Whenever I'm working on a new
update to my Overwhelming List, I always come across new-to-me authors whose
work I'd like to sample—which is why I sometimes think that my personal TBR
list is the really overwhelming one.
The authors I like, as you know, include mystery writers, children's authors,
and memoirists, as well as novelists. But since one of the original purposes
(in theory) of my blog was specifically to document middlebrow fiction by women,
I felt I should single out a few that seem to particularly fit the bill.
One of these seven women,
Welsh writer MENNA GALLIE, whom I
already mentioned in my post on mystery writers added to my list, is probably
the least obscure due to the fact that most of her novels have been reprinted
by Honno Press. One critic cited by Honno on their website called Gallie's
novels "beady-eyed, bawdy-tongued entertainments calculated to stir
recognition in women and discomfiture in men (were they to read it)."
Apart from her first novel, Strike for a
Kingdom (1959), which I already mentioned in my mystery post, Gallie published
five other novels. Apparently, Man's
Desiring (1960)—"a gentle comedy of contrasts about a Welsh man and an
English woman at a Midlands university"—belongs on my grownup school story
list, and Travels with a Duchess
(1968) is about "the journey of a menopausal wife from Cardiff who loses
her luggage en route to Yugoslavia and abandons her usual ways in favor of
adventure and 'debauchery'". I wonder if any of you have already
discovered Gallie's work.
Certainly another
blogger—Peggy Ann of Peggy
Ann's Post—got to Scottish novelist CATHERINE
PONTON SLATER before I did. Earlier this year she reviewed Slater's Marget Pow, a trilogy of novels
including Marget Pow in Foreign Parts
(1912), Marget Pow Comes Home (1914),
and Marget Pow Looks Back (1920), which
were collected into one volume in 1925. You can read Peggy Ann's post about
Slater here.
The brilliant John Herrington was able to find a bit of information about
Slater—born in Edinburgh in about 1853, maiden name Grant, married in 1892, and
died in Renfrewshire in 1947—but details of her life remain sparse. She did
publish two earlier novels—A Friendly
Girl (1896) and A Goodly Child
(1901)—but appears to have stopped writing (or at least publishing) after the
final Marget Pow novel in 1920. Thanks, Peggy Ann, for finding and sharing this
author!
A regular reader and
commenter on this blog, Lisa Perry, pointed me in the direction of ROMILLY CAVAN, who published six novels
between 1934 and 1940 and then vanished from the publishing world, though she
lived another 35 years. As I mentioned in a
recent post, an online bookseller had suggested (correctly) that Cavan was
a pseudonym, but speculated (incorrectly) that she was the daughter of E. F.
Benson or his brother. In fact, John was able to trace her and find that her
real name was Isabel Wilson, who married an Eric Hiscock in 1940 (which, along with World War II, provides probably the only clue we really need as to why she stopped publishing
when she did). Incidentally, he also discovered that her birthday was the same
as mine, July 13th.
Cavan's six novels sound as
though they have potential. The first, Heron
(1934, published in the U.S. as The
Daughters of Richard Heron), is about a successful woman novelist and her
daughters, though that's about the extent of my knowledge. Meanwhile, the American Mercury summed up her fourth
novel, Characters in Order of Appearance
(1938), as follows: "Marriage puts an end to the promising career of
playwright Mark Brown: his wife's success as dress-designer overshadows his
own, leaving him embittered and disconsolate. Very, very English." But
it's her final novel that has me most intrigued. The Kirkus review of Beneath the
Visiting Moon (1940) calls it:
A gay,
warm, witty story of a disarming English family on the eve of war. A family
story, wholly ingratiating, of the Fontaynes, who live on a run-down ancestral
estate in rural England, from the casual mother to nine year old Tom, fourth of
the brood. Things start to happen when the mother marries again and annexes two
unpleasant step-children.
It clearly needs to be added
to my World War II Book List as well.
If Cavan's work can be
described as "very, very English," from what I know of AGNES ROMILLY WHITE her two novels
might be described as very, very Irish. Gape
Row (1934) and Mrs. Murphy Buries the
Hatchet (1936) were both reprinted by White Row publishers in Belfast in
the late 1980s. An Abe Books seller (whom we will presume knows his/her
business) says that White lived in Dundonald, where her father was a rector, from
1890 to 1913, and that she based her fiction on the life of that parish. The
reprint publisher's blurb for Gape Row
reads as follows:
Can
Jinanna escape the poorhouse? Will young Johnny Darragh jilt Ann? Will Mary get
saddled with the awful Andy John McCready? Or will Happy Bill, the wayside
preacher, nip in first and win them all for God? A boisterous, rich, nostalgic
book which immerses the reader in the cheerful chaos of everyday life in a
small Irish village on the eve of the First World War.
Mrs. Murphy Buries the Hatchet is a sequel which takes place after the war has
ended. The reprint publisher's blurb refers to its "strong plot, racy
dialogue, and the author's vivid evocation of the County Down countryside."
I have only vague knowledge
of CHARLOTTE MORROW, who published
several novels in the 1960s and 1970s (she just squeaks onto my list as her
first novel appeared in 1960). But I do know that Barbara Pym apparently had a
copy of Morrow's debut novel, The Singing
and the Gold (1960), in her personal library. The front flap describes it
as:
the
story of seven years in the life of a young girl, Lisa Shelley, in the 1930's.
While still at school she is caught up in situations and emotions too complex
and overwhelming for her reserved, dreamy and solitary nature. In attempting to
resolve them, and at the same time to preserve her own integrity and that of
her youthful lover, Alastair Maxwell, a doctor, she finds her life brought
within the shadow of seemingly inescapable and lasting tragedy.
Of Morrow's other work, I
found information about only one, a 1975 children's title called The Marigold Cut, about "a boy who
finds an old narrow boat hidden in an abandoned canal."
I don't have much more information about ELAINE HOWIS, whom John came across and
forwarded to me. She published four novels and one story collection, all
between 1956 and 1960, and reviews suggest the influence of Virginia Woolf,
which—let's be frank—could be a good or a bad thing. A blurb from an Abe Books
seller for her second novel, The Lily
Pond (1957), reads:"Returning to Weymon Cove after previous
light-hearted visits, Gemmi finds a strange difference. She determines to
discover the reason for it, and disregarding all warnings she probes into the
past."
OLIVE HESELTINE's
first book was called Conversation
(1927), and was literally a guide to that very topic, with suggested strategies
for communicating with one's fellow humans without boring them silly.
Presumably, it was aimed at party hosts and hostesses. Perhaps Heseltine had
been to one too many boring parties and decided to take matters into her own
hands. But thereafter, she also published two novels, Three Daughters (1929) and The
Month of May (1931), under the pseudonym Jane Dashwood. Based on
contemporary blurbs and chauvinistic reviews, both could be poignant and
entertaining or sentimental schlock—it's tough to say.
Three Daughters
is about intergenerational conflict between a mother and her three daughters,
apparently in the final years of the 19th century. Says the book's jacket:
The
intimate, though conflicting, relations, of Lady Pomfret and her daughters are
treated subjectively and with intimate sympathy. In the ordinary events of
their daily life and in the secrets of their inner thoughts the different
destinies of Lydia, Miranda, and Judy gradually emerge.
Meanwhile, according to the
condescending Saturday Review critic
in 1932, The Month of May is "the
story of Mary Willoughby, who refuses to run away and marry the man she loves
because she feels that her aging parents need her at home." Many readers
will grit their teeth a bit as the critic continues:
As a
heroine, Mary is young and lovable, if at times a bit too much inclined to the
blue stocking, but her philosophy harks back to an older day. Once she has
accepted her sacrifice she finds her sadness colored by a serenity and an
inward sort of joy that give no hint that she will end her days beset with the
grim complexes most modern writers assign to frustrated women.
Ah, yes, self-sacrifice is
surely the key to womanly contentment…
Priscilla Johnston in 1930 |
And finally, I mentioned PRISCILLA JOHNSTON recently as well
because her father was the designer of the lettering used on the London Tube
for more than 60 years, until it was updated in the 1980s. She interests me
because she adds not one but two new titles to my Grownup School Story List—her
debut, The Narrow World (1930), and
an apparent sequel, Green Girl
(1931), which is about the love affair of a girl and one of the masters.
Perhaps the theme of a
young girl's attraction to an older man was one that Johnston herself could relate to, because
in 1946, the year before she published her final novel (reputed to be
autobiographical, but I haven't been able to determine its subject matter more
precisely), she married illustrator Leslie MacDonald Gill, a family friend who
was 26 years her senior. Tragically, they had been married only three months
when Gill was diagnosed with lung cancer, and he died the following year.
There's a bio of Gill here,
which mentions Johnston, and a more extensive discussion of their relationship
and life together here,
from which I stole, er, borrowed the photo of Johnston above. Johnston
remarried in 1959.
If time allowed, I would like
to sample the work of all of these authors. Perhaps there's a lost masterpiece
or two here? Has anyone previously come across any of these authors?
such wonderful book cover art
ReplyDeleteThanks, Kate. I think as much as anything these posts are an excuse to enjoy the dustjackets!
DeleteI have not, but when I searched my library network catalog for "Beneath a Visiting Moon" it suggested "Inorganic Chemistry for Dummies." ?
ReplyDeleteWow, that's not a terribly effective search engine, isn't it?!
DeleteI do love the cover art! The cover art for Howis' work is almost contemporary! Gallie's "Travels with a Duchess" could almost be a novel by the legendary Mrs. Rivers (Hermione) a novelist created by Angela Thirkelll, Mrs. RAivers' work tended to be set in foreign, even exotic locals, and featured misunderstood middle-aged women, adored by younger men! She is apparently based on someone, one, at least, of who's novels I read, but I cannot recall.....Jerri? Anyone!
ReplyDeleteIn any case, Scott, that and a reference to a Mrs. POMFRET, also of Thirkell fame - Scott, a double treat for this morning! As always, kudos to you for a very fun posting today!
Tom
I didn't even know that reference, Tom. See the comment below--Ann Bridge definitely seems like a plausible possibility for the target of AT's contempt.
DeleteI do hope that Howis's novels, should I ever get hold of them, live up to their cover art!
Is the author Ann Bridge?
ReplyDeleteThirkell called her the "BAEDECKER BITCH" as she wrote books featuring travelling a lot.(baedecker guide)
Tina
Thanks, Tina, I think that's probably the one Tom meant. I can certainly see Thirkell not being a fan of Bridge's work.
Delete