The Years
Elmore
Leonard advises against opening a book with the weather or wasting plot time
describing objects or places. For conversion to film that is sterling advice,
naturally, and there's no reason why a reader can't be an involved part of that
snappily paced adventure on paper either. One is allowed some fun, one hopes.
It's Christmas, so I'm out on a round of visits and meals and this afternoon
have been paddling in the sea sipping port and brandy out of a hip flask, so I
don't have a copy of the book I want to talk about with me and these words
might have an uneven pace, a drift and giggle gait. Clouds drift, beautiful
puffy ball gown clouds, the sky is a Wedgwood dome. We're at Bluebell Barns
admiring the mackerel shoal sculpture. Later the solar light will catch them
shimmering silver in make-believe waters. We are warm on the corner sofa with a
clear view and strong coffee. Three dogs sleeping. I shall get back to the
point now. The Years is
the last book that Virginia Woolf published in her lifetime and if you have
time for weather and little details there is something here that makes the whole
so much more than the sum of the parts: the description is the narrative. In
brief: the novel follows the lives of the Pargiter family from the 1880s to the
1930s (the then present day) and was first envisaged as a sort of long essay of
stories about the social and economic life of women. Published in 1937 it is
not a new book and it is possible you have already heard of it/read it/studied
it: if so, it is worth a revisit, I think.
A very
good review here if you want more information (yes, this may be cheating.
But my friends are making Bellinis and the mackerel require further
admiration.)
The details are not little, after all, they are how life is, and how life is,
is important.
Comments
The only Virginia Woolf I've read is "Kew Gardens" - very odd, but certainly memorable. I can certainly imagine her turning her nose up at the idea that descriptions of objects and places aren't important.
'drift and giggle gait'
You are inimitable.
Two hip flasks, holstered like a pair of six-shooters? Or one hip flask with a mix of port *and* brandy? Do those go together? Does it matter when you're paddling in December?