A Change of Circumstance

I suspect Susan Hill has lost interest in her Simon Serrailler series of crime novels, in which A Change of Circumstance is the eleventh and most recent book. The plotting has become cursory and in this instance amounts to little more than a tale of low-level drug dealing. As for the hero of the series, Simon Serailler in this outing barely develops. It all feels perfunctory. Perhaps the author or the publisher (or both) couldn’t resist what was bound to be yet another big payday. Dedicated fans won’t care much, I suspect, but it’s a shame to see the series run out of steam like this. If it can’t be reinvigorated, it should be brought to an end.

The Crichel Boys

In 1945 three friends jointly purchased a country home in a tiny Dorset village called Long Crichel, establishing unintentionally what became perhaps the most celebrated literary and intellectual salon in England in the twentieth century. The Crichel Boys, as they came to be known, were bonded by deep friendship and shared cultural interests. All were homosexual. Over several decades Long Crichel House attracted England’s artistic elite. Benjamin Britten, Evelyn Waugh, Graham Greene, Duncan Grant, Frances Partridge, and scores more were regular visitors, enjoying the civilized and relaxed hospitality of the three original owners – Eddy Sackville-West, Eardley Knollys, and Desmond Shawe-Taylor – and two others who bought into the house later.

The house and its owners feature often in diaries I love, such as those of James Lees-Milne and Frances Partridge, so I was eager to read Simon Fenwick’s book when I heard it had been published. Although I enjoyed it, it wasn’t quite what I expected, and I turned the final page with a slight sense of disappointment. Overall I feel Fenwick was unable to portray with equal vividness all five of the Crichel boys and to convey what daily life in the house was like. Nevertheless, I learned a lot from reading The Crichel Boys, not just about their unusual menage, but also about intellectual life in post-war England.

Vengeance

Feeling a little under the weather recently, I searched my bookshelves for a “comfort read”. Something undemanding, entertaining, and diverting. I came across Vengeance by John Banville (when he was still using Benjamin Black as his pseudonym). An old train ticket from 2013 used as a bookmark implied I had read the novel before, though how I might have forgotten the brilliant and shocking opening chapter is something I don’t want to think about too much. It’s a satisfying yarn, set in Dublin in the 1950s and featuring Dr. Quirke, the lonely curmudgeon who is the city’s official pathologist. The suicide of a prominent businessman and the subsequent murder of his partner draw Quirke into the shenanigans of Dublin’s upper middle class, where infidelity, backstabbing, and disloyalty are de rigeur.

Banville’s mystery novels depend to some degree on the reader’s willingness to suspend disbelief. How does a pathologist get so much latitude to do detective work and never step inside the mortuary or perform a postmortem? No matter. Quirke is a wonderful creation and Banville an exceptionally gifted writer. Vengeance proved to be the pick-me-up I needed.

Homesickness

The short story is an unforgiving form. In the hands of those who mastered it (think William Trevor, for example), it can be the perfect distillation of experience and emotion, but it exposes those who prize a showy style, those who can’t resist the extra word, and those who haven’t learned that subtraction, not addition, is the key to perfecting it.

It would be very unfair to find fault with a writer like Colin Barrett because he hasn’t yet reached the heights attained by the likes of Alice Munro. He’s barely forty years-old, but has already won awards and attracted a lot of positive criticism for his stories. Homesickness is the first collection of his that I have read, and I enjoyed many of the stories very much. The setting is often the small towns and countryside of County Mayo, a place where I have spent some time over the years, and that enhanced the pleasure for me. Having said that, none of the stories made a deep impact, but I’ll be looking forward to what comes next from a talented writer.

Monica Jones, Philip Larkin, and me

There is no way to avoid saying this. No one would have written a biography of Monica Jones if she hadn’t been the long-time friend, some-time lover, and correspondent for nearly four decades of Philip Larkin. She had a largely undistinguished career as a university teacher. She had few friends and was often disliked by colleagues and acquaintances. She was a racist and anti-Semite. Her life was blighted by bitterness, loneliness, and alcoholism. And yet from 1946 to 1985, Monica Jones was arguably closer than anyone to one of the greatest poets of the 20th century. She was the primary beneficiary of Larkin’s will and received on his death all his manuscripts and letters (many of which she destroyed).

John Sutherland, her biographer and one of the UK’s most distinguished literary scholars and critics, was one of Monica’s students in Leicester from 1960 and became her friend. That last part might mystify many readers because, on the evidence of this book, Monica was thoroughly and consistently horrible. But Larkin may have been even worse. I have read at least one biography of him, as well as collections of letters he wrote, not just to Monica Jones but also to his coterie of male friends like Kingsley Amis, so the nastier sides of his personality were familiar enough to me. Sutherland, however, has deepened my dislike of Larkin the man by filling out what we know about his stunted and manipulative personality, his misogyny, and his deceit.

Larkin and Jones might have been well matched in so many ways, but they were very bad for one another. He was a blight on her life for decades. She, though helpful to his poetic output in the early years, was treated appallingly, but lacking the self-confidence to break free from a toxic and deeply damaging relationship she was the co-creator of her own misery.

Letters to Gwen John

Celia Paul puzzles me. I find some of her paintings sublimely beautiful and others very crude. Aspects of her personality also puzzle me. She’s clearly a deeply private person, and yet has written two very self-exposing books. She complains that her reputation as a painter has been overshadowed by her relationship with Lucian Freud, but seems to have done as much as anyone to make people aware of that love affair and its consequences. Not that these paradoxes matter (if they are paradoxes); she has produced some wonderful paintings and published two memorable and sometimes beautifully written books.

When she set out to write her imaginary Letters to Gwen John, Celia Paul did so as a homage by one painter to another, not as a conventional biography. Nevertheless, the letters, written between February 2019 and November 2020, reveal a lot about the character and relationships of a deeply private artist whose work during her lifetime (1876-1939) was overshadowed by that of her brother, Augustus John, and her sometime lover, Auguste Rodin. The artistic and personal similarities between Celia and Gwen are striking; the ascetic tendencies in their habits, the absolute dedication to art, the longing to be loved and understood while living entirely on their own terms and in the shadow of great artists.

Few painters, at least in my experience, can write as well as Celia Paul, especially of love, longing, and the solitude on which her art depends. Letters to Gwen John, part biography, part autobiography, and part homage, is a book infused with sadness, vulnerability, and no little nobility.

All the Lovers in the Night

Fuyuko Irie, a freelance proofreader, spends her days looking for errors in manuscripts. She’s in her mid-thirties, lives alone and is almost entirely friendless. Other women make fun of her, for her drab appearance, for her unsociable nature, and, by implication, for her failure to make the efforts that convention dictates she ought to make: to please the boss, to flirt with men, to make herself prettier, and to follow that unrelenting diet of self-improvement served up in magazines and social media. Is she broken or damaged in some way, or is she simply refusing to play the game? As her isolation deepens and her dependence on alcohol increases, Fuyuko has a chance encounter with the enigmatic Mitsutsuka …

What ingredients need to be present for a happy life? Friendship, love, fulfilling work, purpose? What propels us forward and what sustains us when these are absent or when they stop being enough? Mieko Kawakami doesn’t shy away from important themes, but her delicate and oblique approach to them, her curiosity about how individuals confront or avoid them, and, most of all, the spareness and beauty of her style, make her one of the most interesting novelists at work today.

Intimations

The imaginative literature provoked by the COVID-19 pandemic will be vast. Novels, essays, poems, and memoirs from those fear-filled days are already in the bookstores, and much, much more is coming. Inevitably, once we’re in a position to look back at that corpus, some of it will look rushed, wrong, and even downright opportunistic. I predict Zadie Smith’s slim volume of essays, Intimations, will stand the test of time. Published in mid-2020, these are thoughts from the earliest days of lock-down and quarantine, not some attempt at a sweeping review of the COVID years.

Intimations is a very personal memoir, and from it emerges a portrait of the author as a compassionate, sane, level-headed, and thoughtful human being in a time of dislocation and fear. I can see myself re-reading some or all of these short essays in the future. There is wisdom and humanity in them.

The Powerful and The Damned

Lionel Barber was editor of the Financial Times from 2005 to 2019. Even in these times when newspapers are nothing like as powerful as they used to be, being the FT editor gives one access to some of the most powerful people in the world. Barber didn’t keep a regular diary during his tenure, but he has turned his contemporary meeting notes into a sort of journal. He had a ring side seat for many momentous occasions in world events such as the crash of 2008, the rise of Obama (and Trump), Brexit, and much more. Not surprisingly, he writes powerfully of his interactions with the great, the good, and the downright horrible. His list of interviewees and contacts is a roll call of the period’s power players. Putin, Trump, Blair, Obama, and MBS are all seen in close-up, not to mention a coterie of the wealthy and the self-important; Sheryl Sandberg, Eric Schmidt, Prince Charles, and Rupert Murdoch all have walk-on parts.

I gulped down The Powerful and The Damned in one day and two flights. It’s that kind of book – gossipy, insightful, indiscreet, and great fun. Barber is an entertaining chronicler of years that were filled with incident, not all of it good. He’s also very interesting on what it took to navigate one of the world’s great media brands in a time of technological transformation in the news industry.

Weather

Weather is a collaboration between the author Colm Toibin and the artist Antony Gormley. Is it a short story illustrated by drawings, or a set of drawings enhanced by words? Perhaps it’s both or neither. I tend to think of it as two independent meditations on the experience of weather, one (Gormley’s) from the north Norfolk coastline, and the other (Toibin’s) from Ireland’s east coast.

Weather is a beautiful artifact, and a tribute to the arts of printing and book production. It is published in a regular edition and in a de luxe version by Enitharmon Editions. I had the pleasure of working nearly forty years ago with its founder, Stephen Stuart-Smith. Anyone interested in beautiful editions or artists’ books should take a look at Enitharmon’s catalog.