#BookReview Youth and the Bright Medusa by Willa Cather #1920Club

510+6-1hr3L._SX398_BO1,204,203,200_About the Book

A collection of short stories by Willa Cather, published in 1920, including ‘Coming, Aphrodite!’, an unforgettable novella of a young artist in New York and his relationship with a girl who hopes to become an opera star, and ‘Paul’s Case’ which reveals the frustration and pain of a lonely youth from the provinces who escapes to New York City for a brief, tragic time.

Format: ebook (156 pages)       Publisher: AB Books
Publication date: 11th May 2018 [1920] Genre: Fiction, Short Stories

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My Review

The collection, first published in 1920, comprises two novellas – ‘Coming, Aphrodite’ and ‘The Diamond Mine’ – and six short stories. The last four stories had previously appeared in an earlier collection, The Troll Garden, published in 1905.

Having finished the book, I was left puzzled by its title since none of the stories shared it (as if often the case with short story collections) or made direct reference to it. However, I was fortunate to come across an image from the first edition of the book in which its publisher, Alfred A Knopf, helpfully describes its theme as “youth’s adventure with the many-coloured Medusa of art”. (The collection is also praised as ‘a new exhibition of the writer’s power and remarkable artistry’.)

My previous experience of Willa Cather’s writing was through books such as My Antonia, and O Pioneers! meaning I associated her with the setting of those novels not the New York that features so prominently in the stories in Youth and the Bright Medusa. However, as I learned, although she grew up in Virginia and Nebraska, she moved to Pittsburgh and then New York, living in the latter for the remainder of her life.

In fact, many of the stories in Youth and the Bright Medusa present a far from pastoral view of frontier life.   For example, in ‘The Sculptor’s Funeral’, the coffin housing the body of famous sculptor Harvey Merrick is returned to his home town in Kansas but the townspeople who gather to mark his passing are depicted as rather small-minded.  Failing to recognise his achievement in rising from such humble beginnings, they are chided by one of the mourners who reflects, ‘The very name of their town would have remained for ever buried in the postal guide had it not been now and again mentioned in the world in connection with Harvey Merrick’.

The story also contains some striking examples of the author’s closely-observed and often unflinching description of characters.  So the sculptor’s father is ‘tall and frail, odorous of smoke, with shaggy, unkept grey hair and a dingy beard, tobacco stained about the mouth‘. The face of the sculptor’s grieving mother is described thus: ‘The long nose was distended and knobbed at the end and deep lines on either side of it; her heavy black brows almost met across her forehead; her teeth were large and square, and set far apart – teeth that could tear’.   Conversely the opera singers who populate other stories such as ‘A Death in the Desert’ and ‘Coming, Aphrodite!’ are depicted as radiant and uncommonly beautiful.

The power of music or art to move and enrich is a consistent theme of the stories. In ‘A Wagner Matinee’, the narrator takes his aunt, who first influenced his love of music and is visiting from the small Nebraska town where he grew up, to a concert of classical music.  He is amazed by her reaction to it. ‘The deluge of sound poured on and on; I never knew what she found in the shining current of it; I never knew how far it bore her or past what happy islands.’   In ‘Paul’s Case’, a troubled young man who experiences ‘a shuddering repulsion for the flavourless, colourless mass of everyday existence’ finds solace in his work as an usher at Carnegie Hall where the music acts as an ‘orgy of living’.  Determined to live the life he believes he was meant to, he indulges in one glorious period of indulgence, never to be repeated.

Youth and the Bright Medusa was the book I read for The 1920 Club event hosted by Simon at Stuck in a Book and Karen at Kaggsy’s Bookish Ramblings

In three words: Sardonic, acutely-observed, insightful

Try something similar: In A German Pension: 13 Stories by Katherine Mansfield

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Willa CatherAbout the Author

Wilella Sibert Cather was born in Back Creek Valley (Gore), Virginia, in December 7, 1873. Her novels on frontier life brought her to national recognition. In 1923 she was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for her novel, One of Ours (1922), set during World War I. She grew up in Virginia and Nebraska. She then attended the University of Nebraska, initially planning to become a physician, but after writing an article for the Nebraska State Journal, she became a regular contributor to this journal. Because of this, she changed her major and graduated with a bachelor’s degree in English.

After graduation in 1894, she worked in Pittsburgh as writer for various publications and as a school teacher for approximately 13 years, thereafter moving to New York City for the remainder of her life. She travelled widely and often spent summers in New Brunswick, Canada. In later life, she experienced much negative criticism for her conservative politics and became reclusive, burning some of her letters and personal papers, including her last manuscript.

She was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1943. In 1944, Cather received the gold medal for fiction from the National Institute of Arts and Letters, an award given once a decade for an author’s total accomplishments. She died of a cerebral haemorrhage at the age of 73 in New York City.

#BookReview A Lodge in the Wilderness by John Buchan #ReadJB2020

20200314_134401About the Book

An imaginary conference is arranged by a multi-millionaire Francis Carey at Musuru, a lodge located on the East Kenyan Plateau some 9,000 feet above sea level, to discuss Empire.

The conference is made up of nine men and nine women, taken from the upper and professional classes.

Format: Hardcover (334 pages) Publisher: Nelson
Publication date: 1950 [1906]   Genre: Fiction


My Review

My Buchan of the Month for March was A Lodge in the Wilderness.  You can read my blog post introducing the book here. It was published in November 1906, initially anonymously. Although nominally fiction, the book is essentially a debate about Imperialism conducted by various supposedly fictional characters (although Buchan’s first biographer, Janet Adam Smith, observed that ‘spotting the originals of the characters was one of the pleasures of the book for its first readers).

In reality, it’s a political treatise masquerading as fiction and not the John Buchan book I would recommend for readers new to his work; one of his adventure stories featuring Richard Hannay or his works of historical fiction would be a much better starting point.  In fact, I’m not sure I would recommend it at all, except for serious Buchanophiles. I would include myself in that category but even I struggled to maintain my interest and will confess to skimming some of the sections of poetry and the more turgid rehearsals of political doctrine. I found myself identifying with one of the more engaging characters, Lady Flora, who is described as sitting ‘with exemplary patience through the long discussion’ and discovering ‘that only a walk on the terrace would be sufficient reward’.  (Lady Flora is reputedly based on Buchan’s future wife, Susan Grosvenor.)  Earlier, she had remarked, “I do so wish…that they wouldn’t all talk in paragraphs.” Indeed.

The whole book has a paternalistic tone and some of the characters express extremely distasteful views, including advocating eugenics for the destitute who ‘are past hope [and] should cease to exist’ and state-organised emigration.   At no point do any of the characters argue against the concept of Empire; they seem merely concerned with how to make it run more efficiently.  I also found myself inwardly shuddering at references to ‘strange, sullen, childish dark-skinned people’ and that the ‘native’ must stand as an equal before the law with the white man but ‘not a social or political equal’.  Thank heavens we have moved on from that sort of attitude.

However, there are early signs of John Buchan’s ability to describe landscape which would be such a feature of his later books.  For example, this description of an African sunrise. ‘And then over the crest of the far downs came a red arc of fire, and the heavens changed to amethyst and saffron, and, last of all, to a delicate pale blue, where wisps of rosy cloud hung like the veils of the morning.’   Unfortunately, the occasion for this lyrical description is a hunting trip during which several species of big game are killed.

The odd dash of sardonic humour brought some light relief, such as when the Duchess reports news from home. “Eve Nottingham has written a book, purporting to be the letters of a Japanese wife to her English mother-in-law.  What will that silly woman be after next?  She has never been outside Europe… She might as well write the letters of a Coptic greengrocer to his Abyssinian grandmother.”    

April’s Buchan of the Month is A Book of Escapes and Hurried Journeys.  Look out for my introduction to the book and, later in the month, my review.

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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.

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