Xmas reading

Photo by Leah Kelley at Pexels.

The beauty of being snowed into a small village in Devon at Christmas is that there’s nothing much else to do but read. For my visit, I took down Damon Galgut’s In a Strange Room, a beautiful story of rootlessness that I consumed with the same eagerness as the Christmas dinner kindly prepared for me. Also accompanying me on the trip were two Graham Joyce novels, The Limits of Enchantment and The Silent Land. I’m reading the latter to review but decided to take the former ‘to get me in the mood’. Joyce is a master storyteller and so I’ve been working my way through his list with the intention of learning from the master craftsman. One line in Enchantment struck a particular chord ‘you can get stuck and go to sleep in a corner of your life and then wake up seven or seventy years later and it was all gone’ and that ‘you could blink during one of your school days and then you blinked again and your own children were at school.’

Whenever I go away I always worry that I’ll run out of books so one of my presents to my girlfriend was Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s Memories of My Melancholy Whores, a title which prompted a raised eyebrow from her mother. I explained that it was a story that celebrated amorous passions in old age and that we would send it down for her once read. The eyebrow lowered and a smile formed ‘more pudding?’ Having had my most recent rejection slip from Tindal Street inform me that ‘our reader felt your manuscript was extremely well written and very engaging, as well as humorous. Unfortunately, though…’ I can’t help but wonder what it would be like if Marquez was a debut author pitching his synopsis to an agent as it’s basically about an old man perving over a fourteen year old. But I guess when you’ve created something as beautiful as One Hundred Years of Solitude you can pretty much pitch anything.

When I was younger, I used to cement a visit to a new place by sinking an ale in the local. This was how I put circled on the map. Now I preserve my visits via literature. The sleepy Devonshire village in question was Upton Pyne which research informed me was frequented by Jane Austin in 1801 and 1802. Whilst here, she fell in love with a man who tragically died shortly after their encounter. Her suffering – as well as the beautiful landscape of the Barton Valley – would be conveyed in Sense and Sensibility (1811). As we trudged through the ten inches of snow on our daily walk (my partner insisting we have a break from reading) we passed Upton Pyne church where Elinor Dashwood and Edward Ferrars were married in Austin’s novel and Pynes House, where the novelist stayed as a guest of the wealthy Northcote family. It is also, rather oddly, the village in which Five Leaves has had some of their books printed. It is a small world when all is said and done and literature offers me the comforting degrees of separation.

But the real treat of the break was Santa uploading a beautiful present to the Guardian website in the form of 12 short stories via download. Frank O’Conner’s My Oedipus Complex and Katherine Mansfield’s The Doll’s House come highly recommended. With regards to NYE resolutions, mine is to let go of my novel This is all I Know. It is time to ‘blink’. It’s with an agent at the moment so there is still a possibility, but after nine years of loving attention – in the most fulfilling relationship I’ve ever had, it’s time to move on and start afresh. It’s time for a play about the council that is long overdue and has been niggling away at me for years. I’m giving myself until March to finish it. It’s going to be tough switching mindsets, a bit like taking over from Fergie when he finally leaves United, but being disciplined and doing this is a test I need to set myself if I am ever to consider myself worthy of a title such as writer.

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About James

James specialises in digital literary heritage projects. He spends most of his time in front of a computer screen writing about life instead of living it. Therefore, do not trust a word he says.