ORIEL MALET, Beginner’s Luck (1953)
I admit that girls' ballet novels are not exactly a central concern of mine on this blog. I don't think I've ever actually read one before (though, as luck would have it, I stumbled across a nice vintage copy of Rumer Godden's A Candle for St. Jude at Shakespeare & Company in Berkeley a while back, so it looks like I'll be reading another soon!).
But
Oriel Malet certainly fits the blog, and she's one of those writers about whose
novels not a lot of information is available online—at least apart from Marjory Fleming (1946), which has been
reprinted by Persephone. So when I came
across Beginner's Luck at the giant
book sale way back in April, I wavered for a moment and then tossed it in my basket. (I think it was the charming cover
illustration of two girls in tutus—who appear, to my eyes, to be doing the
robot dance rather than a pirouette?—that sealed the deal.)
Am I wrong, or are they doing the robot dance? |
With this limited experience, I might not be the best person to judge, but I found this to be an enjoyable enough but rather run-of-the-mill story. It deals with three children whose famous show business parents were killed in a train crash and who now live with their stodgy aunt and befuddled uncle. Jenny, James, and Victoria have been kept in ignorance of their parents' fame because Aunt Horatia's sensibilities are appalled by the mere suggestion of show biz folk and she wants to keep the children on the straight and narrow. Aunt Horatia's personality is perhaps symbolically summed up with Malet's description of her house:
Aunt Horatia’s house was newer than the cottages, and it was
rather like herself, a stiff, upright sort of house with a very neat garden
full of paths and little flower beds and trees clipped short all over, like
poodles. Inside there were quantities of
small tables standing on very polished floors and loaded with fans and
snuffboxes and all kinds of things which are very likely to tip over unless you
are careful.
Jenny,
who dreams of being a ballerina, has escaped until now her aunt's prohibition
on show business because a doctor suggested that dancing might help her health. But as
the novel opens Aunt Horatia has decided enough is enough and puts an end to
her dance classes. Oh, dear.
Fortunately,
as so often happens in children's books (and far too seldom happens in real
life in my own personal experience), a series of not-entirely-believable
coincidences result in the children being left entirely to their own devices
for weeks on end: Aunt Horatia is called away to Canada (where James hopes she'll
be chased by a herd of bison); the housekeeper, Mrs. Macdonald, quits in
outrage because Aunt Horatia has arranged for a governess for the children
without advance warning of the extra work involved; and finally, predictably,
the governess writes to say she must cancel the engagement.
The
children decide to use their unaccustomed freedom to track down a young maternal aunt, an actress in a repertory theatre in Brunsden. An equally liberal number of coincidences and
benevolent strangers move the plot along enjoyably enough, and it would be hard
to imagine a happy ending not following in their stead. In the meantime, James has adventures in a
hoity-toity modern art gallery and a bookstore that sounds like a dream come
true (with an owner who “is deaf, so he can’t hear what you say to him; he is
short-sighted, so he generally counts your change wrong; but he once shook
hands with Mr. Dickens, and some people think this is much more important than
their change”), which reveal his innate comic abilities; Jenny learns that
natural skill isn’t everything and dedication, work, and generosity have their
place; and it emerges that the ordinary Victoria may be more extraordinary than
expected.
As I
said, enjoyable enough. But Beginner's Luck is just a bit
blandly sweet for my taste—with little of the subversive sense of humor that has made
later (and even earlier) children's books so memorable and beloved. In fact, sadly little humor at all can be found here beyond a
rather obvious cutesy-ness and the occasional befuddlement of various adults
faced with the mild mischief of the children.
By the
way, the book's illustrations, by Fritz Wegner, are rather like the story
itself—perfectly appropriate and adequate, but lacking any extraordinary charm or
personality.
All of
which makes me feel like I'm being curmudgeonly, so I will conclude, as I usually try to do,
with one entertaining quotation, in which the children wrestle with adult
morality:
“Children are not allowed to gamble,” Emily said. “It would ruin our morals. Like reading
comics and going to the theater.”
“But we act in the
theater.”
“That’s all the worse for us.
We’re ruined already, then.”
“How interesting,” Jenny said.
“I don’t feel ruined a bit.”
“Perhaps not yet,” said Emily darkly. “It only shows when you
are grown-up. That’s why older people
are so often wicked and children never are.
Everybody knows that.”
“Emily,” Victoria
interrupted, opening her eyes wide, “I believe you are talking nonsense.”
And that's about as good as it gets…
DOROTHY EVELYN
SMITH, Lost Hill (1952)
Dorothy
Evelyn Smith is an intriguing writer.
A
while back, I wrote very enthusiastically about her 1959 novel Miss Plum and Miss Penny, which is now
one of my favorites—funny, dark, just edgy enough, and very perceptive about
both the darker side of character motivations and the ordinary side—the ways
people get stuck in their habits and routines and obsessive pursuits, for
example—the latter of which of course
I know nothing about…
So, I
promptly ordered two more of Smith's books, and enthusiastically dived into Lost Hill. Sadly, the enthusiasm died down a bit as I
read on.
The novel centers around Jenny Rowland, a well-off widow whose husband, George, was
generally unpleasant and is apparently missed by no one. As she is gradually reawakening from a kind
of numb misery and realizing her newfound freedom and wealth, a handsome Gypsy,
Gethin, arrives with a sick child, Clem, in tow and camps on her land. Around the same time, her handsome neighbor,
Tod, returns from war service.
The
triangular plot which develops is a sort of romantic melodrama—admittedly not
one of my favorite types of novel—with some requisite examples of rather
embarrassing prose, such as this passage from the perspective of Jenny's brazen housemaid, Iris, meeting Gethin for the first time:
Her eyes rested on him in frank desire. The black, wiry curls, the brown skin, the
eyes dark and unfathomable as the Tarn , the
grace of his thin, supple body. … The afternoon might be passed in a pleasanter
fashion than picking filthy bilberries.
In its
defense, however, Lost Hill does
contain some traces of the strengths of Smith's later book. Only a couple of pages after the above
gushiness, Smith comes up with this stronger bit of descriptive writing:
He flashed a sudden white smile at her and turned away. The cart’s wheels began to creak again. The pony tossed his head and the flies rose,
buzzing, and settled back, obscene and insatiable.
And although humor of the kind found in MPAMP is absent here, there are definite traces of a sharper, more ironic sensibility, as in the housekeeper's view of the dead:
The dough creaked and smacked in the earthenware bowl as the
brown, stick-like arms worked powerfully.
The old woman thought poorly of Mrs. George, as she had of George
himself when he was alive. She did not
approve of the living. The dead were
different. Virtue emanated from them
with their latest breath; hung mistily in the memory for evermore. Even Owd Missus, with whom she had waged
bitter warfare from the moment she entered her service, forty years back, had
now become a saint in her mind.
There
is, in all honesty, not a large number of these high points, but I do have to
say that I still found the book highly readable. Its most interesting element is perhaps
that, although it purports to be a romance, the real passion in the novel is in
Jenny's love for the little boy, Clem, who awakens what might be motherly instincts—or
might, indeed, be merely a more selfish need to be loved—or to steal his love
from Gethin. When Jenny contemplates a
lifetime of wandering with Gethin, her real priority is clear:
She gave her fancy full rein, whispering the name to herself,
watching her lips whisper it in the dim circle of the mirror. Gethin was a forest of whispering
leaves. A dark forest, full of unknown
paths and bottomless pools flecked with pale weed, stirred by secret slither of
unseen life. … And enchantment? Wasn’t
there supposed to be enchantment in forests?
If you were not alone in the forest, say, but held the warm, loving hand
of a little boy close in your hand?
Wouldn’t that be enchantment enough?...
But
Clem is not just the vulnerable (and initially very ill) little boy that she
imagines, and the conflicts all three of the main characters experience in
relation to him do provide some real depth of character. I'm not sure I can passionately recommend the
novel on that basis, but it's enough for me to retain my interest in
Smith. Could there be another Miss Plum and Miss Penny among her other
novels?
By the way, my copy of Lost Hill is a People's Book Club edition, which means that it has those nice illustrated endpapers that PBC often did so well. The ones here, by Barye W. Phillips, certainly fit the melodramatic tone of the novel, but are really rather nice nevertheless.
Endpapers of the People's Book Club edition of Lost Hill |
The
other title I picked up after reading MPAMP is The Lovely Day (1949), which appears to be less of a romance and
more of a comedy—though looks can be deceiving.
It seems to have gotten bumped down my "to read" list at the
moment, but I will definitely report on it here when I get to it.
Sadly,
Smith is one of the writers about whom information seems to be sparse. The bio on the back of my copy of Lost Hill says she was the daughter of a
Methodist minister, who began publishing stories as far back as World War I,
but didn't publish her first novel, O,
the Brave Music, until 1943. She was
married, and she and her husband lived in Essex . This, and the fact that she wrote about
eleven novels in all, the last in 1966, is the sum total of my knowledge about
Smith.
If
anyone has additional information about Smith, please do contact me!
HAZEL HOLT, Mrs.
Malory and the Silent Killer (2004)
No, I
am not planning to start reviewing contemporary cozy mysteries here—however
much I may enjoy one every now and again when it’s been a rough week and my
brain needs to rest. (And Hazel Holt is
certainly one of my go-to brain-rest therapists, and I do recommend her if you
enjoy getting cozy.)
Rather,
this is a sort of amusing followup to a comment I made off-hand in my original
Overwhelming List. I was writing about
Edith Olivier’s wonderful—if sadly little-read—novels, and I said:
In particular, The Seraphim Room (1932) (published
in the U.S. as Mr. Chilvester's Daughters), which centers around
the maniacally old-fashioned Mr. Chilvester, who refuses any and all changes
and upgrades to his 18th century house, is a peculiar examination—according to
Olivier's journals—of the ways in which houses impact and form
personalities. This may sound dull, but is in fact hilarious and
fascinatingly strange. Among other oddities, it emerges that the deaths of
Mr. Chilvester's two wives—and the lingering illness of one of his
daughters—have resulted from his failure to upgrade the drains (i.e. sewers) in
his house. Never has raw sewage figured so centrally in a novel by a
"lady" writer!
Well,
apparently I was quite wrong in my final assertion. Here is the inimitable Mrs. Malory—who during
most of her investigations manages at one time or another to mention her
interest in Victorian and Edwardian women writers—discussing Victorian author
Charlotte M. Yonge’s Three Brides
with the local police chief, also a Yonge fan:
“What do you think of it?”
“Mm. It will never be
my favorite but it’s got some splendid stuff in it. All that business with the drains and the
casual way she killed off one of her main characters, poor Raymond, in the
typhoid epidemic!”
“I know. Her females
weren’t supposed to have any interest in drains, it was thought unwomanly. But they pop up in most of the books, and not
just hers. I’ve always wanted to write a
paper on ‘The Importance of Sanitation in the Victorian Novel,’ but I’ve never
had the time.”
I love
the fact that not only did I learn my lesson about broad generalizations based
on my reading of books from a very specific period, but that I was taught the
lesson while reading a very charming mystery.
Thank
you for schooling me, Hazel Holt!
I found a copy of Beginner's Luck many years ago and enjoyed it because it was so much like Streatfeild and Lorna Hill - but I had read all of those! I agree it was unexceptional (as Georgette Heyer might say) but liked it enough that I was disappointed to find it was her only juvenile. Despite having two left feet, I had a weakness for ballet stories!
ReplyDeleteI think you summed it up exactly--enjoyable but unexceptional. I've still meant to read more of Malet's work, but there are just too many books to read!
Delete". . . I’ve always wanted to write a paper on ‘The Importance of Sanitation in the Victorian Novel,’ but I’ve never had the time.” Years ago, in grad school (Modern Letters, Univ. of Tulsa), I did write a paper for Germaine Greer on how the narrative flow in Middlemarch began in a sewage drainage ditch.
ReplyDeleteHow wonderful! Perhaps it's time someone did a full dissertation on sewage in literature. (But actually, someone may have already, who knows?!)
Delete