Late in the Day by Tessa Hadley & Improvement by Joan Silber

Late in the Day by Tessa Hadley (2019)

Two London couples: Christine and Alex, and Lydia and Zachary. They’ve known each other for decades, and their affiliations have changed in major, even ironic ways. It was Lydia who was initially infatuated with Alex when he taught both her and Christine, and Christine and Zachary who dated for a time. But this is how things ultimately fell out, each marriage resulting in one daughter. Christine with Alex; Lydia with Zachary.

The cover image is Raja (1925) by Felice Casorati.

Except now Zachary is dead. The phone call comes in the novel’s very first sentence. How Lydia and her friends – not to mention her daughter, Grace, who’s studying art in Glasgow – will cope with the loss, and rearrange what was once such a comfortable quadrilateral, is the ostensible subject of the rest of the book. There’s a funeral to plan and a future for Lydia to construct. But the problem, for me, is that every other chapter hosts a seemingly endless flashback to the couples’ backstory. Apart from an odd, titillating moment when the four nearly let down their guard together, these sections don’t reveal an awful lot.

This is my sixth book by Tessa Hadley. Her eye is always sharp on how families work, how relationships fall apart, and how memories form and linger as we age. She’s also a master of third-person omniscience, moving effortlessly between characters’ perspectives. The writing here is exquisite; there’s no question about that. I especially love the descriptive passages, full of so much sensual detail that you can imagine yourself right into a scene:

A breeze fanned the newspaper on the table, the smells of a city summer were wafted through the open window: tar and car exhaust, the bitter-green of the flowering privet hedge. Police horses went past in the broad street, their hooves clip-clopping conversationally alongside the voices of the women who rode them; the stables were nearby.

Her perception was a skin stretched taut, prickling with response to each change in the light outside as it ran through the drama of its sunset performance at the end of the street, in a mass of gilded pink cloud. When eventually the copper beech was only a silhouette cut out against the blue of the last light, Christine pulled down the blinds, put on all the lamps, turned her awareness inwards.

Despite the fine prose, I found the past strand of this novel tedious. If you’re new to Hadley, I’d recommend starting with Clever Girl and/or Bad Dreams and Other Stories.


Late in the Day was published in the UK by Jonathan Cape on February 14th, and in the USA by Harper on January 15th. My thanks to the publisher for the free copy for review.

 

 

Improvement by Joan Silber (2017)

I’ve been thinking a lot about linked short story collections, having written a brief article about them for BookBrowse to accompany my review of Carrianne Leung’s That Time I Loved You (those who contributed ideas on Twitter, thank you!). I find them easier to read than the average short story volume because there are fewer characters and settings to keep track of, and you get the fun of tracing unexpected connections between characters. Improvement didn’t quite work for me in that way, mostly because you can tell that it started as one short story, “About My Aunt”: now the untitled first chapter, it is, as you might guess, a solid stand-alone narrative about Reyna and her aunt Kiki. It was originally published in Tin House and collected in The Best American Short Stories 2015.

I was most interested in Kiki, a terrific character with a completely unsuitable name. Her marriage to a Turk failed – but hey, at least she got a great rug out of it, as well as the fun but temporary challenge of third-world life. (“For a hardheaded person, she had let herself be flung about by the winds of love, and she wasn’t sorry either.”) Back in New York City she directs a house-cleaning agency and babysits for Reyna’s four-year-old son, Oliver. Tattooed Reyna’s African-American boyfriend, Boyd, is in prison for three months for selling pot; when he gets out he comes up with the bright idea of smuggling cigarettes between Virginia and New York to profit from the tax difference. He asks Reyna to make one of the pick-ups, but she chickens out at the last minute. Boyd’s friend Claude drives instead, and is killed instantly in a crash.

Part II reaches into the lives of some of the minor characters on the fringes: Claude; Teddy, the truck driver who was the other party in the car accident; Osman, Kiki’s ex-husband; a trio of Germans who passed through their Turkish town in the summer of 1977 with smuggled antiquities in their possession; and so on. For me, these narratives were too diffuse and didn’t hang together as a novel. I had hoped to enjoy this more since it won the National Book Critics Circle Award for Fiction and Silber is one of those writer’s writers you always hear about but never get to read. I found her voice similar to Anne Tyler’s or perhaps Julia Glass’s, but I’m not sure I’d try another book by her.


Improvement was published by Allen & Unwin on February 7th. It came out in the USA from Counterpoint Press in 2017. My thanks to the publisher for the free copy for review.

 

 

Bottom line for both:

Subtle, sophisticated but underwhelming.

10 responses

  1. By coincidence, I read these one after another. I agree with you about Hadley’s writing but I think I’ve come to the end of the line with her novels – rather too small a canvas for me – but I enjoyed the Silber and was pleased to hear another of hers is in the works for the UK. I think you’re right – it did feel more like a set of linked short stories rather than a novel but that worked well for me.

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    1. I’ve had a look through blurbs of Hadley’s remaining books and I don’t think any of them appeal — they all sound so similar. But perhaps she’ll surprise me in the future.

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  2. From your extended quote, it’s clear that Tessa Hadley’s prose is most evocative. I’ll take the hint though and begin with one of her other books.

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  3. I keep on wondering if I should try something by Tessa Hadley, but as I’ve got older, I’ve become more and more impatient with novels with such a narrow focus, and I don’t feel drawn to any of the blurbs.

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    1. If you wanted, you could try one of her story collections since they provide a bit more variety. I’ve read two of hers, and of those I preferred Bad Dreams and Other Stories. Some stories are set in the 1960s-70s and the rest are contemporary, apart from one about suffragettes.

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      1. Good idea, thanks!

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  4. I loved that sample of the Hadley writing but will try one of the other books you mentioned.

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  5. I’ve only read The London Train by Tessa Hadley, and I know not everyone loved that one, but I did. And, yes, small canvas, but it suited me very well. Mind you, maybe I would not feel the same way if I’d read six, like you! Joan Silber has been on my “explore” list for ages. I’ve only read the odd story, never a whole collection, but this one is in the wings! Glad you are enjoyed linked stories so much!

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    1. The London Train is one I don’t know. Clever Girl, The Past, and Bad Dreams (a story collection) are the few of hers that have stood out for me. I think both Hadley and Silber are “writer’s writers,” which can sometimes mean so subtle that I fail to connect…

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      1. I’ve definitely heard that said of Silber. I’m not sure I’ve read enough writing about Hadley to say either way. That is a phrase that usually has me running to explore though! 🙂

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