Archive for the ‘La Farge, Christopher’ Category
Header Image
Winter by the Fraser River.
-
These “Reviews” and Ratings
I am merely a reader, a consumer of books for amusement and personal instruction, not a professional reviewer - and that is indeed a worthy profession, an important literary craft - so these posts are merely meant to be one person's reading responses, not scholarly reviews.
Early on in this blog I began rating the books I talked about on a 1 to 10 scale; it was meant to be a quick way to communicate my personal degree of satisfaction/pleasure (or the opposite) in each reading experience.
To emphasize: These are very personal, completely arbitrary ratings. These are merely meant to be a measure of the book's success in meeting my hopes and expectations as a reader.
5 & higher are what I consider as "keepers", in various degrees. A 10 indicates that I can think of no possible improvement. Ratings under 5 are rare & I struggle with giving those, but in all honesty sometimes feel them appropriate for, again, undeniably arbitrary and very personal reasons.
Each book is rated in its own context, NOT in comparison to the entire range of literature, which would, of course, be an impossible task.
-
Recent Posts
- Welcome to Television Land: The Children on the Top Floor by Noel Streatfeild (1964)
- Some years in the law: Jumping Off the Donkey by John Barnsley (1983)
- Interplanetary slugs and sexism: The Puppet Masters by Robert A. Heinlein (1951)
- Strange Americana: Norwood by Charles Portis (1966)
- Survivors and otherwise: They Were Sisters by Dorothy Whipple (1943)
Archives
- February 2022 (8)
- January 2022 (9)
- November 2021 (1)
- April 2021 (1)
- May 2020 (1)
- December 2019 (2)
- March 2019 (1)
- January 2019 (1)
- November 2018 (11)
- October 2018 (27)
- September 2018 (6)
- July 2018 (1)
- May 2018 (4)
- April 2018 (3)
- March 2018 (5)
- February 2018 (11)
- January 2018 (20)
- December 2017 (1)
- November 2017 (1)
- October 2017 (5)
- September 2017 (2)
- August 2017 (2)
- July 2017 (3)
- April 2017 (4)
- March 2017 (5)
- February 2017 (14)
- January 2017 (7)
- December 2016 (1)
- November 2016 (7)
- October 2016 (11)
- September 2016 (1)
- August 2016 (2)
- July 2016 (3)
- June 2016 (2)
- April 2016 (1)
- March 2016 (1)
- February 2016 (1)
- January 2016 (5)
- December 2015 (4)
- November 2015 (5)
- October 2015 (1)
- September 2015 (2)
- August 2015 (4)
- July 2015 (8)
- June 2015 (12)
- May 2015 (1)
- April 2015 (1)
- March 2015 (5)
- February 2015 (6)
- January 2015 (9)
- December 2014 (18)
- November 2014 (9)
- October 2014 (7)
- September 2014 (4)
- August 2014 (15)
- July 2014 (12)
- June 2014 (5)
- May 2014 (8)
- April 2014 (11)
- March 2014 (17)
- February 2014 (7)
- January 2014 (23)
- December 2013 (21)
- November 2013 (19)
- October 2013 (18)
- September 2013 (10)
- August 2013 (12)
- July 2013 (22)
- June 2013 (11)
- May 2013 (5)
- April 2013 (17)
- March 2013 (12)
- February 2013 (15)
- January 2013 (20)
- December 2012 (37)
- November 2012 (28)
- October 2012 (28)
- September 2012 (22)
- August 2012 (24)
- July 2012 (22)
- June 2012 (16)
- May 2012 (15)
- April 2012 (11)
Blogroll
Bentley Rumble
Bibliolathas
Books Anonymous
The Book Mine Set
The Book Trunk
Canus Humorous
The Captive Reader
Clothes in Books
Desperate Reader
Frisbee: A Book Journal
Geranium Cat’s Bookshelf
Heavenali
His Futile Preoccupations
The Indextrious Reader
Kaggsy’s Bookish Ramblings
Letters From a Hill Farm
Life must be filled up
Lily Oak Books
Mrs. Miniver’s Daughter
Nonsuch Book
A Penguin a Week
Reading the End (formerly Jenny’s Books)
Savidge Reads
Stuck-in-a-Book
TBR 313
Vulpes LibrisA (Second) Century of Books ~ 2018
12th Annual Canadian Book Challenge
11th Annual Canadian Book Challenge
10th Annual Canadian Book Challenge
9th Annual Canadian Book Challenge
8th Annual Canadian Book Challenge
7th Annual Canadian Book Challenge
6th Annual Canadian Book Challenge
Categories
- 1840s (2)
- 1850s (1)
- 1880s (2)
- 1890s (2)
- 1900s (34)
- 1910s (29)
- 1920s (53)
- 1930s (77)
- 1940s (83)
- 1950s (104)
- 1960s (99)
- 1970s (57)
- 1980s (45)
- 1990s (47)
- 2000s (36)
- 2010s (32)
- Aldrich, Bess Streeter (7)
- Allan, Mabel Esther (1)
- Antonson, Rick (1)
- Ardizzone, Edward (2)
- Arkell, Reginald (2)
- Armitage, Ethel (2)
- Ashley, Bernard (1)
- Atkinson, Kate (2)
- Atwood, Margaret (1)
- Bachman, Randy (1)
- Bagnold, Enid (1)
- Baker, Frank (1)
- Baker, Louise (1)
- Banks, Lynne Reid (3)
- Barrie, J.M. (1)
- Bates, H.E. (2)
- Bawden, Nina (1)
- Beaty, David (1)
- Bell, Mary (1)
- Benary-Isbert, Margot (1)
- Bennett, Arnold (1)
- Benson, Ben (1)
- Berckman, Evelyn (1)
- Birney, Earle (1)
- Bjarnhof, Karl (1)
- Blake, Quentin (1)
- Bloom, Ursula (1)
- Bor, Eleanor (2)
- Borden, Mary (1)
- Bosanquet, Mary (1)
- Boston, L.M. (1)
- Boston, Lucy M. (1)
- Bowen, Elizabeth (2)
- Bowers, Dorothy (1)
- Bowling, Tim (2)
- Bracken, Peg (1)
- Bradbury, Ray (3)
- Brazil, Angela (1)
- Brent, Madeleine (1)
- Brinsmead, H.F. (1)
- Bromfield, Louis (1)
- Bronte, Charlotte (1)
- Bronte, Emily (1)
- Brookner, Anita (1)
- Brown, Joe David (1)
- Brown, Margaret Gillies (1)
- Brunt, Carol Rifka (1)
- Bryson, Bill (2)
- Buck, Pearl S. (1)
- Buell, John (1)
- Burgess, Anthony (1)
- Burnford, Sheila (1)
- Cadell, Elizabeth (1)
- Cambridge, Elizabeth (6)
- Cameron, Anne (1)
- Canadian Book Challenge #10 (3)
- Canadian Book Challenge #11 (7)
- Canadian Book Challenge #12 (3)
- Canadian Book Challenge #6 (68)
- Canadian Book Challenge #7 (20)
- Canadian Book Challenge #8 (10)
- Canadian Book Challenge #9 (4)
- Canning, Victor (5)
- Carswell, Catherine (1)
- Caspary, Vera (1)
- Cavanna, Betty (5)
- CBC Ideas (1)
- Century of Books – 2014 (110)
- Century of Books – 2017 (34)
- Century of Books – 2018 (83)
- Century of Books – 2022 (15)
- Channon, E.M. (2)
- Chatwin, Bruce (1)
- Christie, Agatha (5)
- Christopher, John (1)
- Church, Richard (1)
- Chute, B.J. (1)
- Clampitt, Amy (1)
- Classics Club (16)
- Clavering, Molly (1)
- Clive, Mary (1)
- Cobb, Irvin S. (1)
- Cohen, Leonard (1)
- Colette (1)
- Connell, Vivian (1)
- Contemporary Fiction (24)
- Cooper, Thomas C. (1)
- Craven, Margaret (1)
- Creighton, Luella (1)
- Cronin, A.J. (1)
- Czajkowski, Chris (1)
- Daly, Maureen (2)
- de la Roche, Mazo (4)
- de Lint, Charles (1)
- Delafield, E.M. (2)
- Dell, Ethel M. (1)
- Devine, Harriet (1)
- deWitt, Patrick (1)
- Dickens, Monica (4)
- Douglas, O. (pseudonym of Anna Buchan) (13)
- du Maurier, Daphne (5)
- Duncan, Sara Jeannette (3)
- Eggers, Dave (1)
- Ellison, Harlan (1)
- Estoril, Jean (1)
- Fabre, D.G. (1)
- Farjeon, Eleanor (1)
- Faviell, Frances (2)
- Ferber, Edna (2)
- Ferguson, Rachel (3)
- Ferguson, Will (2)
- Fey, Tina (1)
- Fisher, Dorothy Canfield (1)
- Fisher, M.F.K. (1)
- Fitzgerald, F. Scott (1)
- Forster, E.M. (1)
- Franken, Rose (1)
- Fraser, Antonia (1)
- Fraser, Sylvia (1)
- Frater, Alexander (3)
- Furse, Celia (2)
- Gaiman, Neil (2)
- Gallico, Paul (4)
- Garner, Alan (1)
- Garnett, Eve (1)
- Gates, Doris (1)
- Ghomeshi, Jian (2)
- Gilbert, Elizabeth (1)
- Gildiner, Catherine (1)
- Gilman, Dorothy (1)
- Glyn, Elinor (1)
- Godden, Rumer (20)
- Goldman, James (1)
- Goodwin, John (1)
- Goudge, Elizabeth (5)
- Graham, Gwethalyn (1)
- Graham, Winston (2)
- Grahame, Kenneth (2)
- Grant, Robert (2)
- Graves, Robert (3)
- Gremillon, Helene (1)
- Grove, Valerie (1)
- Hamilton, Donald (1)
- Hawes, Annie (1)
- Hawthorne, Nathaniel (1)
- Heine, William C. (3)
- Heinlein, Robert A. (3)
- Herriot, James (1)
- Heyer, Georgette (9)
- Highsmith, Patricia (3)
- Hill, Susan (2)
- Hilton, James (1)
- Hoban, Russell (2)
- Hobson, Laura Z. (1)
- Hodge, Jane Aiken (1)
- Hodgins, Jack (3)
- Holding, Elisabeth Sanxay (1)
- Holt, Victoria (1)
- Horwood, Harold (1)
- Houston, James (1)
- Houston, Margaret Bell (1)
- Hudson, W.H. (1)
- Hull, Helen (Rose) (1)
- Hull, Maureen (1)
- Humble, Nicola (1)
- Hunt, Irene (1)
- Hutchinson, R.C. (1)
- Hutchison, Margaret (1)
- Huygen, Wil (1)
- Ibbotson, Eva (1)
- Innes, Hammond (2)
- Isherwood, Christopher (1)
- Jackson, Shirley (1)
- James, Henry (1)
- Jerome, Jerome K. (2)
- John Barnsley (1)
- Johnston, Velda (2)
- Jones, Diana Wynne (3)
- Jordan, Elizabeth (1)
- Joyce, Rachel (1)
- Kaye, M.M. (1)
- Kennedy, Des (1)
- Keyes, Frances Parkinson (1)
- Kimbrough, Emily (1)
- King, Clive (2)
- Klickmann, Flora (1)
- Konigsburg, E.L. (2)
- La Farge, Christopher (1)
- Lambert, Gavin (1)
- Laski, Marghanita (1)
- Lawrence, Josephine (1)
- Lee, Harper (1)
- Levin, Ira (1)
- Lewis, Sinclair (2)
- Lofting, Hugh (1)
- Lofts, Norah (7)
- Loomis, Ruth (1)
- Lothar, Ernst (1)
- Lyon, Annabel (2)
- Macaulay, Rose (3)
- MacAvoy, R.A. (3)
- MacInnes, Helen (6)
- MacLean, Alistair (1)
- MacLeod, Alistair (2)
- Mankowitz, Wolf (1)
- Mantel, Hilary (1)
- Marchetta, Melina (1)
- Markham, Beryl (1)
- Marsh, Ngaio (2)
- Martin, Shane (1)
- Matthews, Carola (1)
- McGraw, Eloise Jarvis (2)
- McKinley, Robin (7)
- McLennan, Wayne (1)
- McMinnies, Mary (1)
- Meredith, George (1)
- Milne, A.A. (1)
- Mitford, Nancy (2)
- Monsarrat, Nicholas (1)
- Montgomery, L.M. (6)
- Moody, Ralph (1)
- Moore, Lisa (1)
- Moran, Caitlin (3)
- Moriarty, Laura (1)
- Morley, Christopher (6)
- Mortimer, John (2)
- Morton, H.V. (1)
- Murphy, Dervla (1)
- Murphy, Sylvia (2)
- My World (96)
- Nathan, Robert (1)
- Nesbit, E. (2)
- Newby, Eric (4)
- Nichols, Beverley (2)
- Nicol, Eric (1)
- Norris, Kathleen (4)
- O'Grady, Rohan (1)
- Olivier, Edith (1)
- Oppenheim, E. Phillips (1)
- Orange, Ursula (1)
- Orczy, Baroness (1)
- Other People's Words (3)
- Panter-Downes, Mollie (1)
- Park, Ruth (1)
- Patchett, Ann (1)
- Patrick Campbell (1)
- Patrick Dennis (1)
- Patterson, Kevin (1)
- Pearson, Kit (1)
- Peden, Rachel (1)
- Pedler, Margaret (1)
- Peggy Holmes (1)
- Penelope Mortimer (1)
- Perrault, E.G. (1)
- Perrin, Noel (1)
- Peter Blackmore (1)
- Peter Curtis (Pseudonym of Norah Lofts) (1)
- Peter Mayle (2)
- Peter O'Donnell (1)
- Petersen, Christian (1)
- Philip Croft (1)
- Phyllis A. Whitney (3)
- Pierre Berton (1)
- Pierre Boulle (1)
- Poetry (43)
- Poortvliet, Rien (1)
- Portis, Charles (1)
- Poulin, Jacques (1)
- Priestley, J.B. (9)
- Proulx, E. Annie (1)
- Prouty, Olive Higgins (1)
- Raban, Jonathan (1)
- Rainer Maria Rilke (2)
- Read in 2012 (175)
- Read in 2013 (150)
- Read in 2014 (111)
- Read in 2015 (32)
- Read in 2016 (22)
- Read in 2017 (35)
- Read in 2018 (84)
- Read in 2019 (1)
- Read in 2022 (1)
- Read, Miss (Dora Saint) (1)
- Reben, Martha (1)
- Reed, Myrtle (1)
- Reeves, James (1)
- Renault, Mary (2)
- Richardson, Bill (1)
- Richler, Mordecai (3)
- Richter, Conrad (1)
- Riley, Louise (1)
- Rinehart, Mary Roberts (4)
- Robertson, Heather (1)
- Robinson, Eden (1)
- Rosoff, Meg (1)
- Rowling, J.K. (1)
- Roy, Gabrielle (1)
- Russell, Sheila MacKay (2)
- Rybot, Doris (1)
- Sackville-West, Vita (3)
- Salih, Tayeb (1)
- Sayers, Dorothy L. (1)
- Scarlett, Susan (1)
- Schabas, Martha (1)
- Seeley, Mabel (1)
- Shannon, Dell (1)
- Sharp, Margery (19)
- Shaw, George Bernard (1)
- Shepard, Ernest H. (1)
- Short Stories (24)
- Shute, Nevil (5)
- Smith, Alexander McCall (1)
- Smith, Dodie (9)
- Smith, Neil (1)
- Smucker, Barbara (2)
- Spark, Muriel (4)
- Spring, Howard (3)
- St. Pierre, Paul (1)
- St. Vincent Millay, Edna (1)
- Steen, Marguerite (1)
- Stegner, Wallace (2)
- Steinbeck, John (1)
- Stevenson, D.E. (26)
- Stewart, Mary (15)
- Stockton, Frank (1)
- Strachey, Julia (1)
- Stratton-Porter, Gene (5)
- Strayed, Cheryl (1)
- Streatfeild, Noel (2)
- Sutcliff, Rosemary (1)
- Taber, Gladys (1)
- Taylor, Elizabeth (3)
- Taylor, Joanne (1)
- Taylor, Rosemary (1)
- Tey, Josephine (1)
- Thane, Elswyth (1)
- Theroux, Paul (1)
- Thirkell, Angela (1)
- Tickell, Jerrard (1)
- Tracy, Honor (1)
- Trueman, Stuart (1)
- Tutton, Diana (3)
- Ullman, James Ramsey (1)
- Uncategorized (11)
- von Arnim, Elizabeth (9)
- Wagamese, Richard (1)
- Walker, Joan (1)
- Wallop, Douglas (1)
- Walpole, Hugh (8)
- Ward, Mary Jane (1)
- Warner, Sylvia Townsend (2)
- Watson, Sally (1)
- Waugh, Evelyn (1)
- Wells, H.G. (1)
- Wesley, Mary (1)
- Wharton, Edith (3)
- Whipple, Dorothy (4)
- Whishaw, Lorna (2)
- Whistler, Rex (1)
- White, Fred M. (1)
- White, T.H. (2)
- Wilder, Thornton (1)
- Wilenski, Marjorie (1)
- Wilson, Ethel (4)
- Wodehouse, P.G. (1)
- Wright, Eric (1)
- Wynd, Oswald (2)
- Wyndham, John (4)
- Youd, Samuel (1)
- Ziner, Feenie (2)
Winging It Over Africa and the Atlantic; Hurricanes and Foolish Pride; Sally Bowles (and Others) in Berlin; A Waif in War-Torn France
Posted in 1940s, Century of Books - 2014, Isherwood, Christopher, La Farge, Christopher, Laski, Marghanita, Markham, Beryl, Read in 2014, tagged Century of Books 2014, Dramatic Fiction, Goodbye to Berlin, Isherwood, Christopher, La Farge, Christopher, Laski, Marghanita, Little Boy Lost, Markham, Beryl, Memoir, Social Commentary, The Sudden Guest, Vintage, West with the Night on August 22, 2014| 18 Comments »
I’m pushing forward with the Century of Books project and am attempting to clear the decks – or would that be the desk? – for the next four and a half months’ strategic reading and reviewing, so these four books from the last month or two are getting the mini-review treatment. All deserve full posts of their own; I may well revisit them in future years. Though in the case of the three most well-known, Christopher Isherwood’s Goodbye to Berlin, Beryl Markham’s West with the Night, and Marganita Laski’s Little Boy Lost, there has already been abundant discussion regarding their merits and literary and historical context. I might just concentrate my future efforts on the most obscure of these particular four, Christopher La Farge’s The Sudden Guest, which I have earmarked for a definite re-read.
My rating: 9.5/10
In a word: Lyrical
Beryl Markham was born in England and moved to Kenya with her parents when she was 4 years old. Her mother soon had enough of colonial life and returned to England. Small Beryl remained with her father, and grew up in a largely masculine atmosphere made up of her father’s aristocratic compatriots, visiting big game hunters, and the native farm workers and independent tribesmen.
A highly skilled horsewoman, Beryl became a licensed racehorse trainer in Nairobi at the age of 17, after her father’s farm was wiped out during a severe drought, and he gave her the choice of accompanying him to South America for a fresh start, or staying in Africa to go it alone.
Beryl chose Africa, this time and, ultimately, forever more, dying there in 1986 at the age of 84, still staunchly independent, still very much on her game.
Beryl Markham was introduced to flying by her friend and mentor Tom Black, and took to the air with the same innate skill as she dealt with horses. She eventually concentrated strictly on flying, working as a contract pilot in East Africa, and hobnobbing with the famous (notorious?) aristocratic expatriates making homes and lives in Kenya during the 1920s and 30s, including Karen Blixen, Karen’s lover Denys Finch-Hatton (whom Beryl had her own affair with), Baron Blixen himself (Beryl was his pilot during scouting trips for wild game), and others of that large-living “set”.
In 1936 Beryl set out to attempt a solo flight over the Atlantic, from England to New York. She only just made it across, as an iced-up fuel line forced her crash landing in a bog on Cape Breton. The semi-successful attempt brought Beryl Markham much fame; she continued on with her flying career, though she ended her days once again training African racehorses.
In 1942 West with the Night was published, to much acclaim. It is a memoir made up of chapter-length vignettes of Beryl’s childhood and her experiences with horses, and, most beautifully described, her experiences in the air, including an account of the Atlantic flight. The language is both elegant and heartfelt; I used the term “lyrical” to sum up this book, and that is exactly what this is. Really a stellar piece of work.
There has been much speculation as to who really wrote this book. Many have theorized that Beryl had at least some help with it. Her third husband, Raoul Schumacher, was a journalist who also worked as a ghostwriter; the noted aviator and writer Antoine de Saint Exupéry, another of Beryl’s lovers, had a similar writing style. No one knows for sure, as Beryl firmly maintained that the work was completely her own, though her compatriots were stunned when the book came out as they had never known Beryl to be anything of a writer, and she never produced anything after 1942’s West with the Night.
No matter. This is an elegant bit of memoir, well worth reading for the beauty of its prose, and for the portrait it paints of its twin subjects: the truly unique Beryl Markham and her lifelong strongest love, Africa.
My rating: 7/10 for this first encounter, quite likely to be raised on a re-read.
In a phrase: Bitter musings of a self-centered spinster
Oh, golly, where to start with this one. I can’t quite remember where I got it; likely from Baker Books in Hope, B.C. I remember leafing through it in a bookstore, hesitating, and then deciding it was worth a gamble. Another small triumph of bookish good luck, as it is an intriguing thing, and well worth reading.
It is autumn of 1944, and sixty-year-old Miss Leckton maintains a summer house on the Rhode Island shore; her primary home is her New York apartment. Living alone except for a middle-aged married couple who caretake for her, and a daily housekeeper, Miss Leckton has much time to spend in introspection, and what a lot of self-centered opinions she has assembled, to be sure.
Miss Leckton is supremely selfish and egotistical. She has cast off her closest relative, her niece Leah, due to Leah’s engagement to a young Jewish man. For Miss Leckton hates the Jews. (She muses that Hitler, for all his undoubted faults, has the right idea about suppressing them.) She doesn’t think much of the Negroes, either, which makes thing a tiny bit awkward as her resident married couple, the Potters, are black. The local Rhode Islanders are beneath her notice, mere country bumpkins. One actually has a hard time identifying whom exactly Miss Leckton identifies with herself; she is that uncommon creature, “an island unto herself”, to paraphrase John Donne, who doesn’t appear to want or need anyone, and is steadfast in her self-superiority to everyone around her.
Now a hurricane is reported to be blowing in , and Miss Leckton is reluctantly preparing to batten down the hatches, so to speak, though she persists in thinking that the radio reports are over-hysterical. For hasn’t Rhode Island just barely recovered from a brutal storm, the hurricane of 1938? Another just wouldn’t be fair…
I will turn you over to the Kirkus review of 1946, which is quite a good summation of the style of The Sudden Guest, though the comparison to Rumer Godden’s Take Three Tenses is not entirely accurate, in my opinion. There are enough similarities in technique to let it stand, though.
I searched online for more mention of this unusual and well-written novel and found a really good review, including a creative analysis of what Christopher La Farge was really going on about – the American isolationism prior to the U.S.A.’s entry into World War II, and, to a lesser degree, Miss Leckton’s denial of her own “homoerotic feelings”. Check it out, at Relative Esoterica.
Check out this vintage cover: “Bohemian Life in a Wicked City”
Goodbye to Berlin by Christopher Isherwood ~ 1945. This edition: Signet, 1956. Paperback. 168 pages.
My rating: 10/10
Oh gosh. This was so good. So very, very good.
Why haven’t I read this before?
Perhaps because I have always associated it with the stage and film musicals titled, variously, I am a Camera and Cabaret (cue Liza Minnelli) which were inspired by the book, or rather by one episode early on featuring teenage not-very-good nightclub singer Sally Bowles and her apparent intention of sleeping with every man she comes across whom she thinks might possibly become a permanent patron.
But this book goes far beyond the tale of Sally Bowles, memorable though she is with her young-old jaded naivety and her chipped green nail polish and her heart-rending abortion scene.
Christopher Isherwood has fictionalized his own experience as an aspiring writer in 1930s’ Germany, where he made a sketchy sort of living teaching English to respectable young ladies while spending his free time hanging out with (and observing and recording the goings-on of) the artsy crowd and the cabaret performers and patrons of Berlin’s hectically gay (in every sense of both words) theatre and entertainment district.
Goodbye to Berlin is superbly written, deeply melancholy at its core, and only occasionally sexy. It’s a rather cerebral thing, thoughtful as well as charming and deeply disturbing, picturing as it does Berlin between the wars and the numerous characters doomed to all sorts of sad fates – at their own hands as much as through falling afoul of the Nazi street patrollers.
Am I making Goodbye to Berlin seem gloomy? I hope not, because it isn’t. It is poignant, it is funny, it is occasionally tragic, but it is never dull, never gloomy. And Isherwood’s Sally Bowles – who is really something of a bit player in Goodbye to Berlin, appearing only in one episode of these linked vignettes – is a much different creature than that portrayed on stage and film.
The internet is seething with reviews of Goodbye to Berlin, if this very meager description makes you curious for more.
Christopher Isherwood, I apologize for my previous neglect. And I’m going to read much more by you in the future. This was excellent.
A must-read.
(Says me.)
My rating: 7.5/10
My feeling after reading: Conflicted
I had such high hopes for this novel, and for the most part they were met, but there was just a little something that didn’t sit quite right. Perhaps it was the ending, which I will not foreclose, merely to say that I thought the author could have held back the final episode which provides “proof” of the identity/non-identity of the lost child. It felt superfluous, as if Laski did not trust the reader decide for oneself what the “truth” was. Or, perhaps, to go forward not quite sure of that identity. Knowing one way or the other changed everything, to me, and oddly lessened the impact of what had gone on before.
Most mysterious I am sure this musing seems to those of you who have not already read this novel; those who have will know what I am going on about.
In the early days of World War II a British officer marries a Frenchwoman. A child is born, the Englishman must leave; the child and his mother stay in France. In 1942 the child’s mother, who is working with the Resistance, is killed by the Gestapo. The child is supposed to have been taken to safety by another young woman; on Christmas Day of 1943 the father learns that his son has been somehow lost; no one knows where the baby has been taken.
In 1945, with the war finally over, the father returns to France to seek out his child, whom he remembers only as a newborn infant. A child has been located who may be the lost John – “Jean” – but how can one be sure?
Well written, with nicely-maintained suspense and enough verisimilitude in the reactions of would-be father and might-be son to keep one fully engaged. I will need to re-read this one; perhaps I will come to feel that the author’s approach to the ending is artistically good, though my response this first time round was wary.
Interesting review here, at Stuck-in-a-Book; be sure to read the comments. No spoilers, which is beautifully courteous of everyone. 🙂 I must admit that my own easily-suppressed tears were those of annoyance at the last few lines, as I thought they weakened what had gone before.
But on the other hand…
You will just have to read it for yourself. And you really don’t want to know the ending before you read it; the suspense is what makes this one work so well.
Read Full Post »