Buchan of the Month: Introducing Sick Heart River by John Buchan

Buchan of the Month

Sick Heart River is the final book (for 2018) in my John Buchan reading project, Buchan of the Month.  Appropriately perhaps, it was also Buchan’s last novel.  In fact, he finished it only a fortnight before his death and it was published posthumously.  It also happens to be one of my favourite of his novels.  The ending always leaves me slightly teary.

To find out more about the project and my reading list for 2018, click here.  Buchan of the Month will return in 2019 with a new selection of books by John Buchan, both fiction and non-fiction.  If you would like to read along with me you will be very welcome.  Just leave a comment on the challenge post when it’s published in the New Year.

SickHeartRiver2What follows is an introduction to Sick Heart River.  It is also an excuse to show a picture of my lovely edition of the book complete with dust jacket.  I will be posting my review of the book later in the month.


John Buchan (by then Lord Tweedsmuir) started writing Sick Heart River in the Autumn of 1939.  His private secretary, Mrs. Killick, wrote to Susan, Lady Tweedsmuir, “His Excellency is writing a very odd book…so unlike him, so introspective.” As Kate Macdonald has remarked, ‘Sick Heart River was Buchan’s farewell to his writing career, written at the end of his life’.  David Daniell, who has written extensively on John Buchan’s life and work, describes Sick Heart River as ‘a moving novel…deeply meditative’.

On 5th February 1940, Buchan told his sister Anna, ‘I have finished my novel [Sick Heart River] and my autobiography [Memory Hold-the-Door]’. The following day, Buchan suffered the cerebral thrombosis that ultimately proved fatal and he died on 12th February.  Sick Heart River was published in the UK by Hodder & Stoughton in 1941.  In the US it was published under the title, Mountain Meadow.

Sick and fearing he has not long to live, Sir Edward Leithen embarks on what he believes may be his last mission: tracking down and restoring to health Francis Galliard, a young Canadian banker who has gone missing in the wilds of northern Canada.  Leithen’s quest takes him – and the reader – on a journey from New York, to a farmhouse in Quebec, by air across the Barrens to the Arctic shore of Canada and to the country west of the Mackenzie River in a search for the mysterious Sick Heart River.

The latter parts of Leithen’s journey mirror that taken by Buchan to the north of Canada in 1937 whilst he was Governor General of that country.  During this trip, in scenes reminiscent of the book, Buchan met French missionaries working with the Hare Indians, a tribe ravaged by tuberculosis.   Buchan’s first biographer, Janet Adam Smith, notes, ‘It is plain how much Buchan put into the novel of his experience in Canada, particularly Quebec and the North’.  Adam Smith also argues that in Sick Heart River, Buchan makes Leithen more like himself than in any of the earlier books in which he’d featured, such as The Power House and John Macnab.  She notes: ‘Leithen’s body – lean and getting leaner, needing sleep and waking tired, active in spite of pain – is Buchan’s.’

Janet Adam Smith reports that by 1960 the Hodder & Stoughton edition of Sick Heart River had sold around 96,000 copies.  In the US, it sold over 20,000 copies in hardback and a further 300,000 copies when published in paperback.

Sources:

David Daniell, The Interpreter’s House: A Critical Assessment of the Work of John Buchan (Nelson, 1975)
Kate Macdonald, John Buchan: A Companion to the Mystery Fiction (McFarland, 2009)
Janet Adam Smith, John Buchan: A Biography (OUP, 1985 [1965])

Buchan of the Month/Book Review: Memory Hold-the-Door by John Buchan

Buchan of the Month

MemoryHoldTheDoorAbout the Book

John Buchan, 1st Baron Tweedsmuir (1875-1940) completed his autobiography not long before his death. A highly accomplished man, his was a life of note. Although now known by many chiefly as an author, he was also an historian, Unionist politician and Governor General of Canada. Although he stated that it was not strictly an autobiography, Memory Hold-the-Door provides a reflective, personal account of his childhood in Scotland, his literary work from his time at Oxford University to the famous Hannay and Leithen stories and his extensive public service in South Africa, Scotland, France in the Great War, and Canada. Known in the United States as Pilgrim’s Way, Memory Hold-the-Door was reportedly one of the favourite books of John F. Kennedy.

Format: Hardcover         Publisher: Hodder & Stoughton
Published: 1964 [1940]  Genre: Nonfiction, Memoir

Purchase Links*
Amazon.co.uk ǀ Amazon.com
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find Memory Hold-the-Door on Goodreads


My Review

Memory Hold-the-Door is the penultimate book in my Buchan of the Month reading project for 2018.  You can find out more about the project plus my reading list for 2018 here and read my introduction to the book here.   Memory Hold-the-Door is also one of the books I read for Nonfiction November.

On 5th February 1940, Buchan wrote to his sister, Anna, ‘I have finished my novel [Sick Heart River] and my autobiography’. The following day, Buchan suffered the cerebral thrombosis that ultimately proved fatal and he died on 12th February.  Some time before Buchan had told a correspondent that Memory Hold-the-Door was ‘not an ordinary autobiography or any attempt to tell the unimportant story of my life; but rather an attempt to pick out certain high lights and expound the impressions made upon me at different stages’.

Buchan made a deliberate choice not to write about anyone still alive, including family members, so there are only a few passing mentions of his wife and children in Memory Hold-the-Door.  There is, however, this lovely sentiment: ‘I have been happy in many things, but all my other good fortune has been as dust  in the balance compared with the blessing of an incomparable wife.’

There are generous and astute pen pictures of contemporary figures of note with whom Buchan came into contact during a life and career that encompassed the law, colonial administration, publishing, journalism, work in military intelligence, service as an MP and as Governor-General of Canada, as well as the writing for which he is now best known.  Such figures include Lord Grey, Arthur Balfour, Lord Haig and King George V.

Of the latter, Buchan writes: ‘He did me the honour to be amused by my romances [by which Buchan means his adventure stories and historical novels], and used to make acute criticisms on questions of fact.  Of one, a poaching story of the Highlands [which I assume to be John Macnab], he gave me a penetrating analysis, but he approved of it sufficiently to present many copies of it to his friends.’

I particularly enjoyed Buchan’s portrait of his friendship with T. E. Lawrence which to me appears insightful despite Buchan’s own remark that ‘there is no brush fine enough to catch the subtleties of his mind, no aerial viewpoint high enough to being into one picture the manifold of his character’.   Buchan recalls, ‘He would turn up without warning at Elsfield [Buchan’s Oxfordshire home] at any time of the day or night on his motor-cycle Boanerges, and depart as swiftly and mysteriously as he came’.  Buchan remembers Lawrence’s ‘delightful impishness’ but also his depression following what he considered his failure on behalf of the Arabs.  Buchan writes: ‘In 1920 his whole being was in grave disequilibrium.  You cannot in any case be nine time wounded, four times in an air crash, have many bouts of fever and dysentery, and finally at the age of twenty-nine take Damascus at the head of an Arab army, without living pretty near the edge of your strength’.  Quite.

Most touching are the portraits of friends, many of whom sadly died in the First World War (as did one of Buchan’s brothers, Alastair) .  Some of these portraits also appear in Buchan’s book These For Remembrance, originally privately printed.

Elsewhere in Memory Hold-the-Door he writes about his student days (including some high jinks) at Oxford University, his admiration for America and its people, his love of fishing and mountaineering, and his experience of the absurdities of the House of Commons (which I suspect may be largely unchanged).  ‘There are seats for only about three-fourths of the members, and these seats are uncomfortable; the ventilation leaves the head hot and the feet cold; half the time is spent dragging wearily in and out of lobbies, voting on matters about which few members know anything; advertising mountebanks can waste a deal of time; debates can be as dull as a social science congress in the provinces…’  However, for balance, he does go on to say that ‘speeches are shorter and of a far higher quality than in any other legislative assembly’.

The book is written in Buchan’s customary effortless prose style and while some of the people he writes about may no longer be familiar to or of interest to the modern reader, it does give a fascinating insight into an admittedly elite stratum of society of that time and Buchan’s personal philosophy and beliefs or his ‘creed’ as he refers to it.  About his own writing, he describes himself as a ‘copious romancer’ and ‘a natural story-teller, the kind of man who for the sake of his yarns would in prehistoric days have been given a seat by the fire and a special chunk of mammoth’.

One of Buchan’s last acts as Governor-General of Canada was to sign that country’s entry into the Second World War.  With remarkable prescience, he writes in the final chapters of Memory Hold-the-Door of his fears for the future.  ‘We have lived by toleration, rational compromise and freely expressed opinion, and we have lived very well.  But we had come to take these blessings for granted, like the air we breathed. […] Today we have seen those principles challenged… We have suddenly discovered that what we took for the enduring presuppositions of our life are in danger of being destroyed.’   Indeed, Buchan had remarked earlier in the book that ‘the study of [history] is the best guarantee against repeating it’.

Next month’s Buchan of the Month is Sick Heart River, Buchan’s last novel which was published posthumously.  Along with Mr. Standfast, it is my favourite of his novels.  Look out for my introduction to the book next week and my review towards the end of the month.

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John BuchanAbout the Author

John Buchan (1875 – 1940) was an author, poet, lawyer, publisher, journalist, war correspondent, Member of Parliament, University Chancellor, keen angler and family man.  He was ennobled and, as Lord Tweedsmuir, became Governor-General of Canada.  In this role, he signed Canada’s entry into the Second World War.   Nowadays he is probably best known – maybe only known – as the author of The Thirty-Nine Steps.  However, in his lifetime he published over 100 books: fiction, poetry, short stories, biographies, memoirs and history.

You can find out more about John Buchan, his life and literary output by visiting The John Buchan Society website.