Posts Tagged ‘NOVNOV24’

‘The Stepdaughter’ by Caroline Blackwood – Fiction and Real Life

 

‘The Stepdaughter’ by Caroline Blackwood        (1976) – 94 pages               

 

I have never read so hostile or negative a description of a child character in a novel as that which J uses in ‘The Stepdaughter’ to describe her 15 year old stepdaughter Renata.

It is difficult to describe how she manages to be so disturbing, this Humpty Dumpty of a girl. She gives one the feeling that somewhere in the past she took such a great fall that everything healthy in her personality was badly smashed.”

The thing that Renata lacked so painfully was the very smallest grain of either physical or personal charm.”

J even describes how Renata uses so much toilet paper that the toilet overflows and the stuff gets on the floor and she has to call the plumber.

Renata’s problems seemed so insoluble that one starts to feel such a fierce impatience with her that although I have to admit it one often has a longing to try to damage her even more.”

Perhaps it is the way she has been burdened with this stepdaughter that causes J to be so hostile toward her. Her husband Arnold went off to Paris leaving behind his daughter Renata from a previous marriage. Now Arnold has sent a letter from Paris saying that he wants to leave J. He now has a girlfriend. So J is stuck with Renata.

If Arnold imagines he can start a new and beautiful life with his new and beautiful French girl, I can think of nothing more guaranteed to soil and smash his idyll than the arrival of this ungainly and unhappy girl who has survived the debris of her father’s two former marriages.”

I won’t write anymore about the plot of ‘The Stepdaughter’. I found this epistolary novella to be very well written and quite moving. What I do want to write about is the backstory of this author, Caroline Blackwood which somehow explains this novella.

Caroline Blackwood was born into the Guinness family, owners of the Guinness Brewery, so she was fabulously rich from the beginning. As a young woman, Caroline was known as a somewhat wild socialite who hung around with that other wild socialite, Princess Margaret, younger sister of Queen Elizabeth II. Later Caroline was married to three famous husbands, the bohemian artist Lucian Freud and the pianist/composer Israel Citkowitz and the famous American poet Robert Lowell. It was during this last marriage to Lowell, that Blackwood took up writing fiction.

The poet Robert Lowell had severe manic depressive episodes for which he often had to be hospitalized or institutionalized. His previous wife Elizabeth Hardwick figured it must have been during one of these manic episodes that Lowell took up with Caroline. Ultimately Lowell did divorce Hardwick and married Blackwood. However Blackwood could not deal with his mental problems, and Lowell died of a heart attack returning to the home of Hardwick.

On her deathbed, Caroline Blackwood confessed that one of her children she had while married to her second husband Citkowitz was not his child. After you read ‘The Stepdaughter’, you will understand that when Caroline Blackwood wrote this novella ‘The Stepdaughter’, this must have been on her conscience.

Mother felt that, as it was, women, had to do all the work for children – Arnold had no right to make a big fuss about whether her child was his or not.”

 

Grade:    A        

 

‘The Most’ by Jessica Anthony – The Little Novella That Could

 

‘The Most’ by Jessica Anthony     (2024) – 133 pages             

 

‘The Most’ is a straightforward honest story of the marriage of Virgil and Kathleen Beckett .

One Sunday morning Virgil wakes up to find his wife Kathleen in the hardly ever used swimming pool of their apartment complex. Virgil can’t figure out why she is in the swimming pool since she has never gone into it before. He tries to convince her to come out. She won’t come out, so he takes their two sons to church by himself. Later in the afternoon, Virgil golfs with some men from work.

The story takes place in Delaware in 1957. The headline from that time, which is repeated often in the novella, is that the Russians have just launched their second satellite, Sputnik II, into space with a dog named Laika inside it.

Virgil is very good looking, but lazy and unambitious. His main interest is listening to jazz. Although from California, he winds up selling life insurance in Delaware. He gets married to the only average-looking Kathleen, who was a former college tennis champion. “The Most” is a tennis strategy used by Kathleen. They have two sons.

They move to Rhode Island where Virgil starts going to a nearby bar several nights a week with some of the insurance guys. There are girls, young women, at the bar, and after Virgil spends a night with one of them, Little Mo, he feels guilty enough about it to move the family back to Delaware and to start taking the family to church.

Now several months after moving back to Delaware, the family is still stuck in an apartment complex. Nobody ever uses the pool there, but one morning there is Kathleen swimming around in it. She is still in the pool near evening. Why?

Jessica Anthony’s centering this story around a swimming pool kind of reminded me of the famous story ‘The Swimmer’ by John Cheever about a guy who swims from neighbor’s pool to neighbor’s pool in the suburbs.

Although this is the story of a marriage and not an adventure story, there is real suspense here. The reader does not know what will happen, what the final conclusion will be.

The suspense between this husband and wife, which has been subtly and skillfully portrayed, continues through the last page and even beyond.

There are many fine things in Richard Powers’ novel ‘Playground’, but this steady little novella ‘The Most’ achieves more depth than the much, much longer ‘Playground’.

 

Grade:    A