it win the Booker? He imagined it stood out as being ‘of its time’. It even felt somewhat Joycean in the way it presented a very personal perspective on events – almost a stream of consciousness. And it was written by the Managing Director of BBC Radio, no less. That wouldn’t have swayed the judges at all… would it?

RV found it to be a book that he did not enjoy very much; He did not like the main character; it was obviously deliberately confusing, but he did not enjoy that either, and did not really understand why Newby decided to do this (other than to demonstrate Townrow’s confusion – “Townrow felt exhausted by the efforts of hanging on to the real world” - As do we!). The politics of the period were interesting, but he knew a lot about this period already and he learnt nothing new from the book. One thing that he didn’t know about was the Lydney scouting disaster where 25 scouts died – but when he looked it up, nothing came up about it! One thing he did learn about was Townrow’s prejudices (although he thought he did not have any), which came through strongly, alongside many of the prejudices of others, especially Mrs K “Even so , I’d never’ve married him if he’d been a Jew or an Arab no matter how much money he’d got, but Lebanese is different, they’re almost European in a way.” And there was the very occasional good turn of phrase, such as: “A big woman in a dressing gown with sagging cheeks and boot-polish black hair came out of a door as they passed and Faint said, “We’ll be back in five minutes.” Overall, this was a book which was confusing and he was not interested in any of the characters; and frankly was quite bored by this book. It was not exactly badly written but it simply bored him and he was greatly relieved to finish it!

CW found it an Interesting book with a whole load of potential messages but so confusing that it was difficult to work out what the author was trying to say. He didn’t find it an enjoyable read because the story seemed to be extremely muddled in time and place with no new chapters defining the switches of scene. It seemed as though this confusion in time and place may have been the author’s way of portraying Townrow’s own confusion after having been attacked and left with concussion. 

He was very interested in this period of British and world history and so from that point of view he enjoyed the book because it made him research more about what actually happened at the time particularly the attack,(arranged clandestinely with the UK and US), by the Israelis across the Sinai peninsula to create a diversion once Nasser had announced that he was nationalising the Suez Canal. Interesting that it was at this point in history that World power was ceded from the Europeans to the Americans who admonished the British and French for their invasion and told them to withdraw.
Townrow was a pretty unlikable character although he said he was not racially biased; he seemed to bring  up the issue frequently. He refers to“Jewesses” who he says he actually quite likes but he seems to have quite a few racial dislikes underlying his character. I did not like this whole racial element to his character and the book which may have been appropriate for the time but reads very uncomfortably now.

He did not like being told that the British potentially did not react to information about the Holocaust and trains out of Hungary to the death camps. He believed the British to be above this sort of thing and behave correctly and properly unlike other nationalities -and yet here they are bombing the Egyptians indiscriminately.

Townrow’s misogynistic character is also pretty evident which reads uncomfortably in the book. He treats the woman he apparently loves very roughly almost raping her on one occasion and his attitudes are very much dated when read from the present day and so don’t make this a comfortable read.

Chris W’s uncle was in the army in Egypt in the Second World War, got blown up, recuperated and sent back and when talking to him in his older years you can see that this was the way British were at that time in history and that the problem reading this book now is that it is very much outdated and the attitudes expressed in the book jar with our current feelings and attitudes.

From that point of view it’s therefore good to have read this book because it just makes you realise how far we have come in the last 80 years.(and how far we still have to go).
But ultimately if asked if he would recommend this book to others it would be a no because the writing style and lack of depth of characters of all except Townrow meant that it was not a particularly enjoyable book and was often confusing and irritating to read too.

AA has been to Suez and Port Said and driven along the canal, and was interested to read this,  but despite an intriguing start he found the writing a bit jerky and awkward and confusing  so was neither enjoying reading it or looking forward to it after 15%. There were some nice sentences such as: To grasp his hand was like holding a bundle of pencils and some humour: He knew how to stalk and shoot a man. There must be some way of using skills like that and it’s reputedly a great novel by a great novelist so he pushed on, bored senseless, waiting to be drawn in, but by 23% was still finding it as tedious as stripping wallpaper so he called it a day as if it’s meant to take the reader on a confusing dreamy trip in the mind of a concussed crook, then he needed to be hooked into that journey in some way - a theme, a style, a setting, even a single character to care about none of these appeared to him except the atmosphere in Christou’s bar but he will end with a quote he enjoyed: There seemed altogether too much excitement, too many lights, too many big unshaven men in double-breasted suits rushing about and shouting. Unfortunately, the excitement didn’t reach him and he found it stultifyingly dull.

WM didn’t finish the book, and said that he could only blame the sixties for the story structure and the Booker jury decision. Apart from that, the author came up with some striking descriptive passages.

MT didn’t get very far with the book. In his opinion it was an atrocious book and reading it made him cross. He didn’t like the main character and gave up about 1/3 of the way through.

Scores: CB 7.0, MW 7.0, SC 4.5, JH 5.0, RV 4.0, CW 4.5, WM 2.0, MT 3.0, AA 4.0.