Tag Archives: Daphne du Maurier

Recommended Spring Reads:  Daphne du Maurier’s “The Parasites” & Maria Semple’s “Go Gentle”

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.

Daphne du Maurier’s “The Birds” vs.  Frank Baker’s Novel, “The Birds”

“The Birds” is included in this new collection of Daphne du Maurier’s short stories.

I am halfway through After Midnight, a new collection of Daphne du Maurier’s short stories, and, as always, I am struck by her story “The Birds.” And so I am reposting my essay comparing her short story “The Birds” (1952) to Frank Baker’s novel, The Birds (1936).

But first I want to make myself clear about what spoils this particular edition of du Maurier’s short fiction for me. The answer is: Stephen King’s preface, which is titled “An Appreciation.” He writes, “Every story here possesses the gotta, meaning you gotta keep going.” And this makes me wonder if the target audience is young readers of science fiction and horror rather than adult fans of du Maurier’s flexibility in different genres.

Personally, I think someone like Lucy Scholes, an English critic who specializes in 20th-century women’s literature, or the American writer Leslie Jamison, who has written a brilliant introduction to Jeany Rhys’s Good Morning, Midnight, would have dealt with these stories in a way that is meaningful to women readers. And let’s face it, most of du Maurier’s fans are women.

My post below originally was published at Thornfield Hall on March 12, 2024

The Birds is one of Alfred Hitchcock’s eeriest movies.  I was terrified when I saw it on TV,  and in a theater it might have utterly overwhelmed me.  In this apocalyptic movie, flocks of birds of all kinds and sizes swoop into a small town in California and attack the residents.  The birds fight with wings, beaks, and claws and kill when they can.

The movie begins innocuously enough.  In the opening scene Rod Taylor buys a pair of lovebirds for his niece’s birthday and flirts with gorgeous Tippi Hedron in the shop.  Then he drives to a small town in California, presents the lovebirds to his niece, and suddenly seagulls attack the birthday party.  In the days to come,  hundreds (thousands?) of birds line up on telephone wires, trees, and roofs.  They watch, then attack, and eventually kill the schoolteacher (Suzanne Pleshette). Rod Taylor  boards up the windows and doors of his family’s house, but the birds peck and claw their way and burst through a window.  Rod Taylor saves Tippi Hedron (who is staying with them for some reason) from the birds in her bedroom.  She is, after all, the prettiest blond woman in the film and must be saved– while Suzanne Pleshette, a pretty brunette – but blond trumps brunette – is killed off. 

But what set the birds off?  Nobody knows.

Hitchcock’s movie is based loosely on Daphne du Maurier’s macabre 1952 short story, “The Birds.”  Her suspenseful short story  is well -plotted, though it certainly is not in the class of “Don’t Look Now,” another of her stories that inspired a movie. Set in the countryside near the sea, the story focuses on Ned Hocken, a war veteran with a disability who is a farm worker: he must save his family from the invasion of the birds.  They attack people at random: he finds two friends dead on the farm. He boards up the windows, the doors, and the chimney. There is no radio after a few days, and they huddle in the kitchen. Before the radio dies, they learn that London has been attacked, and everyone has been ordered to stay indoors.  How long the Hochens will survive, or if they can survive, is not revealed.  They huddle in the kitchen, listening to the birds tapping.

The tapping began at the windows, at the door. The rustling, the jostling, the pushing for position on the sills. The first thud of the suicide gulls upon the step. – Daphne du Maurier’s “The Birds”

Here’s what you may not know:  the English writer Frank Baker wrote a novel called The Birds published in 1936.  Reading his novel and  du Maurier’s story back to back, I concluded that du Maurier’s version may have been a case of mild plagiarism.  She  tells the story from a different angle, and sets it in in the country rather than London, so the birds’ invasion is analyzed from a different perspective.  Instead of describing the chaos created by murderous birds in a city, she deals with the issue of the survival of one family.   I doubt, however, that she  independently came up with a premise so similar to that of Baker’s.  And yet the two versions are very different – different enough that no one noticed.

Frank Baker’s novel is more complex than du Maurier’s short story.  It does, alas, get off to a slow start, beginning with the reminiscences of an 85-year-old man who is dictating his memoir to his daughter.   The Elder (as he refers to himself), his wife Olga, and his mother escaped from the invasion of the birds in London decades ago and live quietly and happily on a farm in Wales with their children and grandchildren.  He briefly revisits London in old age but is so dismayed by the ruins and collapse of civilization that he turns around almost immediately and goes home. 

 The novel does not really begin till page 10.  “ In that old life before the birds came, I was a marine insurance clerk.”  (Baker, too, was an insurance clerk.) The character of the youthful narrator is remiciniscent of Arnold Bennett’s  clumsy, earnest young protagonists.   One thinks of Edwin Clayhanger in Clayhanger:  he is coerced to work in the family pottery business but longs to become an architect and spends hours at night making blueprints.. 

Frank Baker’s narrator, a young, discontented man, is unhappy in his work but of course he must make money. He writes poetry in his spare time (sometimes on the job) and alienates the Underwriter, the head of the firm.

I love descriptions of the workplace:  he spends hours copying pointless documents into a ledger that no one will ever look at again. Eventually it will be stored in the basement with thousands of other ledgers. When he realizes that no one consults the ledgers, he begins to copy only part of each document and even mischievously burns some of the ancient ledgers.  He also spends a great deal of time fantasizing about various women and men while he is copying documents.  (Baker is open in his discussion of bisexuality.)

And then the birds come to Trafalgar Square during a drought. An old woman tries to feed them:   a bird attacks her and follows her into the underground, where she is pecked to death in a phone booth.  It turns out she was not a nice old woman who fed the birds but a procurer.  The birds kill many people: some are simply in the way, others seem to be killed because of some fault. 

The birds get scarier as time goes on. Sometimes a single bird detaches itself from the flock and follows one person everywhere, even tapping at the person’s windows at night.  This happens first to the narrator’s mother, then to him. It is terrifying and embarrassing. When the narrator meets Olga, a Russian immigrant , she explains that she had been followed by a bird, too, but you can get rid of the shadow bird if you look at it, let it do what it wants, and don’t show fear.   

Without the assistance of the outsider (Olga, the immigrant), he would not have survived. The birds ignore him after this, but when he attends a service at St. Paul’s, the birds swoop in and kill some of the panicked people; others are trampled to death. And, much to his horror, he meets the devil, whom the birds also leave alone.

In this strange novel, which is a none-too-cozy “cozy catastrophe,” the birds represent something metaphysical -and the narrator’s metaphysical theories add to the strangeness of the invasion of the birds. But if you tire of Baker’s philosophizing, read the book as the straightforward dystopian novel it is, with only dashes here and there of Milton – and the novel is of special interest because of Hitchcock’s film.

The birds now seldom appeared over the City in great massed swarms such as had first been their habit. The scene in Trafalgar Square was never repeated. It was now their pleasure to fly about in smaller groups of, perhaps five or six hundred. They no longer disappeared into the sky; they were always about us – chattering, croaking, screaming…. They took evident delight in disfiguring our most important buildings with their offal. – Frank Baker’s “The Birds”

Halloween for the Frightened:  Daphne du Maurier’s “After Midnight: Thirteen Tales for the Dark Hours”

THE BEST BOOK TO READ THIS HALLOWE’EN

Hallowe’en used to last one day: now it is a two-month celebration of corn syrup and horror. The candy corn appears in August.  The Halloween cards soon follow. As for pumpkin spice lattes, I say, “Don’t.”

I admit I am frightened of some of the more graphic decorations. I like the green-skinned Elphaba witches, the inflatable black cats, and the plastic gravestones. But I do draw the line at the 12-ft.-tall skeleton that has not been taken down since September 2024! Perhaps the house is haunted. That’s the only explanation.

So you may wonder:  what does a person scared of plastic skeletons do for Halloween?  Naturally, I read Daphne du Maurier’s classic tales.

Daphne du Maurier’s After Midnight: Thirteen Tales for the Dark Hours is a fascinating collection of her tales, with an introduction by Stephen King.  This stunning hardback was published in September, and it is one of my favorite books of the year.

Two of her most famous stories, “The Birds” and “Don’t Look Now,” were the inspiration for movies. The former is terrifying, the latter a tragedy. In “The Birds,” the avians seem determined to kill off the human race, and the jackdaws and seagulls are the first attackers. A family tries to defend itself, but things look grim. Alfred Hitchcock’s movie approaches it a bit differently, but is true to the spirit.

In “Don’t Look Now,” a couple go to Venice hoping to distract themselves from the horror of their little girl’s death. This story unfolds as a tragedy about what happens if you refuse to believe in psychic phenomena.  The movie Don’t Look Now is also brilliant, but so sad and horrifying that I haven’t returned to it.

I ration myself to one of these stories a day, because I need to look at what lurks beneath the terror, what it says about human fallacy, carelessness, and sometimes malice.  One of her best stories, “The Blue Lenses,” could be designated either as “horror” or “fantasy.”  It is the story of a woman who, after an eye operation, is fitted with blue lenses. What she sees will haunt you. 

I came upon this collection by chance, as so often happens with books. In addition to the two stories I described above, the book includes “The Alibi,” “The Apple Tree,“Monte Verita,” “The Pool,” “The Doll,” “Ganymede,”“Leading Lady,”  “Not After Midnight,” “Split Second,” and “The Breakthrough.”

 I have savored Du Maurier’s novels in the past: now for the short stories.  Yes, we can read ghost stories by E. F. Benson and M. R. James, but it is the world of Daphne du Maurier that resonates with me.

Against Anxiety: Beat Your Reading Slump with Three Fun Tomes

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.

Here’s what we know:  honey,  you’re not in a reading slump.  You are (a) lazy, (b) anxious and depressed, or (c) having a full-fledged nervous breakdown.  The reading slump is not in the DSM!

At the hospital I don’t read Proust.  I sit beside my husband’s bed, trying to persuade him to sit on it. He is on the floor picking up the phone charger he dropped.   And he wants to go to the Starbucks down the hall, though his robe is untied–he can’t use one of his arms–and he has no money.  I rush out and stand in a long, long line to get us coffee and tea.  When I get back, he’s pacing.

It is hard to get much reading done, period, because people are in and out of the hospital room.  Blood pressure, menus, the whole bit.  Between trying to get him to take it easy and my own selfish existential crisis (I never knew his existence was fragile!),  I metaphorically chewed my fingernails,

He’s almost cured–a few more weeks, they think–and now everything is back to normal.  But I’ve done a lot of escape readings, and here are three fun books to help you beat anxiety, though I shall never call it a reading slump!

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).