I am cured! Light reading will save your life. Mind you, these are literary light reads. Over the weekend I read David Lodge’s comic novel The British Museum Is Falling Down, and then I turned to Caroline’s Daughters, a brilliant, entertaining novel by Alice Adams.
Adams’s Caroline’s Daughters is one of my favorites, a family saga I find unputdownable. Caroline, age 65, wants some distance from her five daughters, one in her 40s, three in their thirties, and the youngest in her twenties. Adams deftly switches the women’s point-of-views from chapter to chapter: some of the sisters look and sound alike, but they have little in common except innate sexiness. (Adams often uses the word “sexy,” and their sexual relationships are complicated.)
Caroline, who has been married thrice, and is finally happy in her third marriage, would love to hear less about her daughters’ lives. At the beginning of the novel, she and Ralph have returned to San Francisco after five years in Portugal–a kind of sabbatical to get away from the family. Once they are home, the family is reunited by a web of friendship, gossip, rivalry, and near-incestous relationships with each other’s men. It wearies Caroline, who just wants to work in her garden, but she continues to nurture.
Fiona, a restaurant owner in her thirties, is restless and angry as she watches the popularity of her restaurant fade and has no meaningful relationship with a man. Jill, 31, is a greedy lawyer-stockbroker with a secret; Liza, 35, is happily married to a psychiatrist and sexually satisfied, but is also a bored mother of three children who wants time to write. Portia, the youngest, is a bit of an oddball, who house-sits for a living.
This would be the stuff of soap opera in lesser hands, but Adams makes it believable, and, in fact you may recognize some of these problems if you are in your thirties (a challenging time) or older (when it sometimes, though not always, gets better).
Gorgeous writing and mesmerizing plot–some characters are sympathetic, others are not, and you’ll love some, be appalled by others.
THE N.B. COLUMN. Last week I lamented the cancellation of the N.B. column by J.C. (James Campbell) at the TLS. It turns out that N.B. is still there, though by a new columnist, M.C. J.C. has an inimitable voice, but I also enjoyed M.C.’s column this week: he/she (I’m thinking she, but why?) talks about the Virginia Woolf newsletter, Bloomsbury, and reactions to the Booker Prize shortlist. J.C. wrote the N.B. column for 22 years.
AT THE BAFFLER, Michael Friedrich reviews two books about the meaning of the junk we collect”: Crap: A History of Cheap Stuff in America by Wendy A. Woolson, and Heart of Junk, a novel by Luke Geddes. Has anybody read either of these? I’m fascinated by junk and collections, and am thinking about trying one of these books.
According to the latest Private Eye – it doesn’t seem to be on its website yet – the TLS is suffering from a drastic cut in size and the number of employees under its new editor to save money , with James Campbell one of the victims.
Oh dear, I am sorry to hear that. Very demoralizing. I would imagine a lot of people read him, because he is also a great critic. I enjoyed his essay on The French Lieutenant’s Woman. Maybe he can collect his N.B. columns (or parts of them?) in a book?
His earlier books are listed here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Campbell_(author)
I use some of the same second-hand bookshops in west London and keep an eye out for him, but i was looking for a rather younger man!
Somehow the voices sound the same, regardless of age. Thanks for the list, and do tell me if you see him at the bookshops!
feel better soon
Thank you. I’m much better.
Hahaha, I love your remedies!
They’re guaranteed!