In this book we learn all about being a door-to-door vacuum cleaner salesman. It involves a surprising amount of day-drinking. The author, Julian McLaren-Ross, was apparently a true bohemian, and had much experience as a door-to-door salesman, and also of day drinking. This book captures a certain seedy life in the early twentieth century very well, all petty debts, horrible rooming houses, and trying to avoid buying your round. It is structured around a love affair the salesman has with a colleague’s wife. He is not that into it, at first, and then gets super, super, into it. Then she goes off him. It’s sad, as love affairs that peter out always are, not helped by all the debt. It has a kind of uplifting side though, in that she encourages him to write, and to think about politics, and to generally better himself. People roll their eyes about crushes, but I think they can sometimes be powerful engines for growth. People are always joining the drama club to meet girls, or joining the gym so boys will look at them, and etc. At least it keeps us going forward, even if it all blows up in the end.
Author: sarahwp
MRS PALFREY AT THE CLAREMONT by Elizabeth Taylor
Here is a scarring little book about what is required to survive old age. It tells the story of an elderly widow, Mrs Palfrey, who moves into a residential hotel. Some other old people live there also, and I got the impression that some fifty years ago, moving into such a hotel was quite common for older people who did not yet need nursing care. This is my second book by this author, Elizabeth Taylor, and I am amazed she is not more famous. She is wonderful at capturing the battles of daily life, and the struggle of keeping yourself in hand. Here is an older lady while they wait for dinner:
“Well, another Sunday nearly gone,” Mrs Post said quickly, to cover a little fart. She had presence of mind.
Hanging over the whole book is the loneliness of old age. I guess it makes sense: the older you get, the more likely you are to outlive the people you love. I have never seen described in quite so much detail what this is like. Then there is also of course what is waiting for you: after the hotel, the old age home, if you are lucky, and if not, then death. Here is Mrs Palfrey, answering when someone asks her if she thinks she is an optimistic person:
“Oh I think so.” She did not explain to him how deeply pessimistic one must be in the first place, to need the sort of optimism she now had at her command.
I’m sorry this is kind of a downer, but there you go. It is at the same time a fairly funny book. I’m not sure when I’ll recover.
Just as a sidebar, if you’ve ever read the dreadful IN A FREE STATE by VS Naipaul, you should know that it beat out MRS PALFREY to win the Booker Prize. This just tells you everything you need to know. Allow me to remind you of the time when VS Naipaul said he was better than any female writer, even Jane Austen. Apparently, the 75% male Booker panel of 1971 agreed. VOM.
EMPIRE OF PAIN by Patrick Radden Keefe
A thoroughly depressing book about what money can buy. It tells the story of the Sackler family. They are personally and primarily responsible for the opiod crisis, and have faced no significant penalty for it.
The story begins with Arthur Sackler, born early 1900s, the only one of them who could be said to have earned his money. He was smart, inventive, and pathologically hard-working. He basically invented modern pharmaceutical advertising. He generated the idea of marketing directly to doctors; of data management, so they knew who was prescribing what (for better advertising); and of advertorial. He got very rich off Valium and Lithium.
One of his many business ventures was a small pharmaceutical firm. They produced a kind of covering that allowed a slower release of medicine. They used this covering on a very strong opiod, twice the power of regular morphine, called Oxycodene. As everyone has known for centuries that opiods are extremely addictive, the demand for this drug was naturally limited. Once Arthur was dead, Richard took over and directed his team to a) claim, without any proof whatsoever, that <1% of patients would become addicted to it; b) incentivize reps to always push doctors to prescribe the absolute highest dose for as long as possile and c) ignore the data systems of his uncle which clearly showed exactly what doctors were massively over-subscribing because they were selling direct to the street
More people died from opiods in America last year than from guns or traffic accidents. Despite clear and extensive evidence of criminality, the Sacklers have managed to pay <1% of their fortune in reparations. I won’t go into it, it’s a long story, but basically it’s a lesson for all of us: you can do whatever you want, as long as you have the right lawyers
LUSTER by Raven Leilani
This started off pretty well, being a story of a young black woman who gets involved with an older white man who is in an open marriage. Here she is, making out with him:
For a moment, I’m sure I’m going to cry, which is not unusual, because I cry often and everywhere, and most especially because of this one Olive Garden commercial. I excuse myself and run to the bathroom, where I look in the mirror and reassure myself that there are bigger things than the moment I am in. Gerrymandering. Genealogy conglomerates selling my cheek swabs to the state.
She loses her job and then in a not at all believable turn of events is invited by the wife to live with them. We then get into that beloved territory of recent novels, which is the aimless narrator. She hangs about not really looking for a job, doing weird aimless things like taking photographs of their stuff. I gave up with about twenty pages left to go. The book like the narrator where both going nowhere.
DEVOTION by Madeline Stevens
DEVOTION is okay for a beach read, which is lucky, because I read it on a beach. It tells the story of a nanny who becomes obsessed with her employer. It is another of what seems to be an entire new genre on income inequality. Eventually it all blows up when the employer is extremely intoxicated, and her husband and the nanny force her into a threesome. I got the impression we were supposed to think this was some kind of crescendo of obsession, but mostly I just thought it was rape. Like, check it out, you don’t get to have sex with someone who is too drunk to consent, no matter how obssessed you are or how rich they are.
THE BEAUTIFUL AND THE DAMNED BY F Scott Fitzgerald
I have not read this book for about thirty years, and it certainly has changed. It tells the story of a married couple who spend a lot of money and have a lot of fun. They claim this is because of some life philosophy they have about living for the day and damning tomorrow. In fact, it is because they expect a large inheritance. I used to think this was wondefully romantic; now I just think it’s amazing how many philosophies you can come up with if you expect to inherit.
It begins to look as if they will not receive the inheritance, and they descend pretty quickly into drinking too much and cheating, having now boxed themselves into a corner. Here is the husband, having made the mistake of looking at the alumni magazine of his university (always a mistake when you are feeling low):
He laid down the magazine and thought for a while about these diverse men. . . (In the past) he would as soon become a churchgoer because the prospect of immortality gratified him as he would have considered entering the leather business because the intensity of the competition would have kept him from unhappiness. But at present he had no such delicate scruples. This autumn, as his twenty-ninth year began, he was inclined to close his mind to many things, to avoid prying deeply into motives and first causes, and mostly to long passionately for security from the world and from himself.
Then they sue, and get the inheritance after all; but by then they have already learnt some rough lessons about what happens when you damn tomorrow. I mean on the one hand I feel sorry for him but on the other hand BOO HOO I AM SO SORRY YOU ALMOST DIDN’T GET AN UNFAIR GODDAMN ADVANTAGE.
LOVE IN THE BIG CITY by Sang Young Park
An interesting series of essays about attempting to be gay and bohemian in Seoul, covering roommates and menial jobs and heartbreak. His first roommate, despite being female, is closest to being his soulmate. Read this recipe for house-sharing bliss:
I was an expert at washing dishes spotlessly, and Jaehee’s courageous soul allowed her to swipe the shower drain clean of clogged hair.
And
Like most people’s parents, (Jaehee’s parents) constantly nagged their children about propriety and how one should behave, but in their private lives joyfully indulged in affairs, excess religion, the stock market, or pyramid schemes. I had a real parasitic streak in that as much as I hated my parents, I felt completely entitled to ever coin they gave me . . . Jaehee, however, cut off contact with her parents after their blowout and refused any form of financial support thereafter. She really did have the heart of a lioness.
He has (of course) a tough relationship with his mother, who is very involved, and very religious. She dies slowly of a heart issue. Enjoy this:
. . . she asked the doctors not to anesthetize her because she wanted to participate in the pain of Jesus Christ, a declaration that (finally!) prompted her doctors to add some psychiatric treatment to her prescription . . .
That ‘(finally!)’ really made me laugh.
It is not easy being gay and bohemian anywhere, but apparently especially not in South Korea. This books paints a pretty homophobic, classist, and sexist society. At one point, for example, everyone accepts that the author will get a job purely because all the other applicants are female. It’s an interesting take on the traditional story of the artist vs the man. Apparently the man in Seoul is really not kidding around.
TRAVEL LIGHT, MOVE FAST by Alexandra Fuller
I guess we’ve all got a lot to say about our parents, but this lady REALLY has a lot to say. This is the third book of hers I’ve read, and it’s the third to mostly be about her parents. Rather than them being a character in her story, I am starting to get the impression that she is a character in theirs. They loom most exceedingly large over her life.
Her parents lived variously across southern Africa, but in her childhood largely in Zimbabwe. There is much that is comic about them. Her father reels at the revelation that a laptop might be expected to die after the first decade, regarding planned obsolescence as a scam (which indeed it probably is).
And there they are on South African politics, an opinion I have heard before in Zim:
The Afrikaaners took it to far, the blacks are bolshie and you can’t blame them. I find it very creepy, all of it. Just look at that Oscar Pistorious.
And her mother after the war that gave birth to Zimbabwe:
I mean she was all of us, all of us Rhodesians; hurt, sore, surprised losers. She’d vowed to fight to the death; and even if everyone else had now forgotten that vow, she’d meant it. . . . She wept bitterly in private; drank bravely in public. “Your mother has difficulty cutting her losses,” Dad had explained.
It’s a book framed around the unexpected death of her father while on holiday in Budapest, but it’s very much a celebration of his life. I don’t know what all this author is working through, but I’m enjoying being a part of it
THE VIRGIN SUICIDES by Jeffrey Eugenides
I like Jeffrey Eugenides’ MIDDLESEX, and to a lesser degree THE MARRIAGE PLOT, so I was a bit surprised to be so underwhelmed by this one.
On the surface it seems like it should be interesting, being the story of how five daughters in one family came to all commit suicide. Somehow however, from this promising material, a very boring book is written. I think part of the problem is the attempt at formal inventiveness in the narrative voice. The story is told by some undefined ‘we’ who are apparently the neighbourhood boys, who are apparently recounting this story many years later. I just found this dumb. Also I didn’t really like the heavy emphasis on how inscrutable females are, that inevitably came with it. No doubt that is what teenage boys really do feel but so does most of western literature, and so it is a bit SNORE. Probably they had mental health issues or were being abused or something, like Jesus guys it’s not that complicated. Anyway I did like this sex scene, so I’ll leave you with that. Don’t say I never do anything for you:
Two beasts lived in the car, one above, snuffling and biting him, and one below, struggling to get out of its damp cage. Validanlty he did what he could to feed them, placate them, but the sense of his insufficiency grew and after a few minute, with only the words “Gotta get back before bed check,” Lux left him, more dead than alive.
IN A SUMMER SEASON by Elizabeth Taylor
Here is a story of a suburbia. A middle-aged woman marries a much younger man after her first husband dies, and . . . Never mind the plot, because as the introduction tells us, the author is ‘bored by narrative. ‘
Usually this kind of thing is RED FLAG for me, but Taylor is such a fine writer she makes it work. Try this, of the teenage son coming home late:
Tom walked up the drive, treading silently on the grass verge, let himself in quietly and crept upstairs. The house was night-quiet. They were all as fast asleep as innkeepers of an afternoon. They dreamt their innocent, middle-aged dreams and rested their aging bones
And try this, on his mother’s thoughts when this same son rolls his eyes at her:
They condescend, Kat thought. They behave like people who are trying hard not to be snobbish.. . They are appalled for us that we are middle aged.
Or this, on a son’s reaction to having to talk about his mother:
His fists seemed to be tightened in readiness, lest anyone should find her as absurd as he did . . .
It’s wonderful, sharply observed writing. Particularly heartbreaking is our occasional insights into the mind of the family cook, who is really quite despairing on her life, but somehow carries on cooking. Taylor uses the word ‘courageous’ about how she faces some potatoes in a way that made me want to tear up.
I got up in Wikipedia to try and figure out why a writer of this quality is not more famous. I found no straightforward answer, but I think it is probably down to her being perceived as too mumsy. She lived an almost incredibly bourgeouis life in the London suburbs, and I guess being the wife and mother of bankers is not as interesting as being an actual banker. (Side bar, I am sure this was half the problem for Hilary Clinton too. Fundamentally, people don’t want their mothers to succeed). In any case, it is interesting to see about her process (thanks to the Atlantic for the information):
She said “I dislike much travel or change of environment and prefer the days … to come round almost the same, week after week.”. . . That steady rhythm allowed for her regular and admirable output—although she began to publish only when she was 34, wrote “slowly and without enjoyment, and think it all out when I am doing the ironing,” and regularly put her work aside to attend to her children and household (!), she produced 12 novels, four story collections, and one children’s book in 30 years