Posts Tagged ‘MeToo’

‘An Awfully Big Adventure’ by Beryl Bainbridge – Stella Joins a Theater Company

 

‘An Awfully Big Adventure’ by Beryl Bainbridge     (1989) – 205 pages

 

Beryl Bainbridge writes a novel about a theater troupe. What could be better?

In ‘An Awfully Big Adventure’, fifteen year-old Stella Bradshaw gets a job working as an assistant stage manager for the Liverpool Repertory Company in 1947. This is long, long before the #MeToo movement, and I’m sure if someone were to write this sex comedy with dark edges today, Stella would have to be at least eighteen.

Most authors today would portray a fifteen year old girl as a fragile innocent in this dangerous world. Instead Beryl Bainbridge refreshingly portrays our main character Stella as a fifteen year old girl who can take care of herself.

The director of the play, Meredith, knows just what happens inside these theater troupes.

Not for the first time he thought how monotonous it was, this unerring selection of inappropriate objects of desire.”

Speaking of inappropriate objects of desire, Stella falls hard in love with Meredith.

When he spoke to her she could scarcely hear what he said for the thudding of her lovesick heart and the chattering of her teeth. Often he told her she ought to wear warmer clothing.”

Stella has fallen for Meredith in a full-on crush, but she can’t figure out why he is more interested in the other stagehand Geoffrey.

While at the theater, Stella gets some first-hand explicit lessons in sex education from some of the males she comes in contact with. She also sees the sexual undercurrents which swirl through all of the people who are there at the theater. The sexual activity among and with the theater people shades this young-girl-growing-up comedy with its darker aspects.

There are also affairs between the other actors and actresses. The actress Lily says about one of these affairs:

He doesn’t want her,” squealed Lily, “because he’s got her. He’ll soon change his tune if he thought she’d lose interest. They’re all the same. You tell her from me.”

And then then there is the arrival of Irish lead actor P. L. O’Hara who is to take on the Captain Hook / Mr Darling role in their Christmas production of Peter Pan. O’Hara is a famous actor now middle-aged, a rogue known to have slept with many of the actresses of his time.

He had the audience in the palm of his hand,” he cried. How they hated him. Those flourishes, those poses, that diabolical smile…the appalling courtesy of those gestures.”

A community theater group is an ideal setting for a Beryl Bainbridge dark comedy. Bainbridge had her own experiences working in the theater, and ‘An Awfully Big Adventure’ is a fine theater novel.

 

Grade:   A

 

 

 

‘Dear Dickhead’ by Virginie Despentes – A Provocative Raunchy Dialogue by Email

 

‘Dear Dickhead’ by Virginie Despentes (2022) – 292 pages       Translated from the French by Frank Wynne

 

As I was looking for more fiction translated by Frank Wynne, I came across ‘Dear Dickhead’. Since one of the things I like about Frank Wynne is that he seems to pick books to translate that are off the well-beaten path of modern fiction, I decided to read ‘Dear Dickhead’. This could be interesting.

This novel is written as a modern email exchange between Oscar and Rebecca. Rebecca occasionally starts her email to him with ‘Dear Dickhead’ and it is not always used affectionately.

Tell your sister I googled her name but couldn’t find anything. I’m guessing she’s married and she’s changed her name. Give her my love. As for you drop dead.”

Oscar is a writer who got singled out for #MeToo accusations by Zoe, a woman they both know.

I am the focus of hatred for half the population of the country.”

Occasionally in the novel we also get an email from Zoe.

When Oscar commiserates with Rebecca about his problems, she is not always sympathetic.

You’ve had a string of scandals – take me, for example, now I don’t really care, but how many times have you humiliated me in public, talking about my amazing tits? That kind of thing doesn’t cut it anymore.”

However Rebecca does offer some helpful advice to Oscar.

The correlation between men’s alcohol consumption and their being assholes is underestimated.”

Oscar laments how things have changed.

We assumed that women were happy. I grew up in a world where it seemed that turning a guy on was the best thing that could happen to a woman.”

Oscar expresses his problem with the dating world.

Long story short, the women I find attractive are the ones who don’t want anything to do with me.”

Women do come up for criticism too. After his sister Corinne tells Oscar that she dates girls, he says:

I know what girls are like. They’re ruthless when it comes to losers. And back then being a lesbian was worse than being a loser – lesbians had no right to exist. In the cage fight of traditional femininity, she couldn’t even get her gloves on.”

Rebecca’s verdict:

Obviously you don’t fall in love with someone just because they’re a particular gender. You fall in love, period.”

That verdict may be a little too far out for me.

Besides the discussion of the male/female predicament, large parts of ‘Dear Dickhead’ are about drug use and quitting drugs and Narcotics Anonymous. Having little use for drugs (except alcohol) myself, I was less interested in the parts of the novel relating to their experiences with cocaine, crack, heroin, etc.

While ‘Dear Dickhead’ was discussing the modern sex situation it seemed quite interesting and insightful.

 

Grade:    B