Wednesday, 18 February 2009

An explanation - Tomalin - Woolf/Sackville-West

So my friend Alice and I decided that we needed more friends, and that these new yet-to-be-acquired friends should be funny, smart, articulate, and generally fun to hang out with. To this end, we have elected novelist Nick Hornby as our Semi-Famous-Person Spirit Guide, on the premise that the road to Nick (or Mr. Hornby, whichever he would prefer; we're very polite and respectful, both of us) would be likely to be paved with similarly funny, smart, articulate people. We picked Nick in particular because we both really like his books, and at the time that we were trying to decide on a Spirit-Guide-worthy Semi-Famous-Person I had also just finished re-reading one of his excellent and hilarious collections of book reviews, The Polysyllabic Spree, and had been vaguely thinking of starting a blog anyway to track what I was reading, mostly because I otherwise forget and years later will pick up a book only to realize halfway through that I've already read it. Alice (a terrifyingly brave extrovert) is probably standing on San Francisco street corners as I write this, randomly quizzing passersby if they have any connections that might help us get to our goal; I (introverted, good typist) am going about what is basically an exercise in communication and social networking the most twentyfirst century way possible, sitting at home alone at my computer. We'll see who gets there first. A fabulous prize (free blog subscription? your weight in rubber bands? TBA) to anyone who can get me there faster than Alice. Nick Hornby, here we come.


Recently read:

Claire Tomalin, The Invisible Woman

The Letters of Vita Sackville-West and Virginia Woolf, edited by Mitchell Leaska and Louise DeSalvo


On the list to read:

Tim Parks, Under the Stars

J.G. Hayes, Map of the Harbor Islands


Books transported across state lines:

Junot Diaz, The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao


Currently squashed under my pillow with the spine grievously split open:

Richard Russo, Empire Falls

More New Yorker back issues


My intention (ha! we'll see if that works out....) is to write at least a post a month; I think I can get through a respectable number (i.e. more than one) book in a month and also have time to write about it, in between my very busy schedule of trying to keep my house clean, turning up at work once in a while, etc. I read more books than usual during January, however, and will split my blather into two blogposts, so you can consider this one my post for January, and the next one will be for February. We'll see if I make it to March. My memory may be dire enough that I have to write a post after I finish each book.

Most of the books on the recently read list this month were started over a long weekend at my parents' house, the walls of which have been definitively proved to emit soporific brain-scrambling radiowaves that make it seem like a very good idea to begin several books at once and then have to lug them back in my carryon bag on the airplane, along with the (I am not kidding) four-inch stack of New Yorker back issues that I have yet to get through. (I can't talk about the New Yorkers, yet; I am still in the era of when-will-Sarah-Palin-be-unleashed-for-her-first-press-interview, and although I am... relieved is inadequate, here... that it's a moot point, I still feel honour-bound to read all of them. I will, one day. Perhaps McCain/Palin will run again in 2012 and I can just save them up to read then.) My mother is mainly responsible; she leaves books in stacks next to the spare-room bed, and when I wake up in the middle of the night at my parents' house, I can't go downstairs to do what any self-respecting chronic insomniac would usually do (raid the fridge, watch TV) because they keep changing the burglar alarm code and I'd set all the bells ringing so instead I read.

The first one was Claire Tomalin's biography of Nelly Ternan, Charles Dicken's mistress; that one I actually bought myself specifically because I read about in the Polysyllabic Spree and think Claire Tomalin's great. (She's married to someone famousish as well, I can't remember who, but I remember the little frisson of "whoa, crazy, man" when I found out. I should Google it. My favourite literary-couple-that-I-didn't-know-was-a-couple-until-recently is Anthony Lane, film critic for the New Yorker, and Alison Pearson, author of I Don't Know How She Does It, a witty and unabashedly feminist rant.) Anyway, I had read Claire Tomalin's biographies of Jane Austen and Samuel Pepys previously, and even though I can't claim to have trekked around the UK checking all her facts, she definitely gives the impression of not being someone who makes shit up, and yet her books aren't at all horrifically footnotey or anything, they're very readable. My main problem with biography is that I get really attached to the person, and the whole way along you know the inevitable is coming (that they're going to die) but it feels like a story anyway, so you keep hoping for a happy ending, and when you lose them at the end in whatever grotty circumstances they die (because everyone dies in grotty circumstances, that being sort of the nature of death) it's just really depressing. That was particularly true for me of the Jane Austen biography. I kept hoping Jane would achieve fame and fortune in her own lifetime, recognition, true love, whatever, and... no, she didn't. Anyway, the moral of the Nelly Ternan's story was basically that Charles Dickens was a two-faced adulterous hypocrite. I knew there was a reason I didn't like him. (My previous poor opinion of him was based, somewhat unfairly, on A Christmas Carol (puke), A Tale of Two Cities (enforced reading for school - meh, uninspiring, what is WITH his total lack of convincing female characters?!?!), an abridged-for-children version of Great Expectations when I was eight, a copy of Bleak House which someone gave me as a birthday present ages ago and which I never read because it had such a depressing picture of a 19th century workhouse on the cover, and a medley of songs from Oliver! that we sang in choir when I was little. So, sorry, Nick, if an enjoyment of Dickens is on your list of must-haves in a friend, this might not work out. At some point, I promise to try David Copperfield for you, because I know you liked it, but I am going to have to let the Nelly Ternan story recede a bit for me first. Claire Tomalin 1, Dickens 0.)

Speaking of fame, fortune, true love, and death in grotty circumstances, I also plowed through the letters of Virginia Woolf and Vita Sackville-West in two longish evenings. With the exception, I think, of T.S. Eliot, I find the whole pretentious/romantic ambience of the Bloomsbury crew (and attendant diaries/letters) so much more addictive than any of their actual published-in-their-lifetime writing. Reading the letters between Virginia and Vita is like reading the notes being passed between class periods in some bizarre Edwardian hyperliterate junior high school; the importance that they give their own emotions seems so over-the-top, somehow, and lacking in humour. Virginia's suicide is a puzzle as well; did she have to do it so publicly because she couldn't find anywhere more private to do it? or was it part of the over-romanticising of her own emotions? did she call what she felt "descending into madness" rather than "I'm really depressed" because it sounded sexier? and yet it feels so ungenerous to suspect the motives of someone who was miserable enough to kill herself. Vita apparently wrote in her diary years later that if she had only seen Virginia in the days before her suicide that she feels sure she could have turned her around and made her feel better. I dunno. And yet, and yet. I do love reading about them. I want to reread Nigel Nicolson's terrific book Portrait of a Marriage; I remember being very, very, impressed with Harold Nicolson. Not at all what I would have expected (a weedy passive guy who put up with his crazy wife); he seemed like a genuinely kind, funny, wise person with a lot to say for himself.

I mentioned the Junot Diaz book (which I read ages ago and was only returning it to its rightful owner) just because it was amazing and original and great. I haven't read enough of the Richard Russo yet, but it should be good - Alice recommended it, after all....


4 comments:

  1. maybe you should try david coperfield instead? i hear it's better than copperfield -- just a hair behind knickerless knickleby.

    funny you should go on about dickens; having never been forced to read anything of his, i've never read anything of his -- pathetic of me, i know -- but in reading lots *about* him i'd gathered the general impression of him that you give...and thus it was with total delight that i read in the polysyllabic spree just how much nick hornby really DIGS dickens. i think it's because hornby comes off as such a "cool" writer, and yet he just went all out in such rich detail precisely why dickens is (to him) such a fabulous writer (creator of characters, etc etc...)

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  2. ok next time i won't stop reading just before you actually go on to talk about how, indeed, nick hornby loved dickens, resulting in my adding absolutely nothing to this discussion. :)

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  3. re "descending into madness" -- isn't that just how she would have phrased it, though?

    also, did you hear the bit on TAL about keynes (as in, yes, that one) running around with the bloomsbury boys and wanking with all of them before he settled down and got married? crazy.

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  4. I KNOW, crazy, huh. Talking of people running around wanking with each other, I just saw the film "Henry and June" the other night, which is about the writer Anais Nin and the very tangled affair she had with the writer Henry Miller and his wife June (all the while maintaining a passionate relationship w/ her own husband); it didn't make me any more curious to read more than the page or two of her writing that I've already read, but it did make me quite curious to read Henry Miller's books. Will add to the list...

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