regshoe: A stack of brightly-coloured old books (Stack of books)
First, a couple of D. K. Broster fandom things, thanks to [personal profile] theseatheseatheopensea: Flight of the Heron is now available as a pdf on archive.org; and here is another photograph of Broster herself, in academic dress and accompanied by a little magazine bio that must have been written while she was working on FotH!

According to Gibson by Denis Mackail (1923). A loose series of comic stories which Mackail narrates in character as himself, recording the absurd but entertaining tall tales told to him by Gibson, a mysterious eccentric from his club. The stories themselves feature ghosts, improbable scientific developments, political intrigue and various involved and contradictory backstories for Gibson himself, about whom Mackail's fictional persona eventually discovers a little more of the truth... The stories were good fun—the style and sense of humour are very much reminiscent of P. G. Wodehouse—but nowhere near as good as Greenery Street, which was a bit of a disappointment.

Afoot in England by W. H. Hudson (1909). More lovely nature/travel writing—this one is about Hudson's various adventures travelling around England (by which he, as so often in literature, means the south of England) on foot and by bicycle, staying in remote villages and famous cities, observing both the natural world and the people he meets and writing about it all in beautiful detail. There are various interesting local places, the Roman ruins at Silchester (I recognised the name Calleva from Rosemary Sutcliff!), watching the midsummer sunrise at Stonehenge, more on the avian residents of Salisbury Cathedral and lots more, all illustrated with some absolutely gorgeous descriptive writing and enlivened by Hudson's sometimes slightly odd but usually interesting opinions. (I've just learnt from his Wikipedia page that he was a supporter of Lamarckian evolution—still within the bounds of scientific respectability at this time, but it's still somehow funny to think of it overlapping with the beginnings of the modern conservation movement).

Regiment of Women by Clemence Dane (1917). Well, this is something of a book! It's set at a girls' school and deals with the relationship between two teachers: Clare Hartill, the de facto head of the school who rules with a sort of domineering manipulativeness and is widely adored by the girls, and Alwynne Durand, a new and very young mistress who quickly becomes a favourite with the girls and best friends with Clare. (I shipped it from the omelette onwards, of course). Also important is the relationship between Clare and one of her protégés, the thirteen-year-old and academically brilliant Louise Denny, whom we see struggling with the standard of work in the higher form into which Clare has promoted her alongside a difficult and unhappy home life. It all ends badly. That Clare and Alwynne's relationship is a lesbian one is never stated in so many words, but is almost kind of taken for granted by the book—others characters talk about how Alwynne is acting as though she was in love, how obviously Clare is incompatible with the idea of marriage for Alwynne, and so on. Apparently this book inspired The Well of Loneliness, and I can definitely see the resemblance, in the ideas about what lesbians are and how relationships between women work, and in the shape of the ending. This book has a really, really bad ending. A rant about the really, really bad ending ) It was still worth reading! Interesting historically as well as in the intrigue at the school—there are some great moments of characters trying to manipulate each other at cross purposes and totally misunderstanding each other's intentions, very darkly funny. Also, poor Louise. :(
regshoe: A row of old books in a wooden bookshelf (Bookshelf)
Trying to distract myself from an attack of unreasonable sentimental nostalgia for last year by writing about the last few books I've read, all from the early twentieth century this time.

The Crowded Street by Winifred Holtby (1925) . I read South Riding, Holtby's best-known work, a few years ago and thought it was very good indeed, so this was a good one to happen across at the library. It tells the story of Muriel Hammond, a young lady growing up in Yorkshire in the early years of the twentieth century who fails in the one great aim of a woman in her position—getting married—and the surroundings and consequences as this happens. The book does a good job of presenting the gradual development and slow unfolding of a story that isn't necessarily a single coherent narrative, and it felt very true to life in the amount of incidental detail it contains. The middle-to-late section of the book, in which Muriel finally starts to find something positive in life, was a bit of a disappointment because just when things are getting really interesting the narrative pulls back and refuses to describe anything in detail, letting Muriel's development from that point onwards be implied and inferred from the final chapter rather than seen directly. However, I think it would be a mistake to assume that the decision to focus on the earlier events—the restriction, the social shame, the gradual all-consuming suffocation, etc., all portrayed in incisive detail—wasn't deliberate. The story of Muriel's adventures in London would make a great book, but it's not this book. And the ending! I can't count how many books I've read and wished in vain they might have the ending that this book actually has. I felt very validated.

Garthowen by Allen Raine (1900). Subtitled 'The Story of a Welsh Homestead', which about sums it up: various family relationships, moral dilemmas, and social and economic pressures play out against the backdrop of a farm on the coast of Ceredigion. The old farmer, Ebben Owens, a Methodist, feels simultaneously proud of and abandoned by his son Will's ambition to become an Anglican clergyman; meanwhile his other son Gethin returns to the farm from years spent at sea after he ran away; the free-spirited shepherdess/milkmaid Morva is torn between a promise of marriage to Will and her feelings for Gethin; and Ann, the daughter of the house, marries her sweetheart and settles down at the farm without getting into any drama at all. It's an enjoyable read: the sense of place and descriptions of scenery are lovely, and I appreciated the historical detail for a context I'm not very familiar with (I've read quite a few Victorian English books and a handful of later Welsh ones, but I think this is the first book I've read set in Victorian Wales), although there were a few things I would have liked the narrative to elaborate on a bit more—particularly Will and Gwenda's relationship, with the implication that she, a secure member of the upper classes, isn't ashamed by Will's background and is going to try and moderate his social-climbing tendencies.

Greenery Street by Denis Mackail (1925). The semi-autobiographical story of the first year of marriage for a young upper-middle-class London couple, told through the personification of the ideal street and house that form its setting. (Semi-autobiographical enough that the house can be identified—here it is). Ian and Felicity Foster navigate the perils of housekeeping and City work, arranging and decorating their new home, financial difficulties, servant trouble, neighbour trouble, problems in the extended family, etc., all while working out the new shape and development of their own relationship. The tone throughout is a sort of wryly affectionate gentle parody, and Mackail has a brilliant turn of phrase and eye for the sort of bizarrely spot-on descriptions that make this style of writing work really well—the introduction mentions that P. G. Wodehouse admired his style, and I can see why. Overall, very enjoyable, for the pitch-perfect comedy, for more interesting historical details (including the charmingly quaint idea that the house pictured is unmanageably small for a family of more than three...!) and for the warm sympathy and affection the author so obviously has for his characters. I'll definitely try and find more of Mackail's books in future.

May 2025

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