Showing posts with label Biography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Biography. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 11, 2021

The Professor and Other Writings by Terry Castle / Review

 


The Professor and Other Writings by Terry Castle - review


A brilliantly funny revenge memoir

Elaine Showalter
Sat 23 Apr 2011 00.06 BST

W

riting a memoir is the best revenge, and indeed, as Terry Castle ruefully acknowledges in "The Professor", "writing . . . is often nothing but revenge". Castle is professor of English at Stanford University, and a specialist in 18th-century English literature, as well as lesbian literary theory and literary history. But in the past decade she has also become recognised as an outstanding public intellectual, memoirist and culture critic.

The vengeful side of Castle's work first came to public attention through "Desperately Seeking Susan", her essay published in the London Review of Books in March 2005, just a few months after Susan Sontag's death. Here, Castle detailed her "on-again, off-again semi-friendship" with the great woman in which she played the humble groupie to Sontag's imperious star. She served as Sontag's chauffeur around southern California, a sympathetic audience for her kvetching about academics, an eager player in her games of intellectual one-upmanship, a purveyor of lesbian gossip to her closeted but insatiably curious androgynous persona ("I've loved men, Terry, I've loved women").

Thursday, September 26, 2019

Annie Ernaux / Biography

Annie Ernaux

Annie Ernaux

Since the publication of her first book, Cleaned Out, in 1974, Annie Ernaux’s writing has continued to explore not only her own her life experience but also that of her generation, her parents, women, anonymous others encountered in public space, the forgotten. The main themes threaded through her work over more than four decades, are: the body and sexuality; intimate relationships; social inequality and the experience of changing class through education; time and memory; and the overarching question of how to write these life experiences. In Ernaux’s work the most personal, the most intimate experiences – whether of grieving, classed shame, nascent sexuality, passion, illegal abortion, illness, or the perception of time – are always understood as shared by others, and reflective of the social, political and cultural context in which they occur.

Sunday, April 7, 2019

Raymond Carver / Coming of Age, Going to Pieces


Ernest Hemingway

Coming of Age, Going to Pieces


By RAYMOND CARVER
November 17, 1985


LONG WITH YOUTH
Hemingway, the Early Years.
By Peter Griffin.

HEMINGWAY
A Biography.
By Jeffrey Meyers.



In 1954, after surviving two plane crashes in Africa and being reported dead, Ernest Hemingway had the unique experience of being able to read his own obituaries. I was in my teens, barely old enough to have a driver's license, but I can remember seeing his picture on the front page of our evening newspaper, grinning as he held a copy of a paper with his picture and a banner headline announcing his death. I'd heard his name in my high school English class, and I had a friend who, like me, wanted to write and who managed to work Hemingway's name into just about every conversation we had. But at the time I'd never read anything the man had written. (I was busy reading Thomas B. Costain, among others.) Seeing Hemingway on the front page, reading about his exploits and accomplishments, and his recent brush with death, was heady and glamorous stuff. But there were no wars I could get to even if I'd wanted to, and Africa, not to mention Paris, Pamplona, Key West, Cuba, even New York City, seemed as far away as the moon to me. Still, I think my resolve to be a writer was strengthened by seeing Hemingway's picture on the front page. So I was indebted to him even then, if for the wrong reasons.

Saturday, March 30, 2019

Penelope Fitzgerald / A Life by Hermione Lee / Review by Philip Hensher


Penelope Fitzgerald

Penelope Fitzgerald: A Life by Hermione Lee – review

Hermione Lee has done a superb job, capturing the novelist's elusive personality and telling a complex, sometimes harrowing story

Philip Hensher
Friday 1 November 2013




W
hat does a novelist's career look like? A male novelist might have a short struggle, like Dickens or Waugh or James, then a big success and a series of novels of varying success and accomplishment; the great masterpiece comes 20 years in, when they are in their 40s or 50s. (Think of Mann or Naipaul.) They might have some kind of family connection to the world of letters, or acquire one and know how to exploit it. Women novelists often have a more complex path, perhaps interrupted by children and a more difficult relationship with literary fame; even without children, they are more likely to creep up on fame in a series of books.


Nowadays, of course, writing is often seen as a profession like any other. To take this year's Man Booker winner, Eleanor Catton, as an example of what might be seen as a novelist's ideal career in 2013: one does a degree in English literature, and immediately afterwards a master's degree in creative writing. Your first published novel is your MA thesis. Afterwards, you are given a post teaching creative writing in a university, and your second novel wins a major prize.
Not to criticise the excellent Ms Catton, but this model of a novelist's career is going to produce novelists with a narrow grasp of human experience, whose novels are increasingly going to have to come from historical research and meta-fictional game-playing and, ultimately, novels about creative writing degrees. For a different, though ultimately not tempting vision of a novelist's career, we might turn to Hermione Lee's excellent biography of Penelope Fitzgerald. Fitzgerald was, by general consensus, among the handful of great novelists in English after 1980. She had the misfortune of being not only over 45, but in her 70s and 80s when her great masterpieces first appeared. In an unusual turn of events, her daughter Tina published a novel 18 years before she first did. Tina was 10 years old. Fitzgerald would be 61. Surely, it was Tina who got the business of a novelist's career the right way round. What went wrong? More to the point – in the light of The Blue FlowerAt Freddie's and The Gate of Angels – what went abundantly right?

It is easier to answer the first question than the second. Fitzgerald was born Penelope Knox in 1916 into a famous and brilliant family – her nobly eccentric account of her four uncles, The Knox Brothers, hardly overstates the case. One uncle was the saintly and ingenious Ronnie Knox, Evelyn Waugh's friend, Macmillan's tutor and the establisher of the rules of detective fiction, among other distinctions. Her father, EV("Evoe") Knox was the editor of Punch during its golden age of the 1930s and 1940s. Fitzgerald grew up in Hampstead, the granddaughter of a bishop with intensely literary interests: Harold Monro's Poetry Bookshop is so powerfully evoked in Fitzgerald's non‑fiction that one regrets the absence of the novel on the subject that might have followed her biography of Charlotte Mew. Up to a point, what followed was what might have been expected: a brilliant Oxford first, some work for the BBC, the creation and editing of an interesting literary magazine, a sparkling circle of friends. A novel from this superb mind would surely follow.

Instead, there was the abandonment of the Hampstead ménage with husband and three small children. There was a period in Southwold, Suffolk, working in a bookshop. They couldn't pay the grocery bills, and the household possessions were sold on the pavement outside their house. A period living on a decrepit barge in London, Fitzgerald having to teach in a crammer, ended when the decrepit barge sank. She had to live, with her daughters, in a hostel for the homeless before being rehoused in a council flat, going on with the immense grind of teaching and cramming. Only in the 1970s did she begin to publish books, first a pair of biographies and then novels, to quite rapid acclaim. She lived with her grown-up married children, in spare rooms, on sofabeds, in annexes. By then her husband Desmond had died.

Hermione Lee has unearthed the full story of the catastrophe that overtook the family from a mound of rumour and literary gossip – strikingly, the collected letters, edited by a member of her family, omitted any explanation of why the family was living on a barge and then in accommodation for the homeless. The name of the catastrophe was Desmond. Though plausible and, by many accounts, personally charming, Desmond was a feckless alcoholic who could not sustain much of a career as a barrister. Work must have dried up towards the end of the Hampstead period, and Desmond's income could not help them during the Southwold humiliation. Worse was to come. While they were living on the boat, he was discovered stealing and forging cheques from his chambers. He was disbarred and ordered to pay back £373 – money the family didn't have. London gossip always had it that he had been sent to prison, which was not, it turns out from Lee's investigations, accurate – his sentence was suspended. He was lucky to find a job working as a clerk for Lunn Poly, the travel agents.

"It sometimes strikes me that men and women aren't quite the right people for each other," Fitzgerald writes in The Bookshop, benevolently turning her experience in Southwold into the experience of a childless widow. What is striking about Fitzgerald's story is that her professional experience was seamless and well-considered before she met Desmond; it starts to move again very efficiently in the very last years of his life, and, once he died, her career took off. She published her first five novels between 1977 and 1982. Did she just need solitude? After Desmond's death, though she was only 60, there is not a whisper of any desire for another partner in life. There would have been no shortage of gentlemen happy to take on an acclaimed, brilliant novelist of impeccable manners and fascinating conversation. Yet she had learned her lesson, and now it was time for the books.
Whatever it was like to live through, one can't as a reader regret the immense delay and traumatic contributions of Fitzgerald's life. After the first, amusing fantasy, The Golden Child, her first novels mine her experiences with great concision and depth of psychological analysis born, surely, of long afternoons of boredom supervising in the crammers and in a Suffolk bookshop. The days on the barge, so hungry that she could sometimes be found eating blackboard chalk ("I felt I needed it"), bore some positive fruit. The Bookshop drew on Southwold; Offshore the period on the barge Grace; Human Voices the wartime BBC years; At Freddie's – in some ways the deepest and most wonderful of her books – the experience of the crammers, transformed into a stage school with an extravagant menagerie of posing prodigies. They are not simple statements, and far from romans à clef. They use the long-observed situation to penetrate into the mysteries of human manners.

There is no doubt, really, that Fitzgerald made an awful hash of her career, for the most part. It happened to her despite her very best efforts. Her novels were initially published by Duckworth, controlled by the beady-braying-claret-and-malice pair of Colin and Anna Haycraft. It is difficult to imagine Fitzgerald at home here, and her novels are not much like the brilliantly poisonous satires of Alice Thomas Ellis (AKA Anna Haycraft) or the music-hall raucousness of Beryl Bainbridge – Colin Haycraft's star novelist and mistress – other than in their concision. When Fitzgerald won the Booker prize for Offshore, she seems to have taken it for granted that Haycraft didn't really think her books were much good, and wrote to him thanking him for his effort, and saying that he would be relieved that she was now going to another publisher. Haycraft was, understandably, astounded by Fitzgerald's attitude, and put it down to cunning self-advancement, quite wrongly. She genuinely thought he had lost interest in publishing her. No doubt Haycraft had been going round sharing his disbelief at Offshore's success with most of London, but it was definitely a strange moment for the novelist to be convinced of her lack of success in the world.

Or was it a good, propitious moment? What followed, given admirable prominence in Lee's biography, was the devotion, verging on veneration, of a sequence of publishers. At the very end of Fitzgerald's life, I shared an editor with her, and well remember the immense respect and love of her publishers at Flamingo. In Richard Ollard, Stuart Proffitt and Philip Gwyn Jones, Fitzgerald had editors who would have done anything for her, and did. It was just as well, since her grasp of the business was so vague that she never employed a literary agent, despite being hopeless with money. (She "began to keep a regular (if idiosyncratic) account of her earnings in a notebook labelled 'My Takings'" only in 1992, we are told; "every so often these sums are annotated: 'I've no idea what this is for,' or 'Oh dear where is the Observer [cheque]? I'VE LOST IT.'") There is a comedy about her publishers trying to work out, with no input or, apparently, interest at all from Fitzgerald, what they should pay her as an advance.
What they were working on was a creative volte-face as noteworthy as Lucian Freud's shift from sable to hogshair brushes in the late 1950s. Fitzgerald's first five novels were stories of English life in her lifetime, drawing on her experience. Her last four are remote, dazzlingly complete and quizzical reconstructions of historical, or geographically remote reality: 1950s Italy (Innocence), just before the outbreak of the great war in Cambridge and Moscow (The Beginning of Spring), and finally, in her greatest novel, The Blue Flower, the German Romantic poet Novalis. They came at a point when a number of English novelists were discovering possibilities in the long-disdained historical novel, but they are peerless. They come not just from research – interestingly, in the light of their dense specificity, one of her editors says that she "didn't have an eye for detail" – but also from experience. We hear exactly how much it cost in the 1790s to cross the bridge at Weissenfels, and how much to take the train from Moscow to London before the revolution. What does not come from Bradshaw's Railway Guide, or from the archives, is the knowledge of what a clever boy feels his life is like in a dull small town, or what the stroke of love is like when a figure turns in a dusty room. The long years of frustration, of doing nothing, of serving the general good in unhistoric acts, as George Eliot put it, justified themselves.
In the difficult years, Fitzgerald could easily have taken to reviewing books and writing short fiction. She did a little – readers should prepare to allow their jaws to drop when they get to Lee's reproduction of "Jassy of Juniper Farm", a serial Fitzgerald wrote for a comic for younger children, Swift, in the 1950s. But a little dedication would have led to some comfort in an age when VS Pritchett could live in some style on short stories and book reviews. Why did she not? Could she perhaps not afford, at the family's worst, a typewriter? She would always have been a writer: she would have been a different one, and the distilled experience of those last books not quite the same.
There is a definite comedy about Fitzgerald's rueful eye falling on her success, when it is all rather too late to be thoroughly enjoyed. She carried on doing her duty by the literary world, and there is an amusing story here told by a novelist who was set on accompanying her when returning from a conference. She, on the other hand, was clearly determined, by travelling in second class, refusing a lift in a taxi, and heading down to the underground, to give him the slip. ("I do seem to have involved you in some low forms of transport.") I met her twice: she was very civil about a book of mine; I found her, personally, very daunting, without quite being able to account for the impression. Other people seem to have had the same experience.
Lee was a perfect choice as Fitzgerald's biographer. She has done a superb job, capturing an elusive personality and a complex, sometimes rather harrowing story. She managed to get a good deal out of Fitzgerald's three children, who one sometimes thinks were the people who saw the whole experience most clearly – certainly Fitzgerald's bad behaviour over her son Valpy's early but very happy marriage is given full coverage. (You feel that she might have understood why he wanted to find security in family life as soon as possible.) There is a surface of restraint and orderly decency in the life as it is told here; beneath it, the wildness and fury of the books, where girls' legs are hacked off at the knees to make them suitable companions for aristocratic dwarfs; where a Cambridge intellect falls in love helplessly with quite an ordinary nurse; where poetry happens, from who knows where. At the end of At Freddie's, we glimpse the violence and terror that a mind in love with the possibility of perfection can wreak, as the child actor Jonathan tries to perfect the stage leap in a Covent Garden back yard. "In the morning there would be someone to come and watch, and tell him whether he was right or not. Meanwhile he went on climbing and jumping, again and again and again into the darkness." Someone indeed came in the morning, for Fitzgerald and her writing career. By then she, like Jonathan, had been jumping into the darkness, trying to create perfection, for a good long night.

Saturday, October 27, 2018

“Muriel Spark: The Biography” / A fearless novelist, betrayed




Muriel Spark by Alexander (Sandy) Moffat

“Muriel Spark: The Biography”: 
A fearless novelist, betrayed


A new biography of the writer reveals a life of personal struggle — and a lover with an unscrupulous agenda


MAUD NEWTON
APRIL 20, 2010 6:21PM (UTC)
At age forty-three, the witty, exacting, and wholly original Muriel Spark became known to American readers when The New Yorker devoted an entire issue to her sixth and most celebrated novel,"The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie". Brodie, a magnetic and domineering schoolteacher, selects a group of girls to mold into the "crème de la crème" -- young women made in her image who will recognize their prime when it arrives and know how to exploit it. Propping up their history textbooks for appearances as she recounts a pre-war love affair, trailing after her through strange neighborhoods on the way to plays and picnics, Miss Brodie's chosen pupils idolize her -- until the danger of her manipulations becomes clear.
Spark herself attended an Edinburgh girls' school much like the one she depicts so vividly and in such biting detail -- students in stiff blazers, boys hovering on the periphery with their bicycles after the final bell, and the portrait of the widow who endowed the school "hung in the great hall, and was honoured every Founder's Day by a bunch of hard-wearing flowers such as chrysanthemums or dahlias. These were placed in a vase beneath the portrait, upon a lectern which also held an open Bible with the text underlined in red ink, 'O where shall I find a virtuous woman, for her price is above rubies.'" Yet the uniquely charming and monstrous Miss Brodie, for all her verisimilitude, could only have sprung from Muriel Spark's complex mind.
Martin Stannard's sprawling, respectful, frequently overwritten new life, "Muriel Spark: The Biography," underscores just how much the existence of Spark's novels -- some of the finest and funniest of the last century -- owes to happenstance. It's astonishing (and, at least to this aspiring writer, sobering) to realize just how easily she could have failed to bring them into being.
After a painful divorce in her late twenties, Spark left the son of her disastrous marriage in her parents' care, toiled during the day in often thankless office jobs, and wrote poetry and criticism at night, slowly earning respect as a literary scholar. She first tried her hand at fiction at the age of thirty-three, almost by accident. The Observer announced a £250 holiday story contest, and Spark, who hoped to avoid another secretarial gig but had fallen behind on her bills and a book-length study of John Masefield, dashed off an entry and mailed it in. Until then, she claimed, she had no intention of writing narrative prose. She might well have continued to dedicate herself to verse and to tomes on other people's writing had the newspaper's literary editor not called that Christmas Eve morning to let her know she'd won the prize.
Even for a few years afterward, Spark's literary path remained uncertain. She published reviews, wrote poems and stories, worked on a book about the Brontës, and tried to sort out her life. Finding solace in Catholicism, she slowly extricated herself from a poisonous relationship with her live-in lover, the needy, far less talented writer Derek Stanford.
After her Observer winnings dwindled, she took Dexedrine diet pills not only to stay slim but to keep her food costs down. The hallucinatory, paranoiac effects of amphetamine poisoning were unknown at the time, and Spark had always been given to intense literary passions, so friends saw nothing amiss in her fixation on T. S. Eliot's Christian play "The Confidential Clerk" until she began to speak of threatening codes that she believed were embedded in the text and directed at her. "Obsessively she began to seek them out, covering sheet after sheet of paper with anagrams and cryptographic experiments." As her delusions intensified, she became convinced that Eliot had taken a job with some of her acquaintances as a window-washer in order to rifle through their papers.
"We loved her so much during that period," a friend said. "It was really like watching someone using spiritual crossword puzzles.... The text [of the play] kept her mind together somehow." While she recovered, Spark focused on fiction.
Her first novel, "The Comforters," which the novelist Katharine Weber and others have argued she wrote "to save herself from madness," explicitly deals with hallucinations. The protagonist, Caroline, a literary critic, is plagued by voices -- as though, she tells her priest, "'a writer on another plane of existence was writing a story about us.'"
Stannard sensitively but persuasively examines the way Spark's breakdown found its way into her work -- and may even have enabled it -- but also reveals how desperately she wanted to prevent anyone from making the connection. Not only is "The Comforters'" Caroline, like the author, "[t]orn between the spiritual and the material worlds," but a later novel, "The Bachelors," plays back conversations … as a psychodrama of jabbering demons." Like her friend Evelyn Waugh, who was also suffering from amphetamine overdose, Spark coped with her illness by transforming it into art.
Spark published "The Comforters" in 1957, at thirty-nine, to acclaim and confusion (it employed a postmodern structure that was still unfamiliar). Her next book came six months later. "Usually," Stannard observes, "she had one ... finished while another was in proof and a third being launched." Writing novels was so easy, she said in 1960, "I was in some doubt about its value."
Having found her literary footing, Spark was increasingly certain of her talents. She forbade her editors to alter so much as a punctuation mark without permission. She didn't, or at least claimed not to, revise. "If I write it, it's grammatical," she told a friend and fellow novelist who dared to question one of her sentences. When one of her essays was "updated" without her consent, she demanded the culprit make reparations by contributing to her church's organ fund. He balked; she threatened to sue. In the end, he paid. The one critic she relied on was her Persian cat, Bluebell, "a gifted clairvoyante," who "would sit on my notebooks if what I had written therein was all right."
Spark's staggering confidence in her work was largely warranted. "If she thinks it's good," one of her publishers said, "it is good." Her characters, she informed Iris Murdoch, "do exactly what I tell them to do." Novel-writing was "the easiest thing I had ever done." Love affairs, by contrast, were fraught -- and dangerous.
In her fiction, Spark developed stunning authorial control, reminiscent of fellow Catholic Flannery O'Connor's in its precision, insight, and detachment, but less austere and far more inclined to hilarity and wit. Her characters' disagreements are often played for laughs, even as they somehow remain human, believable, and completely engrossing. In "Memento Mori," the most dog-eared among my copies, of her books, Godfrey Colson cross-examines his Catholic wife and housekeeper about cremation:
"It isn't a matter of how you feel, it's a question of what your Church says you've not got to do. Your Church says you must not be cremated, that's the point."
"Well, as I say, Mr. Colston, I don't really fancy the idea --"
"'Fancy the idea' ... It is not a question of what you fancy. You have no choice in the matter, do you see?"
"Well, I always like to see a proper burial, I always like --"
"It's a point of discipline in your Church," he said, "that you mustn't be cremated. You women don't know your own system."
"I see, Mr. Colston. I've got something on the stove."
Spark wrote fearlessly but lived, especially once she became famous, defensively. Success made her wary. When considering attachments, she was exceedingly conscious of "the fragility of reputation, the carelessness with which this precious commodity was handled by third parties, the exposure to competitive defamation and gossip-mongering."
Stanford, perhaps her greatest love, betrayed her most egregiously. He sold the letters she'd sent him, stole and did a small trade in her private papers, wrote a patronizing "biographical and critical study" of Spark and her work, and, until he died, published withering reviews of her books. Most unforgiveable of all, though, he told her family of her secret breakdown. And publicly, he insinuated that her work was infected by madness.
Spark raged. An artist, she believed, "was in one sense 'possessed' by her vision but must never be possessed by anyone or anything obstructing this vision. Above all, she must not be possessed by insanity. Great art always walked close to that borderline but the great artist always knew her way back." Her attempts to keep the Dexedrine debacle a secret failed, and not just because of Stanford; as her literary fame grew, other friends, and even her son, proved loose-lipped and judgmental. When they did, she added them to her "menagerie of bêtes noires, the unforgiveables." And she hit back hard.
When her novella "The Driver's Seat" appeared, Stanford implied in The Scotsman that Spark's fiction was fixated on "batty" women and traded in "giggles and sniggers." Her revenge in "A Far Cry from Kensington" rivals Somerset Maugham's brilliantly scathing attack on Walpole in "Cakes and Ale." Bartlett, Spark's pisseur de copie, has Stanford's "speech mannerisms and literary style, the yellow tie and check shirt." His prose "reveals him not only as pompous but also a traitor."
In 1993, Spark's former longtime editor Alan Maclean echoed Stanford, telling the New Yorker that she was "really quite batty" in the diet pill years. "[S]he thought I was one of 'them' -- 'them' being the people who were planting the clues. For a long time afterwards, when she was under pressure she would react very badly." Asked for comment, Spark called him an "indescribably filthy liar" who "must be on the bottle again."
For many years, she avoided interviews lest they depict her in an unflattering light. Her life was the raw material of her art; she refused to squander it just to fill out lazy journalists' puff pieces. Yet she was always cognizant of the public eye, and in some sense enjoyed playing to it. She kept herself thin, dressed as fashionably and expensively as her finances would allow, and reveled in being admired, especially by men.
When in complete control of how she was presented, Spark could be surprisingly revealing. In 1996, she kept an online diary for Slate about her failing health and the way she spent her days. Her warm, confiding tone prefigured blogging; unlike many of today's online diarists, though, she doled out the confessions sparingly.
Even as a girl, she deplored idle curiosity and enjoyed thwarting it. She wrote letters to herself from imaginary admirers and tucked them between the sofa cushions for her nosy mother to find. "Dear Colin," one of her fake responses began, "You were wonderful last night." This trickery is pure Spark: theatrical, clever, subversive -- effortlessly outwitting those who would intrude on her private world.
Her best novels -- "Jean Brodie," "The Girls of Slender Means,""Memento Mori,""The Bachelors,""The Finishing School" -- evince this same amusement at people's foibles, at our half-truths and half-baked schemes, our prying and evasions and delusions and prejudices. All of her characters are viewed through her shrewd, unsentimental lens, a perspective that prefigured those Iris Murdoch and Hilary Mantel later adopted. Her work is sui generis, her influence unquantifiable. The people in her books live and speak believably, passionately, ridiculously -- like lovers overheard arguing in an adjacent apartment.



Tuesday, August 28, 2018

Rekindling the Spark / Bio recalls novelist


Muriel Spark


Rekindling the Spark: Bio recalls novelist

Nonfiction: "Muriel Spark: The Biography," by Martin Stannard. MACKENZIE CARPENTER
July 4, 2010

Elegant, macabre, clever, subversive, funny and, these days, mostly forgotten.
Muriel Spark (1918-2006) may be the best post-World War II British novelist people never read any more, remembered mainly as author of "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie," her only novel to achieve popular success.
"Memento Mori," "Girls of Slender Means," "The Driver's Seat" and many of her other novels won rave reviews in their day but have faded into obscurity.
With the publication of Martin Stannard's massive new biography, it might be time for a Spark revival, though. Through archives, letters, publications and interviews, he delineates the life of a publicly celebrated writer who was, the author says, "a mistress of disguise and disappearances."
Well before Betty Friedan composed her own 1962 manifesto for female self-determination, Muriel Spark practiced it without apology, with complete confidence in her genius.
When worldwide fame came after "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie" (which was published in its entirety in The New Yorker), she accepted it as her due, lived large, wore couture, leased fabulous apartments in New York and Rome and had entourages of friends and admirers. (After two dismal love affairs she pretty much abandoned sex although she found late-in-life happiness in an apparently asexual companionship with artist Penelope Jardine.) Yet, always, she was the disciplined writer, indeed, prolific -- 22 novels in all.
Ms. Spark had invited Mr. Stannard to write this book back in 1992 when she read his acclaimed two-volume biography on Evelyn Waugh. It can be an exhausting read, overstuffed with facts about her battles with publishers, editors and journalists.
Famously litigious, Ms. Spark fiercely guarded her privacy, once threatening an injunction when an interviewer wrote she had cooked dinner for Tennessee Williams because, she claimed, all her parties were catered.
Ms. Spark called her fiction "a literature of ridicule" and her shrewdly observed characters are mostly unscrupulous, often stupid, and if they're smart, they're often venal.
Frequently touted as a "Catholic novelist" in the manner of Waugh and Graham Greene (two friends who strongly supported her during her early years as a literally starving writer), her Catholicism was selective; she disdained popes and sermons and supported birth control, but in spare, exacting prose, was always preoccupied with matters of the soul -- self-sacrifice, original sin.
Born Muriel Camberg into a middle-class family in Edinburgh, Ms. Spark was half Jewish, which may have accounted for her divided personality -- a workaholic who craved solitude (she'd sometimes check herself into a private hospital so she could write without being disturbed).
She also loved the limelight, as long as she controlled it. A vivacious redhead, she enjoyed being admired by men, but mocked them after they would leave the room.
Mr. Stannard goes to great lengths to defend her behavior, which could be selfish and cruel, most notably in her treatment of her son, Robin, her only child from a disastrous early marriage to a man who abused her during seven miserable years in Africa.
Let's face it, she could be monstrous, but Muriel Spark's life is worth reading, and if any good comes from this book, it will mean her novels are read again.
But you'll have to order them online. A recent visit to a large chain bookstore revealed many Sparks (Nicholas) on the shelf under "S" but only one small singular Spark -- the "Brodie" book. Depressing.



Muriel Spark / The Biography by Martin Stannard


The driver's seat

Review: Muriel Spark: The Biography by Martin Stannard 
Alex Clark delves into an exhaustive biography of the unsentimental, satirical Muriel Spark

Alex Clark
Saturday 15 August 2009

"I
like purple passages in my life," Muriel Spark once told an interviewer. "I like drama. But not in my writing. I think it's bad manners to inflict a lot of emotional involvement on the reader - much nicer to make them laugh and to keep it short." Although Spark was not averse to playing cat and mouse with those who sought to encapsulate either her or her work in a neat paragraph or two, this self-summary is telling. One may counter that there is plenty of drama in her novels, from corrupt nuns to fatal conflagrations, from mysterious charismatics to outright deceivers, but they all work on the principle of control and distance, on the absence or subversion of emotion in the most overwrought of circumstances. What, though, of her life?

Martin Stannard's exhaustively researched biography, a decade in the writing and encouraged by its subject before her death in 2006, does not shy away from the purple passages, but steers a careful course to ensure that full-blown melodrama is avoided. Amid the multiple flights, bust-ups, triumphs and disasters that stud Spark's life, he emphasises her need to find space, quiet and isolation - her "island" - in which to write. Work was everything; the rest was part of a pageant that was amusing for as long as it didn't distract.
Space and quiet were not commodities readily available in her early years. Born Muriel Camberg in 1918, the daughter of a Jewish mechanical engineer and his gregarious gentile wife, she grew up in a shabby-genteel flat in Edinburgh that brimmed with lodgers, stray family members and passers-by. At Gillespie's school she encountered an inspirational teacher who became the model for the fearsome Jean Brodie and who really did refer to her charges as the "crème de la crème", learning from her, in Stannard's words, "a nascent scepticism about all systems of power and their potential for corrupting free will".
The process of separating herself from her upbringing had begun, provoking the first of many self-exiles. In 1937, when she was 19, she left Scotland for Southern Rhodesia with a maths teacher, Sydney Oswald Spark, marrying him shortly after. Their wedding night, Spark said later, was "such a botch-up". By the time their son, Robin, was born, one year later, Ossie was already in severe mental breakdown. It was time to escape again.
That escape took some years to effect, and was achieved only by leaving Robin behind, but eventually Muriel arrived in the more convivial milieu of mid-40s London. Stannard conjures the febrile atmosphere of the capital and the energising effect it had on his subject, who found herself engaged in Foreign Office propaganda campaigns, dining in hotels with married men and entering the literary world by becoming the general secretary of the Poetry Society. This period, which provided her with two serious lovers, Howard Sergeant and Derek Stanford, and was to end in a vicious power struggle ("You have always had a strange complex about your 'importance'," said one of her opponents at the Poetry Society), confirmed Spark in her own mind as a writer. Stannard gives us Spark's transformation from marginal littérateur to driven, prolific novelist in a detailed, thoughtful fashion, and it is not to his detriment that there remains something of a mystery. There was a mental collapse, fuelled by diet pills, during which she believed that TS Eliot was sending her coded messages through his work; a further distancing from son and family; a final break from Stanford; and her entry into the Catholic church. In a Carmelite priory in Kent in 1957, she wrote her first novel, The Comforters; four more were to follow by the end of 1960.

Spark's spiritual crisis gave her a framework in which to ponder the themes that beset her mind and her work: predestination and free will, the disappearance of an anthropomorphic God and the presence of evil. She aimed for compression and obliqueness. There was, after all, no need for an excess of "emotional involvement", either for the reader or for the writer who, having created her characters, had the same responsibilities as God. The appropriate mode for all this was satiric, comical, playful; not the deadening hand of traditional realism.
Her admirers, Evelyn Waugh, Graham Greene, VS Naipaul and John Updike among them, agreed. Another transformation - into world-famous writer with her own office at the New Yorker (which first published The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie), a string of escorts, diamond rings and even a racehorse - was on the horizon. Stannard details her near-constant wrangles with her publishers with extraordinary patience; one appreciates her talent for hard bargaining without, perhaps, being given chapter and verse over her royalty statements. But if Spark's biographer can appear disconcertingly accepting of some rather self-aggrandising behaviour, he is more compelling on the novels themselves - the vast mental strain of her attempt to confront the fracture between Christianity and Judaism in The Mandelbaum Gate (1965), for example, and the experimentalism of later works such as The Driver's Seat (1970) and The Hothouse by the East River (1973) - and on her determination to keep moving, from New York apartment-hotel to Roman palazzo, from friendship to friendship. Her correspondence of the 1960s, he writes, "suggests her expectation of betrayal, as though she were eager to detect it in order to relieve herself of the burden of intimacy".
Spark was unsentimental about betrayal; it was, she felt, unrealistic to expect loyalty, which didn't stop her outbreaks of fury (often described rather euphemistically by Stannard as "irritation"). Late in her life she found a measure of tranquillity with Penelope Jardine, the companion who acted as secretary, major-domo and confidante, although probably not, despite frequent surmise, as her lover. The novels - including the wonderfully semi-autobiographical A Far Cry from Kensington (1988) and Aiding and Abetting (2000) - did not stop coming. The latter, a jeu d'esprit that juxtaposed a revived Lord Lucan with a fake stigmatic psychoanalyst, was a brilliant éxposé of the lies we are prepared to tell ourselves in order to survive, of the deceptive texture of everyday life. As one of the characters in her play Doctors of Philosophy noted, "reality is very alarming at first and then it becomes interesting".
 This article was amended on 17 August 2009. 



Friday, July 6, 2018

'Penelope Fitzgerald: A Life,' by Hermione Lee / Review by Meganne Fabrega

Penelope Fitzgerald in 1999
Photo by Ellen Warner
Review: 'Penelope Fitzgerald: A Life,' by Hermione Lee

A biography of the late-blooming but brilliant writer Penelope Fitzgerald.

By Meganne Fabrega 
"Her life is basically a short story about lateness," writes acclaimed biographer Hermione Lee of Penelope Fitzgerald, the British novelist, biographer, teacher, mother and wife who did not find commercial success until she was well into middle age. With "Penelope Fitzgerald: A Life," Lee's exhaustive research and immense storytelling talent result in a captivating read about a woman who lived most of her life on the sidelines.

Penelope Fitzgerald / A Life by Hermione Lee / Review by Robert McCrum

Penelope Fitzgerald: A Life by Hermione Lee – review

Hermione Lee writes passionately about a novelist whose brilliant career began at the age of 60

Robert McCrum
Sunday 17 November 2013


T
he novelist Penelope Fitzgerald endured a life of two unequal halves, of failure followed by success. Put them together – as Hermione Lee has done in this brilliant and passionate biography – and you find a haunting tale of blighted hope, personal tragedy and rare, late fulfilment.