Peter Cameron's Blog

May 10, 2024

Eleanor by Julian Fane (Constable, 1993)
 
Eleanor is a c...

Eleanor by Julian Fane (Constable, 1993)


 


Eleanor is a curious novel that chronicles the early life of its heroine, Eleanor Carty, who is born illegitimate in 1905 and raised by two spinster sisters who run a home for children born out of wedlock in a London suburb.  She grows into a beautiful young woman and talented pianist, and at 17 makes a disastrous marriage to David Ashken, a brilliant but brutal violinist.  She manages to escape from his abuse and eventually divorce him, and moves to America, where she becomes an actress in touring companies of Broadway plays.  But after a few years the death of one of her Auntys returns her to London, where she falls in love with a handsome and talented actor who is unfortunately 35 years older than she -- an age difference that forces him to leave her.  Heartbroken, she once again moves to America, this time living in Santa Barbara in a cottage on the estate of Virginia Heim, a millionaire heiress, who is kind and affectionate and sponsors Eleanor as she resumes her study of the piano, which leads to a career of being two of a four-handed piano duo.  She is courted by a beautiful Scottish nobleman who she does not love but marries for security and returns with him to England.


Eleanor is an appealing creation: beautiful, talented, intelligent, honest, independent, strong-willed.  Her story is interesting and original and Fane's writing is succinct and elegant.  It reminded me a little bit of Penelope Gilliat's oddly brilliant and unusual books.  I'd like to learn more about Fane, and read more of his work.  I remember loving his first book, Morning, an incandescent memoir about early childhood.


 


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Published on May 10, 2024 16:43

*Ron by Carl Tiktin (Arbor House, 1979)
 
Ron Starr (nee ...

*Ron by Carl Tiktin (Arbor House, 1979)


 


Ron Starr (nee Stansky -- his Jewish father changed the name for "professional" reasons) grows up in a sort of fake Leave-It-To-Beaver home in upstate New York in the 1950s.  His father is an ineffectual and defeated lawyer, his mother is a pretentious hysteric, and both and his older brother, Lenny, are homosexual.


Lenny, who is dark and semitic, is less able, or interested, in hiding his sexuality and is banished from the family when he's discovered having sex with his high school friend.  Ron, a golden boy, learning the value of discretion, keeps his queerness hidden.  In college he discovers an interest and ability in playwrighting and moves to New York City, where he falls in with a bohemian theater crowd.  But his play gets worse and worse the more he rewrites it, and he finally gives up on his dream of Broadway fame and fortune.  He begins selling life insurance, which, thanks to his confidence and charm, he excels at, and is soon managing a team of salesmen, married to a secretary, and the father of a daughter.


But of course his homosexual urges persist and he soon sets up a young lover in a Greenwich Village apartment where he spends about half his time.  He begins drinking and misbehaving in various ways that threaten his career and his marriage, but when he is offered a promotion to management he cannot resist the lures and comforts of a straight life and renounces. his true nature.


Ron is crudely conceived and written but does afford an interesting and entertaining, if skewed, look at midcentury queer life in middle America.


 

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Published on May 10, 2024 16:26

Mrs. Panopoulis by Jon Godden (Knopf, 1959)
 
A beautiful...

Mrs. Panopoulis by Jon Godden (Knopf, 1959)


 


A beautiful, devastating short novel by an author I increasingly admire.


[image error]Isa Panopoulis is a wealthy, beautiful, supremely elegant and twice-married (and twice-widowed) elderly Englishwoman traveling with her companion and heir, her niece Flora, in Africa.


The entire novel takes place on a single day when the ship they are cruising on stops at an island off the coast of Portuguese East Africa (Mozambique).  Isa and Flora go ashore along with Martin, a kind but penniless English young man who is returning to his struggling farm in the interior, and Humphrey Arbuthnot, a middle-aged English gentleman who knew and admired Mrs. Panopoulis when they were both younger.


Mrs. Panopoulis' heart is failing; the heat onshore is debilitatingly and she grows progressively weaker during the long tiring day.  But she succeeds in her secret mission to arrange an engagement between Martin and Flora, thus guaranteeing Flora's happiness and future.  It's a generous act that concludes her mostly selfish and trivial life, and Godden's honest depiction of the flawed yet charming Mrs. Panopoulis is engaging and admirable.  It's unusual to encounter an elderly character who, though failing physically, is nevertheless bracingly autonomous.


A gentle, yet surprisingly prickly and affecting book, beautifully written.  And in a gorgeously-produced Knopf edition with a stunning jacket and design by George Salter.


 

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Published on May 10, 2024 16:10

March 28, 2024

The Sheltered Life by Ellen Glasgow (Doubleday Doran, 193...

The Sheltered Life by Ellen Glasgow (Doubleday Doran, 1932)


 


I had vaguely heard of this author but didn't know much about her life and work.  I read about The Sheltered Life somewhere -- I think on a blog about books written by women -- and have had it on my shelf for a couple of years.  I'm glad I read it, for it's a beautifully written book about a well-off and socially prominent family living in Virginia (Richmond, I think, although it is called Queensbury in the book) in the first two decades of the twentieth century.


The first part is set in 1906, and after a short impressionistic interlude, the third part is set in 1916. In this formal way, as well as other stylistic and texturous ways, the book resembles Woolf's To the Lighthouse.  Both books are sharply bifurcated by time and follow the internal lives of many characters within a family and small community of friends.  And Glasgow's assured, intelligent, and lyrical writing often reminded me of Woolf's.



[image error]At the heart of The Sheltered Life is a tragic romance between a young girl and an older man.  Jenny Blair Archbald is 9 years old in the first section and about to turn 18 in the third; as both a young girl and as a young woman she has been powerfully charmed by George Songbird, a handsome neighbor who is married to Eva Birdsong.  Eva is a beautiful and charismatic women whom everyone adores, including George, although that does not stop him from being chronically unfaithful and thereby destroying the woman he so dearly loves.  Eva Birdsong is a  wonderful character -- a supreme creation.  Jenny Blair, along with her grandfather, her widowed mother, and her two aunts, who all live together down the street from the Birdsongs in a once-genteel but quickly fading neighborhood, observe the disintegration of the Birdsongs' marriage, and Jennie Blair's flirtatious infatuation with George, which he is unable to resist, hastens its tragic demise.


The rapidly changing world of the South, becoming less  genteel and stratified in the wake of the Civil War and the advent of the Industrial Revolution, is deftly suggested throughout the book.  Glasgow creates a world that is richly detailed and sensually evoked.  The book is longer than it needs to be and would have benefitted by a tighter editorial vision, but it's a rich and complex novel of wisdom and compassion.  I'm not surprised that Glasgow, a very fine writer, would go on to win the Pulitzer Prize in 1941 for her novel In This Our Life.


 


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Ellen Glasgow's house in Richmond, Virginia

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Published on March 28, 2024 12:58

March 27, 2024

*Helmet of Flesh by Scott Symons (Dutton/NAL, 1986)
 
Pe...

*Helmet of Flesh by Scott Symons (Dutton/NAL, 1986)


 


[image error]People (or at least people in books I read) seem to go to Morocco to misbehave and/or fall apart, and York, the Canadian hero of this book, does both.  He leaves his partner John and their quiet life in a village in Newfoundland and travels to Marrakesh, where he falls in with a very gay and dissolute group of expatriots and visitors who are taking full advantage of the readily available men and boys offering (or selling) themselves for sex.  York makes a dangerous and debauched journey out over the Atlas Mountains into the Sahara, which ends in Suddenly-Last-Summer violence and mystery.  Back in Marrakesh, York takes shelter in a queer hotel populated exclusively, it seems, by eccentrics and degenerates, has a scary visit to a sadistic sheik's isolated castle, and pursues an affair with a  decent and beautiful young Moroccan man, who he heartlessly (yet somehow poignantly) abandons when he decides to return to Canada.


Symon's writing is ambitious and intelligent, if sometimes chaotic and puzzling, but his imagistic and impressionistic prose hits more often than it misses.  This book doesn't quite hang together or amount to anything entire, and includes a fairly dreadful flashback to York's life back in quaint Newfoundland, but it's filled with captivating scenes and amusing and engaging characters,

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Published on March 27, 2024 14:33

*Happy Trails by Adam Shand Kydd (Heinemann, 1984)
 
I m...

*Happy Trails by Adam Shand Kydd (Heinemann, 1984)


 


[image error]I made it 2/3 of the way through this intentionally silly novel, a far-fetched thriller/adventure story about two middle-aged gay men.   Bizarre (and unbelievable) circumstances thrust them out of their quiet life in a village rectory into the world of decadent nightclubs and international terrorists.  The writing is breezy but it lacks the brilliant British zaniness to allow it to levitate and consistently entertain -- thus my premature exit.


 

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Published on March 27, 2024 14:04

*The New Life by Tom Crewe (Scribner, 2023)
 
This is a ...

*The New Life by Tom Crewe (Scribner, 2023)


 


[image error]This is a novel based upon the lives of Havelock Ellis and John Addington Symonds, two Victorian men who collaborated on the book Sexual Inversion, which attempted to destigmatize and decriminalize male homosexuality by placing it in a historical context and detailing case histories of homosexual men.  Addington is a homosexual who has married and produced three daughters and hides behind this shield of heteronormative domesticity, destroying both himself and his long-suffering wife in the process.  Ellis, who seems to be only sexually excited by women urinating, is married to a lesbian writer and feminist, who is living with her female lover.  Theirs is not a happy marriage.


The novel, which follows the two men in alternating chapters, is set in the few years the men spend collaborating on the book and the few years after it is published in the wake of the Oscar Wilde scandal.  A bookseller is arrested for selling the "obscene" book, and the resulting court case destroys both men and their marriages.


The book is cleverly conceived and vividly imagined.  I read it with much pleasure and engagement, although I found much of the writing oddly inexact and estranging, as if Crewe was trying to be inventive and poetic and more often than not failing.  A less ambitious, more straight- (no pun intended) forward style would have made the book even more affecting and effective.


 




 


 

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Published on March 27, 2024 13:39

March 12, 2024

*The Northern Clemency by Philip Hensher (Knopf, 2008)
 
...

*The Northern Clemency by Philip Hensher (Knopf, 2008)


 


[image error]I had read and enjoyed King of the Badgers (another inscrutable title) by Hensher many years ago, and remember thinking that it was amusing and somewhat diffuse and inconsequential.  I felt much the same about The Northern Clemency.


Like King of the Badgers, The Northern Clemency is a big book (600 pages), a saga that follows two families in Sheffield from the late 70s into the late 90s, in jumps of five to ten years, chronicling the lives of all the family members, particularly the wives/mothers and the children (one family has 3 children, the other has 2).  It touches rather obliquely on socio-political issues like the miner's strike and the rise of Margaret Thatcher, but politics is always subverted to the exigencies of the character's personal life.


While evoked in great and authentic detail, none of the lives are particularly unique or interesting.  Hensher writes adroitly about everyday life and minor disturbances, and the stakes and subsequent drama seem rather low for a novel of this scope.  I read it with flagging enthusiasm, and while I think Hensher is accomplished, I don't think his novels are brilliant or noteworthy (that is an observation more than a criticism, for I did enjoy reading this book and felt sympathetically engaged with its world and its characters).

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Published on March 12, 2024 14:08

Bring Home the Bride by Gale Wilhelm (Morrow, 1961)
 
Ano...

Bring Home the Bride by Gale Wilhelm (Morrow, 1961)


 


Another beautifully etched book by this extraordinary and sadly forgotten author, who writes in a brilliantly honed and elegantly succinct style about how people relate to one another and the world around them.


Carol is a a young, beautiful, and wealthy woman -- she is independent, spirited, sexually experienced and effortlessly charismatic.  While vacationing with her disengaged mother at a mountain hotel in what appears to be the Pacific Northwest, she meets a beautiful young man named Hans who lives in a house he has built for himself on a large compound owned by his father, a famous playwright with whom Carol had a brief affair a year or so before.


[image error]Carol and Hans fall immediately and completely (and completely convincingly) in love and get married, and begin living together in Hans' chalet-like house in an idyllic setting.  But secrets from both their pasts (SPOILERS) -- Carol's affair with Hans' father and the potentially dangerous genetic nature of Hans' mother's mental illness -- encroach upon their edenic solitude with eventual tragic results.


Bring Home the Bride is a masterful example of a short novel.  Wilhelm imbues her characters -- through their speech, their actions, and their internal monologues -- with exact and vivid life.  She writes so perfectly and tersely that the book has an authenticity and incandescence that is invigorating and exciting.  Her prose seems to be mentholated and gives the reader (me) a rush.


A rare, curious, perfect book.


Note: it's interesting to me that Wilhelm's books -- published by Knopf and Morrow -- were gorgeously and expensively produced.  These publishers must have known how special Wilhelm's books were, and obviously strove to present them to readers in the most beautiful and sumptuous way. 


 


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Published on March 12, 2024 13:53

March 11, 2024

*At the Cross by Jon Rose (Andre Deutsch, 1961)
 
A memo...

*At the Cross by Jon Rose (Andre Deutsch, 1961)


 


[image error]A memoir by this fine writer about two years he spent in Sydney's bohemian ghetto when he was 16 and 17.  Jon Rose leaves his unloving and thwarting family in Melbourne at the tender age of 16 and travels with a couple -- a man and a woman who both are (sexually) interested in him -- to the "Cross," an enclave in Sydney that is home to artists, homosexuals, and other outliers.  Jon quickly moves in with Bella, a middle-aged prostitute, who guides him with kindness and wisdom through the complicated and sometimes dangerous world of the Cross.  Jon meets and befriends a wonderful gallery of eccentric and vividly drawn characters, and learns a lot about life and love before being drafted into the army at the age of 18, in the midst of WWII.


Rose's writing isn't as luminous as in Peppercorn Days, but it is wonderfully engaging and vivid.  Like Denton Welch, Jon Rose was a vulnerable young man with an amazing sense of empathy for both objects and animals.  He's less adept at understanding people than Welch, but his experiences related in this book move him towards a more mature understanding of human nature.


This is a funny, wise, heartbreaking book -- a brilliant depiction of a rare young individual growing into himself in a long-lost but memorable time and place.

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Published on March 11, 2024 21:25

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