Passion’s slave: #ReadingTheTheatre

Melancolia
‘Melencolia I’ by Albrecht Dürer (1514).

The Black Prince by Iris Murdoch.
Penguin Books, 1975 (1973).

… blest are those
Whose blood and judgement are so well comeddled,
That they are not a pipe for fortune’s finger
To sound what stop she please. Give me that man
That is not passion’s slave, and I will wear him
In my heart’s core.
— ‘Hamlet’ Act 3 Scene 2, 72-78).

When you’re faced with a narrative nested within forewords and postscripts from multiple authors you may start wondering who best to believe, or whether they’re all unreliable; but when the editor and then the memoirist batter you from the start with their verbosity you may then question whether you’ll have the stamina to stay the course.

But then you will remember that this is Iris Murdoch, who knows exactly what she’s doing, and that it takes great skill and discipline to write consistently dubious prose while keeping a tight rein on characterisation, pace and mood.

And I wouldn’t be surprised if, as a classicist and philosopher, she didn’t bring her disciplines to bear on A Black Prince: with its overt citations of and covert allusions to Hamlet I’m expecting an underlay of the four medieval ‘humours’ that categorised human personalities: blood, phlegm, choler or yellow bile, and so-called black bile, the source of the Prince of Denmark’s melancholia.

Continue reading “Passion’s slave: #ReadingTheTheatre”

Bookwise 2026/4

Camelus dromedarius.

Hamlet. Do you see yonder cloud that’s almost in shape of a camel? Polonius. By the mass, and ‘tis like a camel, indeed.

April frivolity. I only briefly managed to pull the proverbial wool over readers’ eyes on the first day of the month with a review of The Life of St Meontologia, a so-called ‘grazer’ mystic from the Late Roman period who dressed in camel skins and perished from thirst. However it was worth a try, given the current lack of frivolity in the news globally.¹

Some memes. I managed to get through a range of books though thanks to book memes, including a review to mark International Unicorn Day. Other events included Reading the Theatre, World Book and Copyright Day, Shakespeare Day, the 1961 Club (all Club reviews are listed here) and A Year with Iris Murdoch, and I even managed to combine a couple or so events with judiciously selected titles.

Two themes. A couple of other themes seem to have inadvertently marked out this month, the first being a number of children’s titles. And then, after four weeks largely dedicated to Irish and Welsh writers I began with emigrée Scottish author (Muriel Spark), but otherwise April seems to have largely featured writers based in England – Lucy Boston, Angela Carter, Alan Garner, Alan Judd, and Catherine Storr. However Wales (Dahl), Ireland (Iris Murdoch, another emigrée), Norway (Dahl again, and Ibsen) plus the US (Minarik) have also had a look-in.

Continue reading “Bookwise 2026/4”

Dramatic tales: #ReadingTheTheatre

Theatrum Orbi: second Globe Theatre (1614) by Robert Fludd.

‘Overture and Incidental Music for A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1982)
and ‘Peter and the Wolf’ (1982)
by Angela Carter, in Black Venus.
Picador / Pan Books, 1986 (1985).

The orchestra has laid down its instruments. The curtain rises. The play begins.

Angela Carter’s collection of short stories, first published in 1985 as Black Venus and then as Saints and Sinners in North America, consists of eight narratives which had appeared in various publications between 1977 and 1982.

Here I want to focus on two of the stories which, however distantly, derive from dramatic narratives associated with musical performance – Mendelssohn’s music to A Midsummer Night’s Dream and Prokofiev’s Peter and the Wolf.

However, just as Shakespeare’s play and the Soviet ‘Symphonic Tale for Children’ are inspired by but aren’t based on traditional fairytales, so Carter’s tales riff on ideas from both works without being either simple retellings or modernised versions; but for all that they – as you’d suspect from Carter’s writings – retain the weirdness, even spookiness, of fairytales and their fantastical worlds.

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A vorpal blade: #ReadingTheTheatre

Antiques shop window, Rye, Sussex © C A Lovegrove.

Shakespeare’s Sword by Alan Judd,
foreword by James Naughtie.
Simon and Schuster, 2019 (2018).

‘One, two! One, two! And through and through | The vorpal blade went snicker-snack!’
—Lewis Carroll, ‘Jabberwocky’.

With a title declaring itself as featuring “Shakespeare’s sword” one may have hopes that in these pages one might – figuratively of course – meet the genuine article. After all, antiques dealer Simon Gold, operating out of a Sussex town somewhat like Rye, believes that ‘There is life in things we touch and use, something of ourselves clings to them.’

But what if the rapier (now functioning as a fireside poker in Winchelsea) has a Shakespearean significance other than that our narrator Simon believes the case from his extensive researches into provenance, genealogy and metalworking?

And what if he realises, too late, that he is fulfilling the role played by some Jacobean tragedian, and that the role may have ramifications in the real world? And what if that role involves death?

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Games of Let’s Pretend: #ReadingTheTheatre

Dolls house 1894.

A Doll’s House (1879) by Henrik Ibsen.
Et dukkehjem translated by Kenneth McLeish (1994),
in Three Plays: A Doll’s House/Ghosts/Hedda Gabler,
introduced and translated by Kenneth McLeish and Stephen Mulrine.
Drama Classic Collections, Nick Hern Books, 2005.

It’s Christmas. Nora and Torvald Helmer appear to have a happy life in their late19th-century Norwegian town: with three children under the age of eight, a nanny and a maid, things will be looking up in the New Year when Torvald gets his promotion and becomes manager at his bank. However, their baby-talk endearments at the start of Act One point to an imbalance in their relationship and suggest a marriage on fragile foundations; and we soon learn that Nora has long-held secrets that can potentially bring their house of cards to the point of collapse.

A nudge towards that collapse occurs with the appearance of two visitors, a former friend of Nora’s, Mrs Kristine Linde, and Nils Krogstad, a bank employee who is facing the sack from Torvald, not just for forgery but for the previous break-up of his family. “An atmosphere like that, a stench of lies and deceit,” Helmer piously informs Nora, “poisons the whole household. Each breath children take in a house like that is a lungful of deadly germs.”

Ironically, the judgement he gives – that “when people go bad young in life, the cause is a deceitful mother” – will bring matters closer to home and ultimately precipitate the crisis that occasions the point of no return, when Nora’s eyes are finally opened.

Continue reading “Games of Let’s Pretend: #ReadingTheTheatre”

Two children’s classics: #1961Club

North American lakeside.

Little Bear’s Visit
by Else Holmelund Minarik,
pictures by Maurice Sendak.
An ‘I Can Read’ Book, No 14.
World’s Work Children’s Books, 1962 (1961).

A favourite bedtime read for some of our own kids and grandkids, the dedication of Little Bear’s Visit – ‘To all grandparents and all grandchildren’ – expresses its appeal perfectly, its timelessness not contradicted by pictures that suggest the Edwardian era. In four short chapters we’re given the scenario (Little Bear visits his grandparents in their little woodland house, ‘something Little Bear liked to do’) framing a pair of tales, ‘Mother Bear’s Robin’ and the spookier ‘Goblin Story’.

Given that it’s part of a series designed to encourage the young reader it’s ideal, and the distinctive illustrations by Maurice Sendak, either a full page facing a page of text or occupying the top half of a page, are as one would expect absolutely delightful, full of charm, humour and character. I have nothing but praise for Minarik’s gentle narrative, which brings comforting resolution to any mild anxiety and alternates innocent fun with a sense of safety, love and repose.

My only regret is not having access to the other four titles in this Little Bear series. Maybe there’ll be a chance if and when great-grandchildren ever appear on the scene.


Other children’s classics appeared in this year too, including Rosemary Sutcliff’s Dawn Wind (which I remember reading as a teenager, but not since); but for now I’m finishing by examining a Roald Dahl classic from 1961, his first novel intentionally written for children after The Gremlins (1943).

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Enmeshmemt: #1961Club

Etruscan sculpture from Pyrgi, ca 350 BC, Museo Nazionale Etrusco di Villa Giulia, Rome.

A Severed Head by Iris Murdoch.
Penguin, 1963 (1961).

‘I am a severed head such as primitive tribes and old alchemists used to use, anointing it with oil and putting a morsel of gold upon its tongue to make it utter prophecies.

And who knows but that long acquaintance with a severed head might not lead to strange knowledge.’

In this winter’s tale an economist, sculptor, psychoanalyst, anthropologist and others are discovered all enmeshed in a social network centred on a wine merchant, one who sees himself as a kind of Hephæstus, the cuckold god who ensnared his wife Aphrodite and her lover Ares in a net.

As the various individuals stumble around in a fog of intrigue, one paralleled by a twilight London smog and the perpetual fug of cigarette smoke – this is the early sixties after all – they unwittingly fit into mythic templates, acting out a tragicomedy that would grace an operatic stage.

The mini-epic is narrated by befuddled wine merchant Martin Lynch-Gibbon as he attempts to make sense of situations while suffering from drunken stupors and self-pity, seasoned by a good dose of hypocrisy. Pitiless philosopher that she is, Murdoch skewers every wriggling specimen for us to view under her microscope, getting us to wonder how each will fit into her taxonomy.

Continue reading “Enmeshmemt: #1961Club”

Displaced persons: #1961Club

© C A Lovegrove.

A Stranger at Green Knowe
by Lucy M Boston,
illustrated by Peter Boston.
Green Knowe No 4.
Puffin Books, 1977 (1961).

When a book is awarded the Carnegie Medal after being judged the best children’s book published in 1961 you know it’s probably something special. And, as I can confirm, something special it certainly is.

Other titles in this Green Knowe series that I’ve so far read have had a quality all of their own, even if they’ve shared the kind of enchantment evident in, say, John Masefield’s The Midnight Folk and The Box of Delights. But the magic that generally happens at Green Knowe, for all its dreamlike nature, feels different because the stories are based on a real life manor house.

However, the magic in A Stranger at Green Knowe isn’t the natural, primeval or ritual kind that appears elsewhere in the series but an altogether more realistic type: it’s the inexplicable bond that can develop between different species – in this case that between a refugee and a gorilla. And the way that rapport is presented here has a poignancy that makes this no ordinary story.

Continue reading “Displaced persons: #1961Club”

Not without an echo: #InternationalUnicornDay

Slum clearances, Salford, Manchester, in the 1960s.

Elidor by Alan Garner,
illustrated by Charles Keeping.
Collins, 2002 (1965).

“‘The darkness grew,’ said Malebron. ‘It is always there. We did not watch, and the power of night closed on Elidor. We had so much of ease that we did not mark the signs — a crop blighted, a spring failed, a man killed. Then it was too late — war, and siege, and betrayal, and the dying of the light.'”

Much of the fantasy written for children in the sixties and seventies by British writers – Penelope Farmer, Susan Cooper, Alan Garner, Joan Aiken and Catherine Storr among others – was dark, with precious little light relief.

Even while there was a hope-filled resurgence and confidence in popular music, fashion and the like the postwar legacy of bombed sites and slum clearance combined with the uncertainties of the Cold War seemed to evoke a response in children’s literature somewhat akin to that met with in adult kitchen sink drama.

Alan Garner’s early novels, beginning with The Weirdstone of Brisingamen (1960), The Moon of Gomrath (1963) and then Elidor in 1965, all carry this mood of melancholy and menace, the sense of an imminent loss encapsulated in the phrase made familiar by Dylan Thomas, “the dying of the light”, and cited here by the mysterious figure of Malebron.

Continue reading “Not without an echo: #InternationalUnicornDay”

The soul jar: #ReadingWales

Waterloo Place, London, 1899: photograph by Léonard Misonne.

‘The Inmost Light’ (1894)
by Arthur Machen,
in The White People and Other Weird Stories
edited by S T Joshi,
foreword by Guillermo del Toro.
Penguin Books, 2011.

“Q. has had to go and see his friends in Paris,” it began. “Traverse Handel S. ‘Once around the grass, and twice around the lass, and thrice around the maple-tree.'”

Fin-de-siècle London. Litterateurs of independent means. Flâneurs. Creeping suburbia and slums. Swirling fogs and coded messages. And hints of unspeakable, even blasphemous mysteries.

Welshman Arthur Llewellyn Jones loved these, and lived these, and even wrote about them – under the name Arthur Machen. In his early novelette ‘The Inmost Light’, written in 1892, he created a twisty narrative that, while relying a great deal on happenstance and synchronicity, languidly brought these aspects together. 

In Mr Dyson, Charles Salisbury and Dr Steven Black we see these kinds of dilletante males he frequently featured, some of whom unfortunately could, and would, casually use women to achieve their dubious and sometimes occult ambitions – to their cost.

Continue reading “The soul jar: #ReadingWales”

Running commentary

Job’s ‘miserable comforters’ from William Blake’s Illustrations of the Book of Job.

The Comforters by Muriel Spark,
introduced by Ali Smith.
Virago, 2009 (1957).

Then Job answered and said, I have heard many such things: miserable comforters are ye all. Shall vain words have an end? or what emboldeneth thee that thou answerest?
— ‘The Book of Job’ (King James Version), 16:1-3.

How can I best describe this book? Delicious, perhaps, because there’s so much to savour – and that’s before considering the significance of baked bread, fish roes, syrup of figs, and the climactic picnic on the banks of the Medway, here at the border between one English county and another.

And what a smörgåsbord Spark provides for us: plaster saints, Black Magic, smuggling, a ghostly typist, delusions, sleuthing, and the testing of a witch by whether she floated or drowned are among the many delicacies offered.

By drawing on her own personality and life experiences Spark imbued her debut novel, written in 1955 and published two years later, with a substrata of authenticity, for all its humour, satire and twisty plotting. Her wartime role concocting fake news in the Political Warfare Executive (PWE), her unfortunate use of Dexedrine, and her conversion to Catholicism from being what she called a ‘Gentile Jewess’, they all fed artfully into a fiction in which deceitful comforters who, when one is distressed, suggest that it may be entirely your own fault, are roundly castigated.

Continue reading “Running commentary”

A house and a home

Bronze Age knife.

Rufus by Catherine Storr.
Illustrated by Peggy Fortnum.
Faber Fanfares, 1978 (1969).

The Children’s Home was about five miles from a market town called Ditchleigh, somewhere in England, anywhere in England. It was called Toft House, and Rachel and Rufus had lived there ever since he could remember.

I began reading this slim children’s story thinking it was largely about an orphaned child being bullied in a children’s home in the sixties. It was indeed about this, but it was also about much more: here was a young boy who’d never known his mother, and the absence he therefore felt grew to a yearning that even his older sister in the home couldn’t replace for him.

But when I discovered that the author was a trained psychiatrist – at one stage married to psychiatrist and psychoanalyst Anthony Storr (whose 1992 book Music and the Mind I liked but have still to finish) – I knew that there was more to this story than just a simple heart-warming tale, even one furnished with the expected happy ending.

Rufus is the little boy whose life we follow, opening with the Big Freeze of 1962-3, when the UK suffered a prolonged period of bitter cold, and then moving on through to when he’s about eleven or so and learns to not only stand up for himself but to be truly and authentically himself.

Continue reading “A house and a home”

Less obscure than before

Cofion bookshop, Quay Hill steps, Tenby, Pembrokeshire © C A Lovegrove.

Sicut Camelus:
the Life of St Meontologia of Nephelococcygia
translated by Thomas Carlyle,
introduced and edited by Kostas Outis.
Methórios Books, Hay-on-Wye, 1991.

I’ve been meaning to review this pamphlet for some time, ever since I spotted it, a year or so before we moved away from Pembrokeshire, sticking out of a tower of books – one of many stacked up in the famously chaotic secondhand Tenby bookshop called Cofion (‘Memories’).

I’m always fascinated by little brochures on obscure historical topics, published by some little-known antiquarian society or short-lived independent press, such as Methórios Books, hailing from the “World’s First Book Town” Hay-on-Wye, at the border between England and Wales.

This eight-page booklet stapled inside nondescript brown covers is a hagiography: it tells the story of a female saint from Egypt, living during a period when Greek influence was still strong in this part of North Africa. As her feast day in some Eastern traditions is marked down for today I thought this might be a good time to draw your attention to her career and help render her life a little less obscure than before.

Continue reading “Less obscure than before”

Bookwise 2026/3

© C A Lovegrove.

March has been a busy month, personally as well as bookishly, but at least I managed to beat some of the blues caused by a succession of weather depressions here in the UK, allied with depressing world news, by escaping into fictional worlds – as I hope some if not all of you have too. And anything concerning books is always music to my ears!

Literary memes formed my focus, as they have for the past handful of years, with March Magics, Reading Wales and Reading Ireland guiding me through some titles and authors I possibly never knew I needed to read, plus a couple of more familiar faces.

I also polished off a few items on my Mount TBR list, though for ill or good I partially countered that by acquiring, ahem, a couple or more titles that were new to me …

Continue reading “Bookwise 2026/3”

A sustained metaphor: #ReadingIrelandMonth

Leucothea: Etruscan sculpture from Pyrgi, ca 350 BC, in the Museo Nazionale Etrusco di Villa Giulia, Rome. The name translates as ‘white goddess’.

The White Goddess:
a historical grammar of poetic myth

(amended and enlarged edition) by Robert Graves.
Faber and Faber Ltd, 1961 (1948).

All saints revile her, and all sober men
Ruled by the God Apollo’s golden mean—
[…] Whose broad high brow was white as any leper’s,
Whose eyes were blue, with rowan-berry lips,
With hair curled honey-coloured to white hips.

— ‘In Dedication’

It was in the 1970s that, in the wake of an interest in what actually constituted ‘Celtic-ness’, I really got stuck into Robert Graves’s The White Goddess, trawling through nearly thirty chapters of dense detail and confusing pantheology. Much of it seemed to make some logical sense but my total lack of familiarity with the sources quoted, combined with an absence of conviction as to many connections and equivalences he made across cultures, meant that I was always uncertain what to take with a pinch of salt and what to reject.

Thirty-plus years later, after much critical questioning of the validity of some of the assertions I realised I’d been failing to take into account the book’s subtitle, which had said it all: it was ‘a grammar of poetic myth’, not a dictionary, an encyclopædia or a bona fide textbook. It was in fact what Professor Ronald Hutton succinctly called “a sustained metaphor, a vision of the sort of past that the writer thought ought to have existed.”

In other words, it was Graves’s own personal credo as a poet, an affirmation of what inspired him to create his verse, his private prayer to the Muses — or rather, to the Muse that he’d created. But canny magician that he was, he thereby persuaded the public to part with their pounds and many to even swallow wholesale his sustained metaphor.

Continue reading “A sustained metaphor: #ReadingIrelandMonth”

Vademecum: #MarchMagics2026

Diana Wynne Jones, 1934–2011.

The Skiver’s Guide
by Diana Wynne Jones,
illustrated by Chris Winn.
Knight Books / Hodder & Stoughton, 1984.

Diana Wynne Jones’s The Skiver’s Guide, like her later The Tough Guide to Fantasyland, is touted as a nonfiction book, but it’s as much nonfiction as Monty Python and the Holy Grail is a historical documentary about searching for a fabled holy relic.

The result of ‘twenty painful years of research’, this is a humorous handbook on how to avoid onerous tasks, concoct excuses, and avoid being found out. In a way it’s the equivalent for youngsters of the once popular series of Bluffer’s Guides, featuring titles like Bluff Your Way in Economics, The Bluffer’s Guide to Law, and – my personal vademecum – Bluff Your Way in Teaching.

Seven chapters cover everything you ever needed to know about degrees of fibbing, skiving at home and at school, coping with your contemporaries, and the strategies to adopt with approaching family holidays and the feigning of illnesses. Again, like Jones’s Tough Guide this feels like more a book to dip into than read from cover to cover, but either way would work for would-be shirkers; luckily for you I’ve read it so you can avoid having to – no excuses needed!

Continue reading “Vademecum: #MarchMagics2026”

Life and death: #ReadingIrelandMonth26

© C A Lovegrove.

Love and Summer by William Trevor.
Penguin Books, 2010 (2009).

William Trevor’s Rathmoye is a rural town in 1950s Ireland, somewhat like Skibbereen, Tipperary, Youghal or Enniscorthy (towns where he grew up) but decidedly a location within an overnight bicycle ride to Dublin. Yet, take away the tractors, the radios and the cinema, and the various lives lived here can be imagined replicated back to the Middle Ages, their stories told not in novels but in ballads or fragments of saga.

For in Love and Summer William Trevor gives us portraits of local worthies, gossips, eccentrics, quiet stalwart types and doomed lovers, whose interactions echo personal histories and repeat patterns that can be replicated the world over and down through the years.

And yet in applying universal and familiar narratives to distinctive individuals we soon understand that joy and sorrow, contentment and tragedy become intensely personal, and that processes and outcomes may bring both profit and costs to all those involved.

Continue reading “Life and death: #ReadingIrelandMonth26”

Like Antigone: #ReadingWales

© C A Lovegrove.

I Saw a Man by Owen Sheers.
Faber and Faber, 2016 (2014).

Yesterday, upon the stair,
I met a man who wasn’t there
He wasn’t there again today
I wish, I wish he’d go away…

[…]

Last night I saw upon the stair,
A little man who wasn’t there
He wasn’t there again today
Oh, how I wish he’d go away…
— from ‘Antigonish’ by Hughes Mearns.

When I spotted an online review that simply but honestly declared this novel as “well-written but undoubtedly the saddest, most depressing book I have ever read,” I was well-prepared for mixed emotions and responses; but sometimes it is as well to confront the outcomes of fictional tragedies, especially when they reflect harsh truths and contemporary realities.

Why so? Because this novel, in which the bulk of the action precedes the global financial crash of 2008, can still be relevant as commentary on individual tragedies and universal disasters happening today, and particularly on actions and technology that impact directly on the lives of innocents, but rarely on the culpable. 

Thoughtless and careless impulses, whether made under stress or before one has time to think, can have ramifications that have far-reaching consequences. Like its source poem I Saw a Man explores these consequences, reflects on ghostly presences and emphasises that tragedy is in fact indifferent to an individual’s gender.

Continue reading “Like Antigone: #ReadingWales”

Neverland now: #MarchMagics2026

Diana Wynne Jones, 1934–2011.

‘The Origins of Changeover (2004)
by Diana Wynne Jones
in Reflections On the Magic of Writing,
edited by Charlie Butler.
David Fickling Books / Greenwillow Books, 2012.

Changeover, Diana Wynne Jones’s first published novel from 1970, was reissued in 2002, and again in 2004 with a new introduction by Moondust Books (who also issued a handful of her early plays plus her poems, this last which I reviewed here). Although she wrote this novel in 1966, she didn’t seriously begin her career as an author until all her sons were in school, when this was published in 1970.

I remember reading that 2004 introduction, ‘The Origins of Changeover‘, in a collection of her nonfiction – Reflections on the Magic of Writing – when it was published in 2012, a year after her death; I then became fascinated to discover whether, and how, this novel for adults might contrast with her later writings, all angled towards fantasy.

Sadly, looking to see where I might acquire an out of print copy I find that the original hardback is now available for … more than £300, and even the paperback reissue costs a pretty penny online, typically from £50.00 upwards. But today, with the notion of ‘régime change’ currently the obsession of leaders wielding too much power and thereby abusing it, it might now be a good moment to consider what Changeover is actually about and what its title implies, as well as its relevance, if any, to 2026 in particular.

Continue reading “Neverland now: #MarchMagics2026”

‘As flies to wanton boys’: #MarchMagics2026

The Discworld Mapp (1995) co-designed by Stephen Briggs and Terry Pratchett, painted by Stephen Player.

Terry Pratchett’s The Colour of Magic: The Graphic Novel.
Discworld Graphic Novel #1
adapted by Scott Rockwell,
illustrated by Steven Ross,
lettered by Vickie Williams
and edited by David Campiti from the novel by Terry Pratchett.
Corgi Books, 1992 (1991).

“As flies to wanton boys are we to the gods;
They kill us for their sport.”
— ‘King Lear’, Act IV Scene 1.

Where to start with an assessment of this adaptation of the first of Pratchett’s Discworld novels? With the good or the bad? With the ambition or the deficiencies? With the wonder or the weaknesses?

Because, for all the well-documented inconsistencies and chaotic storytelling of Pratchett’s original novel there is much to admire there in terms of worldbuilding, satire and humour, even if the final resolution is delayed until its sequel, The Light Fantastic.

Above all, Pratchett deals with words, ideas, reactions and abstractions, leaving the reader to exercise their imagination to fill in extraneous details; so can a visual representation – whether (as here) static or even staged – really be a substitute, however competent, for verbal magic? And has this particular adaptation even succeeded on its own terms?

Continue reading “‘As flies to wanton boys’: #MarchMagics2026”

The books of Taliesin: #ReadingWales

© C A Lovegrove.

Inverted commas: Kindling daydreams

Chapter Fourteen of Rhidian Brook’s debut novel The Testimony of Taliesin Jones (1996) gives a fascinating glimpse into the reading matter a bookish Welsh schoolboy in the second half of the 20th century might have on his shelves.

It begins with three books his father bought him as Christmas presents: Spellbinders in Suspense, Famous and Fabulous Animals and ‘a book of Welsh folk tales depicting a red dragon scorching a silver knight.’ The first title was in fact first issued in 1967 as Alfred Hitchcock’s Spellbinders in Suspense and included stories from writers as varied as Agatha Christie, Robert Bloch, Roald Dahl, Daphne du Maurier, Dorothy L Sayers and Sax Rohmer. This sounded promising.

On the other hand young Taliesin finds the drawings in Famous and Fabulous Animals (1973), authored by Penrose Colyer, ‘gaudy and artless’ and the writing ‘patronising.’ Aged eleven, I too remember being disappointed by books bought for me that I found too simplistic and, indeed, patronising. There were ‘tales of wonder’ where I literally wondered why any adult would assume fantastic tales required the young reader to be talked down to in baby language.

Continue reading “The books of Taliesin: #ReadingWales”

Like bruised blood: #ReadingIrelandMonth26

Gravestone, cherub
© C A Lovegrove.

Long Lankin by John Banville.
The Gallery Press, revised edition 1984 (1970).

She watched him go away down the road. He did not look back, and soon he was gone around a bend. She turned and walked slowly up the hill. The sun had fallen behind the mountains, and the clouds, like bruised blood, were massing.
— ‘The Visit’.

As a former folkie I’ve long been aware of a widespread folk ballad called ‘Long Lankin’ (or variants such as ‘Cruel Lincoln’) since at least the 1970s. It’s a spooky and bloody tale of a man who breaks into a castle, for reasons which are not always clear: some versions suggest he’s a mason who’s not been paid by the castle’s lord for work he’s done, others that he’s also a leper. He somehow persuades the nurse in charge of the lord’s child to let him bleed the lord’s child to death before murdering the wife; whether it’s for some ritual purpose or for revenge is rarely made clear but eventually the false nurse and the vengeful intruder have to meet justice.

I say all this because, like many surviving folk ballads of some antiquity in which motivations are not often clear or there exist lacunae in the telling, the nine pieces in John Banville’s collection of short stories (most of which first appeared in 1970) also have the same unnerving feel: we may arrive in the middle of a situation, and key information about the participants and their relationships can be withheld or remain ambiguous, while there also remains a general sense of menace throughout, of mysteries vaguely alluded to, of crises unresolved.

As a debut publication it’s impressive, and even in this revised edition (with a 1984 tale substituted for two of the original ten stories) it remains haunting and suspenseful. And, in keeping with the cryptic nature of the texts, none of the pieces, either directly or indirectly, seems to reference the ballad of the collection’s title.

Continue reading “Like bruised blood: #ReadingIrelandMonth26”

A stranger world: #MarchMagics2026

Woodcut of Mephistopheles and Faust.

Wild Robert by Diana Wynne Jones.
Illustrated by Emma Chichester Clark.
Collins, 2001 (1989).

‘Heather felt as if something tipped with Robert’s hand. It was as if the part of the world that was ordinary and possible went slanting away sideways in a thin sheet. One edge of the thin sheet went upwards, and the other sloped down through the harder, stranger part of the world that was always underneath, leaving that part bare.’ 
— Chapter Two.

When Diana Wynne Jones writes magic, it’s like no other magic descriptions I’ve read. It’s strange and weird, as you’d expect, but it’s also discombobulating in the sense that there are perceptual paradoxes involved, with words you might recognise juxtaposed in such unexpected ways that one is completely disorientated and totally disconcerted.

And even in this short novella aimed at younger readers she manages to get across the warning that magic can be dangerous, especially magic used by an aggrieved young man who’s awakened after 350 years of enforced slumber to find his former home seemingly invaded by hordes of visitors whom he regards as disrespectful.

Can young Heather restrain his pique and appeal to his better nature before things get too nasty?

Continue reading “A stranger world: #MarchMagics2026”

Fruit from the tree: #ReadingWales

© C A Lovegrove.

The Testimony of Taliesin Jones
by Rhidian Brook.
Penguin Books, 2014 (1996).

He has taken a certain comfort in his possessions. There is a reliability in inanimate objects: they aren’t difficult to converse with, they have no hidden agenda, and they can be relied upon not to desert him. — Chapter 14.

Eleven-year-old Taliesin Jones has reached a pivotal moment in his young life: he’s not long started secondary education, his parents have just separated, he has no friends, and he’s not sure whether or not to believe in God.

His mother has taken up with a hairdresser, his father seems lost, his older brother is distracted by sport and a girlfriend, and Taliesin’s bullied at school; the only friendly faces are the village grocer with a walrus-moustache, who supplies Tal with apples – and once with pomegranates – and his patient piano teacher, Billy Evans, who’s also a natural healer.

Living on a relatively isolated farm in West Wales it’s unsurprising, therefore, that he takes refuge in his few possessions, and especially in his books – his atlas of the world, Animal Farm, Lord of the Flies and a children’s illustrated bible. In the shifting sands of uncertainty Taliesin is desperate for something dependable to cling to, and the novel chronicles his efforts to find what it is.

Continue reading “Fruit from the tree: #ReadingWales”

Bookwise 2026/2

Antique booksnot on my TBR pile!

The shortest month, and yet these Bookwise posts don’t get any shorter. Still, my main focus this February was to read titles from independent publishers for Karen’s #ReadIndies – which I’m pleased I did, incidentally polishing off a few books from my Mount TBR.

The publishers included Broadstone Books in Kentucky, Edinburgh-based Floris Books, Faber & Faber, Europa Editions, and Sort Of Books (which, along with Faber, are part of the Independent Alliance of publishers). The authors I read came from Austria, England, Japan, Scotland and the US; alongside three of these five titles selected from my TBR pile I also included a fourth, a classic SF from John Wyndham for the Speccy Fiction Challilenge.

I even polished off a couple of #logophile posts, one for Valentine’s Day, another for the tenth anniversary of Umberto Eco’s passing, in which there followed a lively response on the topic of antilibraries or – maybe – ante-libraries!

Continue reading “Bookwise 2026/2”

Genie out of the bottle: #SpeccyFicChal

Created using text-generated imaging © C A Lovegrove.

The Trouble with Lichen
by John Wyndham.
Penguin Books, 1987 (1960).

‘There’s more in that girl that she is allowing to meet the eye. She has a way of smiling at the wrong things. Should be surprising, sooner or later.’

Significantly, the cat that turned its nose up at the saucer of milk was called Felicia, from the Latin root meaning happy or lucky. But was it really lucky happenstance that both Diana Brackley and Francis Saxover individually decided to secretly investigate the properties of the lichen that had stopped the milk from going sour?

John Wyndham’s speculative fiction title from 1960 was rather different from what I’d expected after enjoying his action-packed dystopian thrillers, though the po-faced humour was familiar from his 1954 short story collection Jizzle. Superficially a sorcerer’s apprentice type of narrative, it definitely had the whiff of a narrative with the genie let out of the bottle: once a discovery is made you can’t undo it.

What I wasn’t expecting though was the hint of a proto-feminist message which, though presenting as a little laboured and muddled several decades later, ran counter to much of the SF penned by male authors of that period and even later. Though not quite perfect The Trouble with Lichen still has much to challenge and enlighten us in the 21st century as a novel of ideas.

Continue reading “Genie out of the bottle: #SpeccyFicChal”