So
far, in this time of enforced isolation, the
Dunnetts, the
Mantels,
the
Sansoms
and
other historical tomes have
stayed
on the bookshelves.
My
need was for
something brisk to stand against the media’s
outbreak of “war words” and
writing that
reminded
me of the quiet cynicism with
which
my parents and grandparents – who
had
had real experience of
such
things -
regarded such
“patriotic” stances.
In consequence, I
have been
reading the
novels of
Lissa Evans: OLD
BAGGAGE, CROOKED HEART and
THEIR FINEST HOUR
AND A HALF*,
set
during
the
first half of the twentieth century, and blessed with a dark, quirky
and benign humour.
Evans
has
a way of creating
characters that
are
slightly at odds with society, people
trying
to survive in a world that has moved on and not always to their
advantage. Her
plots are
not about dealing with heroic events on
a world stage,
but about coping with
snobbery, prejudice, poverty, petty cruelty, boredom
and tragedy during
the hard times.
However,
bit
by bit, despite
sometimes doing a wrong or stupid thing, things work out almost right
for her main characters - and
almost
right, Evans seems
to suggest to me,
might be the best we can hope.
OLD
BAGGAGE is
set in London in
1928. Women
have now been granted the right to vote,
so
what
lies ahead for the Suffragettes, now
older
and stouter, who
were shaped
by their
experiences of direct action?
Miss
Mattie Simpkins will
be gathering with her
fellow radicals, for
Emmeline Pankhurst’s funeral. As
she
walks, pre-occupied,
on
Hampstead Heath, she
is
robbed by a young man. Still adept in lobbing objects at full
strength, the furious Mattie throws a bottle after him, striking an
ordinary young woman, Ida, in the face.
Partly
in retribution, autocratic
Mattie
sets up The Amazons, a club for young, disadvantaged women, providing
opportunities for strong, healthy, physical outdoor activities such
as “Javelin
throwing. Archery. Use of the slingshot.” along
with lectures on feminism.
Her
intention is to encourage female confidence
and independence, but despite her years of campaigning, Mattie - from
a more privileged background - does not really understand the lives
of ordinary girls and women:
Now
she could see Ida toiling up the hill from Parliament
Fields,
head down . . “Well done,” she called as Ida came within earshot.
“Couldn’t you persuade anyone to come with you?”
“I
tried my friend Vesta, but she says today’s her only lie-in,”
said Ida, trying to keep the resentment out of her voice, seeing as
exactly the same thing applied to herself.
Meanwhile,
Mattie’s best friend, Florrie Lea - nicknamed “The Flea”-
offers more practical solutions and better employment to Ida. Unlike
Mattie, with her wealthy background, The Flea knows what it is to be
poor.
While
Mattie’s
militant energies
help the group to thrive, its
status
is soon threatened by a more
glamorous and miltaristic
organisation:
the
well-funded “Empire Youth League” led
by an old
Suffragette
acquaintance
who has now become a
fervent
supporter of Mussolini.
Mattie
also threatens the group herself, unwisely favouring a new recruit -
the flighty, sly Inez - above
her more ordinary Amazons because
Inez
is the daughter of a fellow Suffragette and a young man that Mattie
once admired.
In
her idealised pursuit, Mattie breaks her promise to Ida, the original
protege and thoughtlessly offends “The Flea”, through whose
quietly determined visits we glimpse life in the poorest districts of
thirties London.
OLD
BAGGAGE,
set within the rising shadows of the Thirties, is a
study of the gaps between idealism, intentions, practicality and
human frailty.
CROOKED
HEART
Although
this
title
would
come
second in a
historical
time sequence, in
terms of publishing, this is the earlier novel of the pair.
The
year is
1939, with
Hitler actively threatening, London’s school-children are to be
evacuated for a second time. Meanwhile,
out in St Alban’s, Hertfordshire, Lissa
Evans introduces us to Veera.
"Vee",
thirty-six,
lives
with a domineering, ailing mother and
Donald
her selfish
nineteen-year-old
son.
Constantly
in debt, Vee
struggles over rent and bills, surviving by
whatever means possible. Unexpectedly
offered an
unwanted
evacuee with a limp, she sees
the boy as an
extra
way of extracting money and sympathy and
takes him in.
Besides,
with Donald working as a watchman, the boy can sleep in her son’s
empty bed..
Ten
year old Noel, however, is not a simple
idiot. He has
been
trained by his godmother Miss Mattie Simpkins to be observant,
self-reliant and
suspicious of authority.
Noel
surprises Vee, not only with the ammonite he lugs around in his
suitcase, but
by his responses.
Slowly, ill-treated Vee and Noel
become a team, even if this involves
some petty crime on the way.
Gradually,
after
her harsh introduction, the reader starts
to understand Vee’s
behaviour
and situation,
and
to admire young Noel’s single-minded stoicism and determination as
well as recognise some of the outcomes of wartime officialdom.
OLD
BAGGAGE and
CROOKED
HEART will
be followed soon by VICTORY, the third in Lissa
Evans trilogy.
THEIR
FINEST (HOUR
AND A HALF)
When
this earlier novel was
bought and made into a film, the original title was adapted in
response to other films out
in
production at that time, particularly
a film about Churchill, called
THEIR
FINEST HOUR.
Both
book and film were
released around the anniversary of the Dunkirk evacuation, and about
the same time as
the spectacular film DUNKIRK
hit the screens. In many ways, this change
almost
echoes
the storyline
of
this
novel, which is about
the
making of a
“Dunkirk” wartime
propaganda film,
the lives of some of those involved, and the wider issue of what
happens to facts when they meet the needs of fiction.
The
book
includes
passages of typed script, and
moves
between the writing team’s cramped studio, location filming off the
Norfolk coast and the film studio. Although
there are many characters in the
book,
the story mainly
centres on
three
main roles.
The
first is Catrin
Cole,
a
young Welsh
woman
who has run to London with her lover,
a war-artist,
Initially
a copy-writer,
she
becomes
a script writer,
creating
the
“slop”:
the pieces
of
film
script
that appeal to women.
Searching real-life news for
inspiring national stories,
she discovers
a
pair of twin sisters who took a boat across to Dunkirk, but
finds,
face to face, that
their adventure was less heroic but in some ways as bold as the
newspaper
reports. Returning
to work, she
witnesses
the
“film
twins”
life
and adventure
altered
in almost every respect to suit industry
and national needs
for
a “good story.”
Another
is
Edith
Beadmore,
a
middle-aged
dressmaker,
bombed
out of her
home
and her
job
at Tussaud’s Museum, now living and
working uncomfortably with family, but fortunately close to the film
location. Unfortunately, ordinary
Edith
and
her story has not
leapt from page to screen.
Thirdly,
we see the events through the eyes of Ambrose
Hilliard,
a vain, selfish,
elderly actor, who
cannot
accept
he
is no longer leading-role
material and
is forced
into
the
demeaning role of the twin’s drunken uncle. Once
again, the needs of the film re-shaped Ambrose, who
was
played by the much-loved actor Bill
Nighy.
This
new
Ambrose
had a far larger
role, more
interaction with Catrin, and was
more kindly
drawn,
script-wise, than
Lissa Evan’s original
novel - all
of which rather
fits
the theme of the book, the
power of the media
and
the need for effective images.
These books have been just the right reading for me at this time. What is harder to convey in this History Girls post, is Lissa Evan’s
clever sideways look at the society and events of these past times,
and, implicitly, at our own too.
For example, at
one point, Lissa Evans describes Ambrose, forced to take ownership of his agent's dog, struggling down a wartime street in London.
“It
dawned on Ambrose that he’d been mistaken, not only for a dog-lover
but for a bombed-out vagrant toting his remaining possessions in
search of a nice cup of tea and a chit for a public bath.
He
jerked the lead, and Cerberus trotted after him, past the rest
centre, where a photographer was loitering – waiting, presumably,
for a subject of the requisite crass symbolism. The yellow press
seemed permanently plastered with pictures of dusty but defiant
grandmothers, and bandaged urchins signing “V” for victory.
England, apparently, could “take it”, though whether she could
also dish it out was a moot point. . .
It
was all an utter disaster, and yet if one were to read certain of the
newspapers, one might believe that an invasion could be forestalled
by a few pallid bank clerks armed with cobblestones, and that a
nation could be fed on allotment carrots and the odd can of beans
lobbed over by Roosevelt.”
Penny
Dolan
Penny, these sound wonderful and I'd never heard of them. Thanks for the tip.
ReplyDeleteYes, reading in these times is not simple, is it? Thanks for the recommendations - she's a new name to me!
ReplyDeleteI have never read any Lissa Evans but you've made me want to! I did read the latest huge Mantel during lockdown but am now happily reading Kate Atkinson's latest Jackson Brodie novel, Big Sky.
ReplyDeleteThanks, everyone.
ReplyDeleteMary. I know our tastes often vary but OLD BAGGAGE and CROOKED HEART are written with such a darkly observant and amused eye. No young officers at war or big events or Mediterrane conflict, but the cramped lives, quiet deprivations and desperation of ordinary people, usually from a female pov. Hope you do like the books when you get around to reading them.