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Authors: Colm Tóibín,Carmen Callil
Carson McCullers writes in polished Southern tones, and this novel is written in language of singular beauty with not a word out of place. Her explorations of the frustrations of love are never bleak but seem to celebrate human love at its oddest and best, turning humdrum lives into heroic ones, and making a sad love story endearing and droll.
Carson McCullers was born in Georgia, and wrote the equally famous novels
The Heart is a Lonely Hunter
(1940),
Reflections in a Golden Eye
(1941) and
The Member
of the Wedding
(1946).
Age in year of publication: thirty-four.
This novel was published in the year before Margaret Thatcher took power in Britain, and its tone and content seem to imply that there was a very great need for her. The house where the four children – Julie, Jack, Sue and Tomare – are being brought up by their parents is in sight of new tower blocks, and the proposed motorway which caused the houses around them to be knocked down, has never been built. Neither parent has any siblings so there are no relatives. The father dies first, and then the mother after a long illness. The children, three of whom are in their teens, decide to bury her in the cellar and tell no one. This is presented as perfectly normal by Jack, who narrates the story. They loved their mother, but they want the giddy freedom which running the household will offer them.
There is not a false note in the whole book; McEwan makes you feel that this is, perhaps, what you would do too under similar circumstances. In any case, the siblings are locked into their own dramas. Tom, the youngest, wants to dress like a girl and is allowed to do so, then he wants to be a baby and this too is arranged. Jack is obsessed with his own adolescent body. Sue keeps a diary. Julie gets a boyfriend. They settle down into an uneasy and fragile
harmony
, broken only by Derek the boyfriend and the gradual rise of the smell from the cellar. Their world has been so perfectly created that you feel miserable at the prospect of its being broken up.
Ian McEwan was born in Aldershot, Hampshire. He published his first volume of stories,
First Love, Last Rites
, in 1975. His other novels include
The Child in Time
(1987),
Enduring Love
(1997),
Amsterdam
, which won the Booker Prize in 1998,
Atonement
(2001), which was made into an Oscar-winning film in 2007,
Saturday
(2005),
On Chesil Beach
(2007) and
Solar
(2010).
Age in year of publication: thirty.
In all of John McGahern’s fiction – he wrote five novels and three volumes of stories – there is an air of perfection. He works on a small canvas; the same figures and the same landscape and indeed the same hard-won bleakness appear in much of his work. There is a timeless beauty about his fiction which means that it is unlikely to date or seem out of fashion. The opening pages of his first novel,
The Barracks
(1963), contain some of the best prose written in English in the second half of the century.
Twenty-seven years later McGahern’s fifth novel
Amongst
Women
tells the story of the War of Independence veteran Moran, his three daughters, his two sons and Rose, his second wife. Besides having one of the best first sentences in recent fiction (‘As he weakened, Moran became afraid of his daughters.’), the book is remarkable for the plainness of its prose, its seamless structure and its careful delineation of the dark forces which gather around family relationships. Moran is both a violent bully and a man with an enormous capacity to charm; his daughters fear him and love him at the same time. McGahern’s genius lies in the relentless accuracy of his prose, and the graceful portrayal of his characters.
John McGahern was born in Dublin and lived in County Leitrim. His novel
The Dark
was banned by the Irish Censorship Board in 1965.
The Leavetaking
(1974) and
The
Pornographer
(1979) were followed by his magnificent
Collected Stories
(1992),
That they May Face The Rising Sun
(2001) and
Memoir
(2005).
Amongst Women
won the Irish Times Literature Prize.
Age in year of publication: fifty-six.
This novel is written in a language which has been created to preserve order, to describe precisely, to win the reader’s trust. This is the first sentence: ‘The catastrophic love affair characterized by sexual obsession has been a professional interest of mine for many years now.’
The narrator is the psychiatrist Peter Cleave, who works in a top-security mental hospital in England in the 1950s. He tells the story of how his colleague Max Rafael’s wife Stella ran away with the brutal murderer and sculptor Edgar Stark, an inmate of the hospital. As with all of McGrath’s work, every word and phrase is carefully weighed and placed; from early on, you cease to trust Dr Cleave’s narrative, but despite this, the figure of Stella, obsessed with Stark, becomes more and more clear and engrossing. Her introduction to Stark, his efforts to escape, her flight to London, her life with him there, and all the inevitable consequences are narrated with an almost prurient zeal by Dr Cleave. Her state of mind and the desires which impell her are utterly convincing, and the way in which Stark deals with her and Cleave watches over her make the book dark, disturbing, Gothic. The scenes in a Welsh farmhouse are particularly bleak. This is the sort of book that when you finish, you immediately want to hand to someone else to read.
Patrick McGrath was born in London and grew up near Broadmoor Hospital where his father was Medical Superintendent. His other books include
Spider
(1992),
Dr Haggard’s Disease
(1993),
Port Mungo
(2004) and
Trauma
(2008).
Age in year of publication: forty-six.
It is extraordinary and unexpected that two of the best American novels of the past decade have centred on the Wild West. Larry McMurtry’s
Lonesome Dove
lacks the poetry and intensity and fierce power of Cormac McCarthy’s
All the Pretty Horses
, but it makes up for that in the quality of its characterization and its plain, careful, perfectly pitched style. It is almost a thousand pages in length, the sort of book that you would stay up all night to finish; it has many old-fashioned virtues: a gripping story, action, sex, death, strong silent types (McMurtry is very good on these), human weakness, strong-willed women, harsh landscape.
It tells the story of a journey of a group of men, one woman and a herd of cattle from Texas to Montana at a time when the Native Americans have been all but wiped out and America has been tamed for the white man. It reads like a book of the Old Testament, a battle against nature at a time when old virtues are being replaced, with constant setbacks caused by the weather, cruel Indians (the few remaining), the crossing of rivers and the vagaries of the human heart. The fact that the tone of this book has been unaffected by the advances made in prose fiction by Joyce and Beckett, Faulkner and Pynchon does not lessen its impact, which is immense, or its status as a modern American masterpiece.
Larry McMurtry was born in Texas, where he now lives. His many novels include
Horseman
,
Pass By
(1961), filmed as
Hud
in 1963 and
The Last Picture Show
(1966) which was made into a film in 1971.
Lonesome Dove
won the Pulitzer Prize in 1985.
Age in year of publication: forty-nine.
The Executioner’s Song
is a brilliant work of imagination, based on numerous interviews given by the murderer Gary Gilmore and those around him. Gilmore was executed by firing squad in Utah having demanded the death penalty for himself; he had spent twenty-two of his thirty-five years in jail.
The novel moves like a camera, describing each scene coldly and dispassionately in short paragraphs, never judging, never summing up, never overwriting, allowing each character great latitude and sympathy. It is a triumph of control; the author and his famous ego are totally absent. No one is good or bad; people are motivated by strange, complex passions, longings, compulsions and loyalties. The novel is full of sex and sexual desire in a climate controlled by Mormons. Gilmore’s girlfriend Nicole is one of the great creations in contemporary American writing; she is protean and wild and impulsive, deeply loyal and, at the same time, easily distracted. Gilmore emerges as damaged and trapped, his willingness to destroy and be destroyed giving the book a grim tragic power and a sort of grandeur.
Norman Mailer was born in New Jersey and grew up in Brooklyn. His talent as a novelist was often disguised by the extent and uneven quality of his publications. His best books included
The Naked and the Dead
(1948),
Armies of the Night
(1968),
The Fight
(1975) and
Miami and the Siege of Chicago
(1969).
The Executioner’s Song
won the Pulitzer Prize in 1980.
Age in year of publication: fifty-six.
This is one of the best books about sport, which means that it is about much more than the game of baseball which it describes. It is written in a spare clear style, and in a tone in which light and darkness do battle against each other for the body and soul of our hero.
It opens with the nineteen-year-old Roy Hobbs going to Chicago on a train with his scout. He is an orphan who has been discovered as a baseball wizard and he is destined for the big time. When the train has to stop, he pitches his skills against a famous baseball player who is also on the train, and wins. He is watched by a journalist who will follow the rest of his career, and a woman called Harriet, his nemesis, who is crazy and manages to shoot him in the stomach.
The rest of the novel takes place fifteen years later when Roy makes one last effort to succeed. He is too old, and he is still capable of being bewitched by women (all the women in this novel bewitch); he is moody and hungry for sex and love and hero status, but he is still a brilliant player. The games – the crowd, the tension, the next shot – are described in the novel with great verve and excitement. Roy Hobbs’s uneasy but ravenous desire, his
desperation
to avoid the past, give the narrative a stark power and depth. It is the raw simplicity of
The Natural
, his first novel, which makes it so gripping.
Bernard Malamud was born in Brooklyn. His other masterpieces are
The Fixer
(1967) and
Dubin’s Lives
(1979), and his
Collected Stories
were published in 1997.
The Natural
was made into a film in 1984.
Age in year of publication: thirty-eight.
The Great World
is a portrait of Australian life during and after the Second World War. It is hard to make generalizations about Malouf’s work. He never repeats himself. His characters are portrayed and handled with great feeling and depth; he is capable of creating moments of pure beauty in his books; he insists always on the complexity of things, the various levels on which things happen.
In his three novels of the 1990s,
Remembering Babylon
(1993), set in a remote part of Queensland in the middle of the nineteenth century, and
The Conversations at Curlew Creek
(1996), a dark, intense novel set in early nineteenth-century Australia and Ireland, he has been constructing a sort of history of Australia, an old and new testament for his own country.
The Great World
deals superbly with the drama of a Japanese prisoner-of-war camp; indeed, the novel could have dealt solely with that experience. But this is a more ambitious book, which follows a number of characters back to Australia and makes what happens to them during subsequent decades, emotionally and domestically, in their work and their families, hugely interesting, so that you feel you know them.
The Great World is
memorable for the range of the characters’ emotional response, for the depth and detail and sheer integrity of the writing.
David Malouf was born in Brisbane and lives in Sydney. He is also a poet and librettist.
The Great World
won the Commonwealth Writers Prize. His other books include the magnificent
An Imaginary Life
(1978), a brilliant account of Ovid in exile and after exile, and
The Complete Stories
(2007).
Age in year of publication: fifty-six.