The Modern Library (23 page)

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Authors: Colm Tóibín,Carmen Callil

Jake is in constant flight from all that raw emotion. In England, he finds it hard to make much sense of the natives – there is a marvellous description of a ghastly English dinner party. While Jake’s background renders him powerless in the public world of the Swinging Sixties – with actors, producers and TV people
everywhere
– he is tender and human in his own house with his wife and his three children. Jake Hersh is one of the great Jewish creations of the North American novel.

Mordecai Richler was born in Montreal and lived in England between 1959 and 1972, before he returned to Montreal. His other novels include
Cocksure
(1968),
Solomon
Gursky Was Here
(1989) and
Barney’s Version
(1997), which was adapted for film in 2010.

Age in year of publication: forty.

 
 
Marilynne Robinson 1943–
 
1980
Housekeeping
 

This is a most unusual novel, steeped in imagery of water and light, lakes and trains, and the mountains and snows of the north-eastern USA, where the town of Fingerbone seems to float.

Here live three generations of women. Sylvia, the grandmother, has three daughters: Molly, who becomes a missionary in China; Helen, who is mother to Lucille and Ruthie, but follows her father into the bottom of the lake; and Sylvie, a drifter. Ruthie is the teller of the tale and through her eyes we witness the quiet desperation of children at loose in the world. Grandmother dead, mother dead, they end up with Sylvie, who like all her sisters has eschewed for ever the accepted ways of being a woman. No housekeeping, cake-making or doily-crocheting for her, but magic in the
mountains
and love when required. As the disapproving townsfolk of Fingerbone move in, Sylvie and Ruth and Lucille variously set off on pilgrimage, the past travelling with them.

Marilynne Robinson has a rare eye for nature. Every insect, gnat on the wing, the shifting colours of snow, water, ice ‘the colour of paraffin’, ‘plaited light’ is closely observed. Smells too – woods with the odour of ‘the parlor of an old house’, cleanliness that smells like a sun-warmed cat. This is a wistful, laconic novel, illuminated by a haunting sense of the spirit of nature, and the spirit of place.

Marilynne Robinson was born in Idaho and lives in New England. Her other novels are
Gilead
(2004) which won the American National Book Critics Circle Award and a Pulitzer Prize and
Home
(2008) which won the Orange Prize.
Housekeeping
was filmed by Bill Forsyth in 1987.

Age in year of publication: thirty-seven.

 
 
Philip Roth 1933–
 
1997
American Pastoral
 

Swede Levov has everything: he is good-looking, a superb athlete, rich, a good father, a good son, a good citizen and a good employer; he is married to a former Miss New Jersey, with whom he has a pretty good sexual relationship; he is even-tempered, at ease with himself, mild-mannered, and much admired. Philip Roth establishes him convincingly and in great detail as one of the most contented men in America, post-Jewish, but deeply alert to his family’s recent history as immigrants. Why then, does his daughter, Merry, become such a difficult presence in the house, refusing first to eat her food and then slowly becoming obsessed with the Vietnam War until she puts a bomb in the local store-cum-post office and disappears? Why do the riots in Newark, where the main Levov factory is sited, occur?

Roth dramatizes the significant events of the second half of the century in the United States in the life of one family, in one all-American consciousness. The result is a novel which is intensely absorbing and readable with some magnificent set scenes such as a forty-fifth anniversary high school reunion at which the narrator meets the Swede’s brother among many others, and a dreadful dinner party at the end of the book which must be the best worst dinner party in all fiction. Swede Levov is alive in this book not as a recognizable type, but as a uniquely vivid personality. His character and his consciousness stay in your mind.

Philip Roth was born in Newark, New Jersey, and now lives in New York State. His other books include
Portnoy’s Complaint
(1969),
Sabbath’s Theater
(1995),
I Married a Communist
(1998),
The Plot Against America
(2001),
Everyman
(2006),
Exit Ghost
(2007) and
Indignation
(2008).
American Pastoral
won a Pulitzer Prize in 1998.

Age in year of publication: sixty-four.

 
 
Norman Rush 1933–
 
1991
Mating
 

Sometimes a novel appears which seems to have no direct literary antecedents, which is written in a tone which is new and fresh, and takes an approach which is original and startling. Norman Rush’s
Mating
is such a book; it deals with Americans in Africa; it is narrated by a female anthropologist on the make in Botswana. She is urbane, intelligent and has read thousands of books, now she is in search of new sensations and a warm climate and useful research material. She is knowing and cynical and pushy, too selfconscious as a narrator to make the reader dislike her too actively, but so adept with sentences and paragraph endings and exciting prose rhythms, not to speak of self-knowledge, that the reader is full of admiration for her and deeply amused by her antics.

The novel, like all good comic writing, has a dark side: our heroine sets out on a lone journey across the desert to find the brave, remote Utopia which a shady and attractive American called Nelson Denoon has set up in a place called Tsau. While some of this is very funny indeed, there is something strange and
unsettling
about the social control which Nelson insists on, and the world he has invented. The tone of this book is flawless, the voice is utterly convincing.

Norman Rush was born in San Francisco and now lives in New York. He is the author of three works of fiction: a book of stories,
Whites
(1986),
Mating
which won the
Irish Times
Literature Prize and
Mortals
(2007). He lived and worked in Africa between 1978 and 1983.

Age in year of publication: fifty-eight.

 
 
Salman Rushdie 1947–
 
1981
Midnight’s Children
 

Salman Rushdie is a born storyteller, whose work has been a turning point in the development and perception of modern Indian fiction. Rushdie vibrates with moral passion, with opinion and political belief. He is a dominating writer who engulfs his readers in fabulous stories. A master of comic invention, his characters, full of snot, ego and physical abnormality, leave you with a sense of having sneezed violently and laughed too long and too loudly.
Midnight’s Children
– an allegory for India’s recent history – leaves you with a great love for its Indian world.

Saleem Sinai is born on 15 August 1947, one of 1001 children, magically endowed, whose birth coincides with India’s severance from Britain. Rushdie takes a savage swipe at Mrs Indira Gandhi and her notorious 1971 Emergency measures, whilst the fantastical plot and flamboyant narrative, centring on the swapping of two babies at birth, give entirely new excitement to the most traditional of British comic literary fancies. Rushdie is the kind of writer whose work is too much surrounded by academic contemplations of his ‘magical realism’ and ‘post-modernism’. Readers need only concentrate on the ebullient Rushdie imagination and the wonder and entertainment of the novel itself.

Salman Rushdie was born in Bombay and educated in England.
Midnight’s Children
won the Man Booker Prize. Other novels include
Shame
(1983),
The Moor’s Last Sigh
(1995),
The Satanic Verses
, which won the Whitbread Fiction Award (1988),
The Ground Beneath Her Feet
(1999),
Fury
(2001),
Shalimar the Clown
(2005) and
The Enchantress of Florence
(2008).
Midnight’s Children
was awarded the Man Booker of Bookers for the best Man Booker winning novel of the first forty years in 2008.

Age in year of publication: thirty-four.

 
 
J. D. Salinger 1919–2010
 
1951
The Catcher in the Rye
 

It is against the odds that this book, which had such a cult following in its day, and during the twenty years after publication, should still be fresh and fascinating. But it is still fresh and fascinating.

It tells the story of a few days in the life of a sixteen-year-old boy, Holden Caulfield who, about to be thrown out of another expensive school, escapes to New York. He books into a hotel, tries to lose his virginity, meets his kid sister – the scene where he sneaks into the apartment is magnificent – and ponders on the nature of things. His thought process is direct and unforgettable, he has odd fascinations and desires, he has great loves and hates, and he has a most peculiar and impressive sort of intelligence. Clearly, he needs psychiatric help, but psychiatric help also needs him (and his version of the encounter would be by far the more interesting). In other words, Salinger created a character who stays in the mind, whose first-person narrative the reader enters completely, whose verbal quirks – and he has many – remain funny and do not irritate, and whose story is likely to survive into the far future.

J. D. Salinger was born in New York. His other books include
Franny and Zooey
(1961) and two collections of stories. At the time of his death he had lived in seclusion in New Hampshire for many years.

Age in year of publication: thirty-two.

 
 
Frank Sargeson 1903–1982
 
1965
Memoirs of a Peon
 

Michael Newhouse, New Zealand Casanova, is the protagonist of this picaresque satire, which takes us from his childhood through his youth to his later years, by way of the procession of vociferous women who catch his eye.

Michael is a puffball of conceit, one of those oblivious men who specialize in making others aware of their own intelligence and emotional requirements. Thus a puzzled sense of indignation wafts through Michael’s story, as he perambulates around Hamilton, Auckland, Wellington, Rotorua and the farms and towns of the North Island, extending his favours to mothers and daughters, utterly unconcerned with his country’s complacent, puritanical values. Circumstance constantly foils him as he snuffles around for a corner of New Zealand life where a more diverse sexuality and a more willing attitude to copulation can be discovered.

Much of the pleasure of the novel comes from the comic grace of its narrative. Michael, raised by his Edwardian grandparents, has mastered a sedate New Zealand version of their formal prose which fluently decorates his descriptions of the ‘raging pit of
disappointment
’ fate always seems to place in his path. Seeming artless, this novel is artful, a radical work using the life and times of an intelligent rake to stick pins into conventional pomposities, in New Zealand in particular, and in the world in general.

Frank Sargeson was born in Hamilton, New Zealand, and lived and wrote in New Zealand. Important works are stories,
Conversations with My Uncle
(1936) and the novel
The Hangover
(1967).

Age in year of publication: sixty-two.

 
 
Paul Scott 1920–1978
 
1966
The Jewel in the Crown
 

India was the jewel in the crown of the British Empire, the possession most loved, most influential, most mourned. This is the first volume of Scott’s grand work The Raj Quartet, and is set in 1942, the beginning of tumultuous times, with Europe at war and India in ferment, raging with anti-British riots, on the road to Independence.

Rape is at the centre of events, the political rape of India by the British, the physical rape of Daphne Manners by Indian peasants in the Bibighar Gardens in Mayapore, an outrage which reverberates immediately and for many years to come throughout the British community in India. And throughout the Indian communities too, for Daphne Manners had committed the unforgivable sin of falling in love with a Hindu, Hari Kumar. He, in turn, a Hindu educated at an English public school, is an outcast in both worlds.

Over Scott’s vast landscape hovers the magnificence of India itself, almost a spectator, watching as Scott moves through the past, present and future to show that just as there was no mercy in British India for those who transgressed Imperial rules so, subtly, mercilessness became the weapon upon which the British impaled themselves.

Paul Scott was born and lived in London. The books that follow
The Jewel in the Crown
in The Raj Quartet, which became a successful television series in 1983 as
The Jewel in the Crown
, are
The Day of the Scorpion
(1968),
The Towers of Silence
(1971) and
A Division of Spoils
(1975).
Staying On
, a coda to The Raj Quartet, won the Booker Prize in 1977.

Age in year of publication: forty-six.

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