The Narrow Land by Christine Dwyer Hickey #BookReview @AtlanticBooks

The Narrow LandAbout the Book

1950: late summer season on Cape Cod. Michael, a ten-year-old boy, is spending the summer with Richie and his glamorous but troubled mother. Left to their own devices, the boys meet a couple living nearby – the artists Jo and Edward Hopper – and an unlikely friendship is forged.

She, volatile, passionate and often irrational, suffers bouts of obsessive sexual jealousy. He, withdrawn and unwell, depressed by his inability to work, becomes besotted by Richie’s frail and beautiful Aunt Katherine who has not long to live – an infatuation he shares with young Michael.

A novel of loneliness and regret, the legacy of World War II and the ever-changing concept of the American Dream.

Format: Hardcover (384 pages)      Publisher: Atlantic Books
Publication date: 7th March 2019 Genre: Historical Fiction

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My Review

The Narrow Land comes garlanded with praise: by book bloggers whose opinion I respect; from literary critics; and, not least, by the judges of The Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction who awarded it the 2020 prize. You can hear Christine reading an excerpt from the book here.

Commenting on their decision, the judges observed, “It’s a risky business, portraying the marriage of two artists, particularly when both the marriage and the art have already been picked over by biographers and art historians”. For my part, although I knew Edward Hopper’s name and had a vague idea of the kind of art he made, I knew nothing about his wife or their life together. Therefore I came to the book without any preconceptions – except, naturally, that I should expect a high quality of writing. I was certainly not disappointed in that respect.

The book is divided into a number of sections, the first five of which are named after the movements of The Planets by Holst. For example, the opening chapter, in which young Michael travels to Cape Cod (the ‘narrow land’ of the title) to join the Kaplan family for the summer, is called ‘The Bringer of War’ (Mars). Michael (the Americanised version of his true name) has been rescued from post-war Germany and brought to America to be adopted by the Novaks. He is urged to leave the war behind as if he somehow carries it with him about his person. The title could equally reference the turbulent relationship of the Hoppers or the enmity that quickly develops between Michael and Ritchie.

With subtle irony, the chapter detailing the Labor Day garden party thrown by Mrs Kaplan is ‘The Bringer of Jollity’ (Jupiter), although for some of the guests, including Josephine Hopper, the party is the scene of anything but jollity. Never one for small talk, Josephine feels out of place and abandoned by her husband who, as usual, is the centre of attention.

In her speech at the garden party, Mrs Kaplan quotes President Truman’s words from his directive on displaced persons: “This is the opportunity for America to set an example for the rest of the world in cooperation towards alleviating human misery”. However, her singling out of Michael for attention, although no doubt well-intentioned, sets in motion other events.

Throughout the book the reader is given glimpses of the traumatic events Michael witnessed in Berlin before he arrived in America . There is a particularly moving chapter in the section entitled ‘Die Trummerfrauen‘ – a phrase I had to look up but which I then recognised from another book I read recently, Then We Take Berlin by John Lawton. Die Trummerfrauen (or “rubble women”) is the name given to the women who, in the aftermath of WW2, cleared away the rubble of the bombed cities of Germany, including Berlin. Trying to salvage something from the rubble is perhaps a metaphor for what many of the characters in The Narrow Land are trying to do.

It seems to me that what unites the characters is they are all searching for something. Michael is searching for security and a way to erase the memories of the traumatic events he has witnessed. It’s why he creates a place where he can feel safe and it drives other actions that will prove significant later in the book. As well as physical ailments, Edward Hopper is suffering from the artist’s equivalent of writer’s block. He’s desperately searching for inspiration, fixated on finding the woman who inspired a previous painting or the right kind of sky. ‘And he sees nothing he hasn’t seen before and feels nothing much either.

Josephine Hopper is searching for recognition of her own creativity and for a way to come out of the shadow of her husband, quite literally in one respect. Being shorter than her husband, she describes him at one point as ‘looming like a skyscraper right behind her‘. Having supported her husband in expressing his artistic talents for many years, she has come to resent her position as ‘the torch bearer leading the way’ or ‘the stone they use to step across the water’.

I’m aware some readers have found Josephine a difficult character to like. (As it happens, she is never referred to by her first name, not even by her husband, but mostly just as ‘she’, ‘her’ or ‘Mrs Aitch’ .) It’s true that she can be spiteful, argumentative and difficult. As she says, ‘Words are the deadliest weapons: merciless, vicious, diseased. Cut them and pus would ooze out.’ Josephine is definitely a master when it comes to using words as a weapon but, thanks to the author’s skill, I found I could understand her frustration, if not always the way she acts.

We see her softer side in her relationship with Michael. In Mrs Aitch, as he refers to her, Michael finds a kindred spirit; someone who doesn’t insist on the social niceties like addressing women as ‘Ma’am’ and who retains a sense of fun. They understand each other and form a touching bond. For her part, Josephine finds in Michael someone who wants her for a change, not just as a route to her husband. She reflects on one of the outings she and Michael go on together: ‘And she knows then: what has been removed is loneliness and what has been added is love’. I really felt for her when she cries, “What I care about is my wasted life. My life. I had something once, I had spark and potential and creativity.

The Walter Scott Prize judges especially praised Christine Dwyer Hickey for reaching “into the guts of the marriage of Jo and Edward Hopper and into the heart of the creative impulse itself”. I have to agree because The Narrow Land is a painstaking, forensic dissection of a troubled marriage: the small acts of kindness, the petty acts of spite, the angry silences, the arguments, the routines and habits that have become all too familiar, the mutual disappointments, the rare agreements. But, as in so many relationships, a shared history and treasured memories keep them together. The final chapter depicts a poignant scene which the author imagines to be the inspiration for Hopper’s painting, Cape Cod Morning. You can see an image of the painting here.

The Narrow Land is a moving exploration of regret, loneliness, frustration and disappointment, and the poignant story of two people who find it hard to be together but even harder to be apart.

My thanks to Atlantic Books and Readers First for my review copy.

In three words: Insightful, intimate, acutely-observed

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Deirdre power photographerAbout the Author

Christine Dwyer Hickey is an award-winning novelist and short story writer. Twice winner of the Listowel Writers’ Week short story competition, she was also a prize-winner in the prestigious Observer/Penguin short story competition. Her best-selling novel Tatty was chosen as one of the 50 Irish Books of the Decade, longlisted for the Orange Prize and shortlisted for the Hughes & Hughes Irish Novel of the Year Award, for which her novel The Dancer was also shortlisted. Last Train from Liguria was nominated for the Prix Européen de Littérature. Cold Eye of Heaven won the Irish Novel of the Year 2012 and was nominated for the IMPAC 2013 award. She lives in Dublin. (Photo credit: Publisher author page)

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Reading The Walter Scott Prize 2020 Shortlist: Shadowplay by Joseph O’Connor

Shadowplay AudiobookAbout the Book

1878 – The Lyceum Theatre, London. Three extraordinary people begin their life together, a life that will be full of drama, transformation, passionate and painful devotion to art and to one another. Henry Irving, the Chief, is the volcanic leading man and impresario; Ellen Terry is the most lauded and desired actress of her generation, outspoken and generous of heart; and ever following along behind them in the shadows is the unremarkable theatre manager, Bram Stoker.

Fresh from life in Dublin as a clerk, Bram may seem the least colourful of the trio but he is wrestling with dark demons in a new city, in a new marriage, and with his own literary aspirations. As he walks the London streets at night, streets haunted by the Ripper and the gossip which swirls around his friend Oscar Wilde, he finds new inspiration. But the Chief is determined that nothing will get in the way of his manager?s devotion to the Lyceum and to himself. And both men are enchanted by the beauty and boldness of the elusive Ellen.

This exceptional novel explores the complexities of love that stands dangerously outside social convention, the restlessness of creativity, and the experiences that led to Dracula, the most iconic supernatural tale of all time.

Format: Audiobook (11h 40m)     Publisher: Whole Story Audiobooks
Publication date: 6th June 2019 Genre: Historical Fiction

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My Review

Shadowplay is one of the books on the shortlist for The Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction 2020. You can find more details about the other books on the shortlist here.

In this fictionalized account of the life of Bram Stoker, the author adopts some of the literary techniques of Stoker’s famous novel, Dracula, including the use of diary entries, letters and transcripts of conversations as well as more traditional third person narration. As Stoker struggles – with limited success – to achieve his literary aspirations, some of the fun is spotting names and places that will later find their way into Dracula.

The core of the novel is the relationship between Bram Stoker and the bombastic Sir Henry Irving. When famed actress, Ellen Terry, arrives on the scene it creates an even more turbulent triangle. Poor Florence, Bram Stoker’s wife, is rather left out in the cold as the Lyceum Theatre becomes central to Stoker’s life. Not to mention attending to the whims of Sir Henry Irving, an equally all-consuming occupation, the main qualification for which seems to be the ability to consume large quantities of alcohol.

I loved the descriptions of the theatrical performances and all the backstage goings on. There is a great episode where Oscar Wilde attends a performance and provokes a very raucous after show party. The author also throws in some supernatural elements and it’s all set against the backdrop of a London stalked by Jack the Ripper.

The last, quite long, section of the book transports the reader ahead a number of years and has a distinctly melancholy tone as age and infirmity catch up with the main characters. I found the end of the book poignant and rather moving.

I listened to the audiobook version, narrated by Anna Chancellor and Barry McGovern. To be fair, the latter does the majority of the narration with Anna Chancellor contributing a couple of sections purporting to be recordings of Ellen Terry’s recollections of Sir Henry Irving. These are wickedly funny and delivered in Anna Chancellor’s inimitable style. Where Ellen Terry appears elsewhere in the book, she is voiced by Barry McGovern rather than by Anna Chancellor, even in chapters told from the point of view of Ellen Terry. However, I can’t fault Barry McGovern’s representation of the rich, plummy tones of Sir Henry Irving or the soft Irish lilt of Bram Stoker.

Shadowplay is inventive, imaginative and full of Gothic atmosphere. I can definitely see why it has earned a place on The Walter Scott Prize shortlist.

In three words: Atmospheric, complex, immersive

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JOC-PhotoAbout the Author

Novelist, screenwriter, playwright and broadcaster, Joseph O’Connor was born in Dublin. He is the author of nine novels including Star of the Sea, Ghost Light (Dublin One City One Book novel 2011) and Shadowplay (June 2019). Among his awards are the Prix Zepter for European Novel of the Year, France’s Prix Millepages, Italy’s Premio Acerbi, an American Library Association Award and the Irish Pen Award for Outstanding Achievement in Literature. His work has been translated into forty languages.

In 2014 he was appointed Frank McCourt Professor of Creative Writing at the University of Limerick. Twice-Booker Prize-winner Peter Carey has written, ‘There are few living writers who can take us back in time so assuredly, through such gorgeous sentences. Joseph O’Connor is a wonder, and Shadowplay is a triumph.’ (Photo/bio credit: Author website)

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About the Narrator

Barry McGovern is one of Ireland’s most skilled and experienced actors, who has had a long career in theatre, film, television and radio. He is regarded by many as one of the leading exponents of the work of Samuel Beckett. His one-man Beckett show, I’ll Go On, produced by Dublin’s Gate Theatre, has played worldwide.

He has toured with the Gate productions of Waiting for Godot, Endgame and Happy Days. In early 2012 he played Vladimir in the acclaimed production of Waiting for Godot at the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles which garnered him a 2012 Ovation Award Lead Actor nomination.

The Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction 2020 Shortlist
The Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction 2020 Shortlist