While in other ways 2016 was an absolutely terrible year—here's hoping 2017 doesn't turn out as badly as seems likely—a look back at all the books I read this year, and my difficulty in selecting only 12 of my favorite books of the year, suggests that it was a very good year for me on the bookish side—and this is really true in more ways than one.
Firstly,
as a reader, the fact that I had to force myself to eliminate no fewer than nine other books that I really loved
obviously means that I was lucky enough to find books that really spoke to me
this year. I had to make a rule that I would only include each author once,
which required that ELIZABETH ELIOT’s
Alice (1950) and RACHEL FERGUSON’s A Harp in
Lowndes Square (1936) be removed from the list. This was also the year that
I properly discovered NGAIO MARSH’s
late mysteries, having foolishly avoided them before, but there just wasn’t
room for either Dead Water (1963) of Clutch of Constables (1969) on my list,
and even JOSEPHINE BELL’s delightful
Death at Half-Term (1939), which I
read while we were travelling and enjoyed very much, had to be dropped.
Other
terrible deletions from the list include my intro to the Thrush Green series by
MISS READ/DORA SAINT, Battles at Thrush Green (1975), GWENDOLINE COURTNEY’s The Girls of Friar’s Rise (1952), my
favorite ELINOR M. BRENT-DYER Chalet
School book so far, The Chalet School
Reunion (1963), and my return to reading MURIEL SPARK with Loitering
with Intent (1981). (I loved the Spark, by the way, though in the rush of
getting ready for our trip I never got round to writing about it.)
The
second reason it was a good year for me is that I actually had the opportunity
to play a role in bringing three of the books on my list back into print this
year, in both cases for the first time since the 1940s. I’ve already written
tiresomely often about the Furrowed Middlebrow imprint from Dean Street Press
(see links to them in the left column, including my announcement from last week of the new titles we'll be doing in March 2017), but the opportunity came about and
developed so quickly that, looking back at the list of books I read this year,
I found it hard to believe that I'd only discovered two of the FM books and one
additional Dean Street mystery in the early months of this year. Things happen
quickly! And happily, as I announced last week, we'll also be reprinting another of the books from this year's list.
But
to counteract, for just a moment, all this regret and all the adoration I’m
about the express below, I can’t help mentioning one book I don’t regret not
including here at all (which I also never got round to writing about, and it
would have been an uncharacteristically harsh post if I had). I ordinarily love
GLADYS MITCHELL unconditionally, but
I’m afraid the love is now at least somewhat conditional—to retain my love, she
simply must do better than The Longer Bodies (1930), her absolutely
dreadful third novel. The daftness of Mitchell’s mysteries is usually a joy for
me, but here it went over the top, and the perky, flapperish, dimwitted characters
(indistinguishable from one another) and even more dimwitted plot were pure
irritation and no joy. Fortunately, much much
better work was to come.
But
now, back to the adoration. This year, I’m going to present my top 12 in
reverse order. The “ranking” is unscientific, but based on the strength of the
feelings each book evokes in retrospect. Here goes:
I
seem to have been even more focused this year on World War II—pre-, mid-, and
post-—than usual (which is saying something!). Although it’s not the most
polished of the novels on my list, this is one of the most astonishingly
detailed portrayals of the immediate postwar years in England that could be
imagined. As Rose Macaulay did with bombed-out ruins in The World My Wilderness, which I discussed recently (and which was
a re-read, so it’s not eligible for this list), in Peace, Perfect Peace Josephine Kamm seems to have set out to carefully
document the mundane day-to-day details of postwar life. It’s endlessly interesting.
Another
flawed but fascinating novel, and I was thrilled to have a chance to read it,
as it came from my Hopeless Wish List. Tracing the relationships and
experiences of a group of women translators at the Ministry of Foreign
Intelligence, it’s particularly entertaining for anyone who works or has worked
in an office environment, with the cameraderie and pettiness that such places
can inspire. But imagine that office environment in the midst of the Blitz!
Funny, a bit bitchy, and, like Kamm, marvelously detailed, it’s an almost
unique portrayal of women office workers in World War II.
In
some ways, this novel might have enabled the whole Furrowed Middlebrow
publishing venture. I had already read and loved Peck’s first mystery, The Warrielaw Jewel, and when I finished
this one I couldn’t resist emailing Rupert at Dean Street and suggesting both
books for their Golden Age mystery series. The rest, as they say, is history!
Both mysteries are in print from Dean Street, and of course Peck’s wartime
novel Bewildering Cares was one of
the first batch of Furrowed Middlebrow titles (and was #1 on my 2014
Furrowed Middlebrow Dozen).
This
one is still in print and available from
Greyladies! I can’t say it better than I did in my original review: “For
me, what sets The Winter Is Past
apart from other portrayals of the earliest days of the war, is that while it
has all the hallmarks of a cozy, comforting bit of escapism (and indeed it is
very, very entertaining and addictive, so it could really be read as such),
Streatfeild's characters are undoubtedly real living breathing human beings,
not idealized figures with only minor problems easily resolved at the end.
Their flaws are shown and wrestled with, and reading about how they come to
terms with them and with one another, one must come to terms with their
failings too, and then forgive them and like them anyway.”
The
first title on this list not related
in any way to WWII! A wonderful intro to Young’s work for me, the tale of a
40-ish spinster with “too much dignity, a troubled relationship with the truth,
and a tendency to speak her mind a bit too eloquently.” Miss Mole is a
wonderfully complex, damaged character, which makes it even more inexplicable
that none of Young’s novels seem to be in print on either side of the Atlantic
(though happily most are fairly readily available in green Virago editions from
the 1980s).
Released
in October as one of the inaugural Furrowed Middlebrow titles, and recently
discussed in Gillian Tindall’s article
about Ferguson in the Times Literary
Supplement, I go back and forth between this novel and A Footman for the Peacock as my favorite Ferguson. Both a satirical
warning against nostalgia and a marvelous bit of nostalgia in its own right,
it’s funny, highly literary, and a complete education in Edwardian pop culture
all in one spot.
6)
AUSTIN LEE, Miss Hogg and the Brontë
Murders (1956)
I
meant to find a way to work in a short review of the two delightful Miss Hogg
mysteries reprinted by Greyladies in the past year, but with the trip
preparations and the trip itself, they sort of got lost in the shuffle. Despite
the fact that they are written by a man (I know, shocking, right?), I fell in
love with both this one and the earlier Sheep’s
Clothing (1955), which introduces the redoubtable Miss Hogg, spinster
heroine of nine mysteries. But having just been to Haworth myself, I had to
choose this one, set in and around Brontë country, as my favorite. Both are
still in print from Greyladies, who reportedly will eventually reprint all nine
Miss Hogg mysteries. I for one am very impatiently awaiting the other seven!
We’re
back to the war with this one, but in what delightful style! I dared to compare
this one to blogger favorite Guard Your
Daughters by Diana Tutton (which, for those of you who don’t subscribe to
the Persephone Post, will finally
become a Persephone reprint next year—exciting news indeed). In some ways, I
like Cavan’s novel better than Tutton’s—there’s a similar focus on charming,
perky young girls in an eccentric family, with a similarly dark undercurrent
(in this case the imminent approach of war) and the inevitable romantic
touches, but I think Moon might
actually be more fun. It’s definitely on my radar to be an FM reprint if
possible (though sadly Cavan’s other work doesn’t seem to be of equal quality),
but its rather jumbo size (just under 400 pages!) would make it a costly
reprint. Clearly, I will have to re-read it (and Tutton’s novel as well, of
course, for comparison) to assess the situation.
In
limiting myself to including one title per author on this list, I set myself the
challenge of deciding between Elizabeth Eliot’s giddy debut, Alice, and her fifth and final novel, Cecil (Henry and Mrs Martell
would both be close behind as well). Ultimately, though, the more subtle,
mature work had to make the cut (though it’s the one that makes her subsequent
silence as an author that much more sad). In Cecil, Eliot sets herself the challenge of presenting the
dysfunctional relationship between Lady Guthrie and her son through the eyes of
an in-law who only sees them infrequently. There’s an almost Jamesian subtlety
about the narrator’s (and therefore the reader’s) limited perceptions and
knowledge about these characters, which reminds one that we can never know for
sure all the motivations of those around us.
I
admit that I probably overuse the term “hilarious” on this blog—it’s an easy
go-to term for any book that has regularly made me laugh. But in this case it
definitely applies. I’ve long been a fan of Anderson’s rollicking memoirs—I
wrote about two of her other titles here
and here—but
this one just might be my favorite of them all. Detailing the granting of a
young Verity’s long-cherished wish to accompany her sister Rhalou to
boarding-school, and the difficulties she has in adapting to the new
environment, Daughters of Divinity is
must-read material for fans of school stories and anyone who likes giggling
deliriously while one’s family members, spouse, or fellow train-riders look on
with unease.
I’m
in the minority here, but I found this final novel from the divine Stella
Gibbons—written around 1980 but not published until this year—to be one of the
best she ever wrote—eloquent, heartbreaking, and impossible to put down. Many other
readers have found it hard to engage with the emotionally disengaged heroine,
but perhaps I have a bit more in common with Juliet than I’d like to admit. If
you’re up for something a bit more challenging, empathy-wise, but with all the
wisdom and wit that Gibbons had developed over a lifetime of writing, give this
one a try.
It
was tough to make a call about my favorite new read of the year. There are so
many different kinds of books on this list, so there’s no way to objectively
choose a favorite. But this only novel by Ursula Orange’s sister-in-law,
recommended to me by Monica Tindall’s niece, Gillian Tindall, ultimately won
out. A powerful portrait of a terrible mother and a precise dissection of exactly
how she became that way, it’s as compellingly written as a mystery novel and
will make your identifications and sympathies shift so frequently as to get
tied in knots. And, as I mentioned in my pre-Christmas post, Dean Street Press and Furrowed Middlebrow will be reprinting Tindall's novel next March, along with the three best novels of Ursula Orange!
And
that’s that. Wow. It really was an extraordinarily successful year of reading.
I’d better get busy with my bookshopping and interlibrary loans to make 2017
just as satisfying!
Now, what were your favorite reads of 2016?
Now, what were your favorite reads of 2016?