Everyone loves Daphne du Maurier’s Gothic novel, Rebecca. “Last night I dreamt I went to Manderley again,” the novel begins. I first read that sentence when a friend returned from a miserable archaeological dig and said Rebecca had kept her sane at night while her roommates played Mah Jong.

If you love Jane Eyre, you will love Rebecca. There is a mad wife in the attic in Jane Eyre; in Rebecca, it’s a contemptuous, unfaithful wife who taunts her husband and is killed. When The New Yorker published an essay about Rebecca, I realized that the feminist canon had expanded to include women’s novels formerly dismissed as pop fiction.

Rebecca may be du Maurier’s best book, but I prefer The Parasites (1949), a novel about three step-siblings who grow up in the theater. They have no fixed abode: they accompany Pappy, a famous singer, and Mama, a famous dancer, all over Europe and the U.S. And they don’t seem marred by the experience: on the contrary, they thrive on it.
Daphne du Maurier, the daughter of Sir Gerald du Maurier, a famous actor and manager, certainly knew the theater. And I am addicted to theater novels: I also recommend J. B. Priestley’s Lost Empires, Ferdia Lennon’s Dangerous Exploits, and Doris Langley Moore’s A Game of Snakes and Ladders. In The Parasites, two of the children, Maria and Niall, grow up to have careers in theater and music. Maria becomes a famous actress, Nial a popular songwriter, and poor Celia, who loves to draw, is stuck as the caregiver of their alcoholic Pappy. (Mama died in a tragic accident.)
But it’s not just the complicated relationships – and Maria’s and Niall’s is the most complex, being quasi-incestuous – but the narcissism, the selfishness, and the histrionics.
Take the opening of the novel, written in the first person plural. Du Maurier uses the first person plural at the beginning of several segments.
It was Charles who called us the parasites. The way he said it was surprising, and sudden; he was one of those quiet reserved sort of men, not given to talking much or stating his opinion, unless upon the most ordinary facts of day by day, so that his outburst…had the force of an explosion.
Are “we” indeed parasites? Much of this novel is comical – it is not a soap opera – but Charles doesn’t believe acting and song-writing are real work. Mind you, Maria is always acting, so one sees why he tires of it. In fact, she married Charles so she could be called the”Honorable”: she loves being an “Hon.” And Niall is a popular songwriter, whose career was boosted by his parents’ eccentric friend, Freada. At a posh school, the music teacher had said he had no talent. Running away from school (several times) turned out to be a wise decision.
Perhaps there is most hope for Celia, who, after years of looking after Pappy and being at Maria’s beck and call, achieves her own creative goal – and it is completely free of the theater.
A brilliant, flamboyant book. One of my best rereads this spring.

Maria Semple’s new novel, Go Gentle, is charming, funny, and a bit over-the-top. The heroine, Adora Hazzard, is the author of a best-selling book about stoicism and is leading the good life with her daughter and dog in a chic New York apartment. She has organized a whimsical “Coven” of single and divorced women who live on her floor of the apartment building: they save money by sharing a dog-walker, splitting packages of vegetables, and even save on ballet and theater tickets
But even if you quote Marcus Aurelius as you walk down the street, you will run into trouble eventually. She loves her work as a philosophy tutor to the sons of a wealthy philanthropist-art collector, but is haunted by an episode of sexual harassment that happened during her stint as a comedy writer in L.A.
At first I didn’t understand how this long episode fit in with the rest of the book. It almost seems like a self-contained novella. Around the turn of the century, Adora’s fellow TV comedy writers, all male, made a bet about how far one of them could sexually maul her during a meeting. The humiliation ends in her being fired, because the network didn’t want gossip or trouble, and she is given a huge sum of money in exchange for signing an NDA. And so she went back to school and got her Ph.D. in philosophy.
But it is a turning point for Adora. She reinvents herself as a philosopher. And, of course, we see that Semple can write seriously, just as Adora isn’t restricted to comedy.
Adora stoically understands that, statistically, she is unlikely to marry again. But when she meets a charming, handsome guy, we think we’re in for a romance. But there’s something wrong there, maybe…
And then the novel turns into a mystery, in which Adora tries to resolve her suspicion of an art theft, or similar crime, in her employer’s collection. S
Go Simple is a great read, if slightly baggy. Semple is a great comic writer, and this is by far her most complex novel.







In all probability, the “reading slump” was invented by a non-reader. “I can’t read Proust, baby; I’m in a reading slump.” Someone must have tweeted it, and then everybody had the syndrome. Pity the poor person with retro-major depression.
1. Daphne du Maurier’s The Parasites. Yes, du Maurier’s Rebecca is a classic, but The Parasites is almost equally brilliant. This fascinating story of three siblings, Maria, an actress, Niall, a songwriter, and mousy Celia, who has a talent for drawing, begins on a Sunday in the country when Maria’s husband explodes with rage and calls them parasites. As du Maurier tells the story of the tight-knit talented brother and half-sisters, who are the children of an actress and singer, we have our own opportunity to judge. Du Maurier narrates the novel in the first-person plural–and we never know quite who the “we” is!
2. Elizabeth Goudge’s The White Witch. Goudge’s writing is sometimes breathtaking, other times sentimental, and I love her vivid Dickensian characters. I recently reread The White Witch, a historical novel set in England in the 17th century, during the English civil war between Charles I and the Puritans. Most of the novel is set in a village temporarily left to its own peaceful ways since the not-very-bright Puritan convert Squire, Robert Haselwood, has gone to war. In the opening chapters, we meet his cousin Froniga, who is half-gypsy and a white witch with healing powers and benign spells; the Haselwood twins, Will, a very ordinary little boy, and his unusually percepitve sister, Jenny; Francis Leland, a traveling artist who paints the twins and is secretly one of the king’s men; Yoben, Froniga’s long-time boyfriend and a gypsy with a mysterious past; and the eccentric, very wise village priest, so kind he tries to help the black witch in the village, an evil soul who digs up graves and casts obscene spells. How will they all come together? This is not her absolute best, but I enjoyed it very much and some people love it.
3. Mary McCarthy’s Birds of America. This 1971 satire, set in New England, Paris, and Rome in the 1960s, skewers American innocence and hypocrisy, and I think it’s McCarthy’s best work. You don’t have to know about the 1960s to be amused by her mockery of frozen foods, a pious Thanksgiving abroad (which the hero calls “a harvest fest”), the faux-historicism of New England villages, and tourism in Europe (the protagonist thinks tourists should be licensed to go to art museums).