Classics

Ladies of the Rachmaninoff Eyes by Henry Van Dyke

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Ladies of the Rachmaninoff Eyes

Laughing through the tears

We’re devotees of the excellent Faber Editions series, dedicated to resurrecting radical novels of the 20th century. New to the list is an American gem, Ladies of the Rachmaninoff Eyes by Henry Van Dyke. This distinctly offbeat 1950s-set drama is told through the eyes of Oliver, a young, gay Black man, who lives with his elderly aunt, Harriet, and her employer of thirty years , Mrs Etta Klein. In a tale that ranges from farce to tragedy (with lashings of rum), Oliver uncovers the truth behind a Klein family suicide, in the company of a sex-mad maid, a shady psychic, and his own beloved volume of Baudelaire’s poems.

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Things - A Story of the Sixties

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Things: A Story of the Sixties

A material world

A 1965 cult read (reimagined for the 21st century by Vincenzo Latronico in his recent excellent novel, Perfection), Things: A Story of the Sixties by Georges Perec is a wry portrayal of post-war materialism. Chronicling the lives of a young Parisian couple, Jérôme and Sylvie, Perec shows us how they are served by their time and place in history. With the advent of mass advertising and the concept of ‘lifestyle’, a desire for stuff and more stuff has been ignited, yet Jéröme and Sylvie are determined not to join the 9 to 5 treadmill. They want to be free but are unaware that there’s always a price to pay.

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The Cat by Georges Simenon

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The Cat

The ultimate toxic relationship

First published in 1967 and now available in a freshly translated Penguin Classics edition, The Cat by Georges Simenon is a bleakly funny tale of marital warfare, old age and obsession. Celebrated for his wonderful Inspector Maigret novels, Simenon also wrote a series of psychological novels he named ‘romans dur’ (hard novels). In this one, we meet seventy-somethings, Emile and Marguerite Bouin, married in haste and repenting at leisure. Since Emile accused his wife of fatally poisoning his beloved cat and launched a barbarous retaliatory attack on her pet parrot, they have been enmeshed in a silent battle of wills. Will it be a duel to the death?

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The Vet's Daughter by Barbara Comyns

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The Vet’s Daughter

Rising above it

We’re big fans of the Virago Modern Classics collection, the iconic green-spined books denoting wonderful women writers saved for posterity (and often from neglect). A personal favourite on this inspiring list is the 1959 gem, The Vet’s Daughter by Barbara Comyns, an eccentric tale tinged with melancholy and magic. Set in a rather gloomy Edwardian South London, it tells the story of a naive young woman named Alice, her confined girlhood, strange otherworldly gifts, and relationship with a father who must surely rank as one of the most monstrous parents in all literature.

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Nervous Conditions by Tsitsi Dangarembga

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Nervous Conditions

Instant African classic

Rare is the book that becomes an instant classic but that was the case for Nervous Conditions by Tsitsi Dangarembga when it was published in 1988. Set in 1960s and 70s in what was then Rhodesia, it’s the coming-of-age story of Tambu, a gifted girl from a dirt-poor farming family who defies her gender and class to be allowed an education. Nervous Conditions was the first book published in English written by a black Zimbabwean woman and its feminist outlook, inspired by Germaine Greer’s The Female Eunuch, revolutionary in itself. A fenomenal portrayal of misogyny, colliding cultures, colonialisation and class.

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So Long See You Tomorrow by William Maxwell

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So Long See You Tomorrow

The classic you didn’t know you should read

An absolute gem of a book, So Long See You Tomorrow by Willam Maxwell had never been on my radar of books to read until I stumbled upon it in a scantily stocked airport bookstore. It’s a novel of two loosely connected stories: the narrator who looks back at his childhood in Lincoln, Illinois and the devastating loss of his mother and the parallel tragedy of his friend Cletus’ family. Maxwell’s evocative yet sparse writing is nothing short of genius.

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Goodbye to Berlin by Christopher Isherwood

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Goodbye to Berlin

Observing the downfall of a nation

‘I am a camera with its shutter open, quite passive, recording, not thinking’, starts Goodbye to Berlin by Christopher Isherwood, an autobiographical collection of loosely connected stories from the author’s time living in Berlin during Hitler’s rise to power. Observing is indeed what he does: the decadent nightlife, the discontent and poverty of the working class, and most chillingly, the sinister beginnings of persecution of Jews. It’s a dark but also comical book with the author playing a supporting role to an eccentric gallery of characters. A quirky and notable classic.

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After Leaving Mr Mackenzie by Jean Rhys

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After Leaving Mr Mackenzie

Down and out in Paris and London

A curiously sad autobiographical novel, After Leaving Mr Mackenzie by Jean Rhys is an episode in the itinerant life of Julia Martin, a thirty-something woman leading a precarious existence in Paris and London between the wars. Hers is a life of cheap hotels, booze, and financial dependence on unsuitable men, who invariably let her down. When her ex-lover in Paris cuts off her weekly allowance, the penniless Julia decides to muster her fading magic and head back to London, in hopes of finding love, solvency, and reconnection with her estranged family.

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Revolutionary Road by Richard Yates

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Revolutionary Road

The crumbling of an American Dream

Frank and April Wheeler seemingly have it all: good looks, cute kids, a respectable job, a white picket fence house in Connecticut. Cracks are starting to emerge, though. Is this really the life they wanted? Whatever happened to their youthful dreams? A drastic plan emerges, but what exactly are they fleeing from? Revolutionary Road by Richard Yates is an enduring American classic dealing with marriage, expectations and dreams. As relevant today, as it was in 1961 and a very good read.

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The Sense of an Ending

Finely chiseled masterpiece

As I’ve just discovered, it’s never too late to read the brilliant The Sense of an Ending by Julian Barnes, Booker Prize Winner from 2011. This is a marvel of a novel about interpreting the past, suppressing memories and coming of age, which deserves to join the rank of classics. It’s a book that will make you question your own past and wonder how differently others might perceive it.

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