Showing posts with label Publishing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Publishing. Show all posts

Thursday, 19 June 2008

A Month in the Country

Good to see Sam Jordison in the Guardian extolling the virtues of J L Carr's utterly wonderful short novel A Month in the Country - an elegaic, moving tale of two damaged survivors of the First World War, uncovering a medieval wall painting in a church in rural Yorkshire, during the long hot summer of 1920. It won the Guardian Fiction Prize in 1980 and was shortlisted the same year for the Booker Prize.

This has long be a dearest favourite of mine. As indeed are all Carr's beautifully crafted and lovingly self-published novels. If you've never discovered them, then you must! Carr's voice and style are unique - and once you are hooked you will fall in love for ever.

Carr (1912-94) retired from teaching to write full time and originally established The Quince Tree Press as the publishing house for a series of ‘Pocket Books’: small selections from the great poets, idiosyncratic dictionaries, small histories and volumes of 'Fabled Saying' and illustrations by his favourite wood engravers.

The income from these popular little books allowed him to concentrate on his novels, which were all originally published by conventional publishers, but he bought back the rights and re-published them himself, in attractively designed Quince Tree editions. The Quince Tree Press continues as an independent family-run publishing house, now based in Suffolk.



Along with A Month in the Country, my other favourite J L Carr is the very different, riotously bookish Harpole and Foxberrow General Publishers - a brilliant, quirky novel about a small, chaotic private publishing house. This is real book-lover's book, it's wonderfully 'inky' and explores the whole concept of what books are, where they come from, how they're made and what they're for - and manages to be both comic and profound. If you have Richard Kennedy's A Boy at the Hogarth Press, Anne Fadiman's Ex Libris or Diana Athill's Stet on your shelves and loved them, then I advise you to rush out and buy a copy of Harpole and Foxberrow right this very instant! - it's an addition to the TBR pile you won't regret.



Back to A Month in the Country, and I really can't better Sam Jordison's assessment of the novel, so I'll quote it at length here. His article starts with a review of the 1987 film, starring two remarkably fresh-faced actors named Kenneth Branagh and Colin Firth. The film is gorgeous, but nevertheless Jordison is absolutely right:

'Somehow the magic that makes JL Carr's book so precious is missing. It's probably unfair to criticise the film for not being able to recreate this spellbinding quality. Not least because I'm unable to define it myself. Whatever it is that separates the book from its big screen incarnation is a question of feeling and atmosphere as much as anything solid. It's easy enough to catalogue A Month In the Country's merits (and I will shortly) but there's an extra elusive something that I can only suggest you read the book to understand.

To encourage this pleasurable undertaking (and brief, I might add, since it clocks in at less than 100-pages), here's a list of a few of those virtues. The story of the narrator's secret love for another man's wife and ongoing struggle to recover from the trauma of being a signaller in the first world war is moving. The rural setting is beguiling with its evocation of a lost world "at the end of the horse age" full of alarmingly plain speaking, but unfailingly generous Yorkshire folk. The writing is lovely too. It's as simple and rich as the countryside it describes ("ditches and roadside deep in grass, poppies, cuckoo pint, trees heavy with leaf, orchards bulging over hedge briars"), but shot through with a mordant wit that ensures the book has an edge to sharpen all that easy bucolic softness. Finally, there's also the added physical appeal of the slim volume itself - at least if you are lucky enough to have the splendid Quince Tree Press edition designed by the author himself.

But even accounting for all these various delights, A Month In The Country is far more than the sum of its parts. It's full of emotive, nostalgic intangibles that the Germans probably have an admirable long word for, I can't define and it would take a hell of a film to recreate. The one showing this weekend falls short, but the ICA has done enough just by programming it: they've sent me back to the book.' Like Sam, I'm just off to dig out the book and re-read it for the umpteenth time . . .

Thursday, 24 April 2008

The highlights of my day . . .


Have been wrestling with different coloured highlighter pens and a 600pp set of proofs (a textbook on Employment Law - oh joy of joys) for the best part of today. And now I am typing like fury into the night to capture the results of my fluorescent daubing.

It's all far too arcane and complicated to explain here, but I can tell you that it's so enthralling that I'm not even going to stop in order to write a proper blog post. No, I just can't wait to get back to it asap, and I thank my lucky stars that I worked hard and passed lots of exams at school and university because if I hadn't, well, I don't know where I'd be, but it certainly wouldn't be perched up here in the dizzy heights of the publishing world, colouring things in.

Oh how I must be envied by my peers - the ones with boring jobs with boring add-ons like . . . paid holidays and company cars and pensions. And who can blame them? They're probably reduced to putting their feet up and watching telly right now. Poor things.

Anyway, I have managed to wrench myself away from this delightful task on a few occasions during the day - principally to intervene in various noisy altercations between SDs #2 and#3, who have been enjoying the extra holiday provided by their striking teachers; but also to surf at lightning speed through the blogosphere, screeching round corners and bumping into things all over the place (part joy-ride, part guilt-trip).

Here are two that are well worth a read:

A characteristically perceptive piece by Danuta Kean (which has attracted some equally illuminating comments from writers and publishers) about the perils for unwary authors of entering into a relationship with a small publisher - written in the light of (though not specifically about) the disaster that was The Friday Project. Some insightful thoughts about the nature of blogging, too ('just a form of vanity publishing'), and the limited potential of the whole 'blog to book' ('blook') concept.

And Susan Hill on copyright and the Internet, 'are we the owners of our own work?' (vis-à-vis the J K Rowling court case in New York)