Six Degrees of Separation: From The End of the Affair to Nutshell

This month we begin with The End of the Affair by Graham Greene, a perfect excuse for me to review a novel I finished more than a year ago. This was only my second novel from Greene, after The Quiet American many a year ago. It’s subtle: low on action and majoring on recollection and regret. Mostly what we get are the bitter memories of Maurice Bendrix, a writer who had an affair with his clueless friend Henry’s wife Sarah during the last days of the Second World War. After she broke up with him, he remained obsessed with her and hired Parkis, a lower-class private detective, to figure out why. To his surprise, Sarah’s diaries revealed, not that she’d taken up with another man, but that she’d found religion. Maurice finds himself in the odd position of being jealous of … God? (More thoughts here.)

 

#1 I asked myself if I’d ever read another book where someone was jealous of a concept rather than a fellow human being, and finally came up with one. I enjoyed Cooking as Fast as I Can by Cat Cora even though I wasn’t aware of this Food Network celebrity and restaurateur. Her memoir focuses on her Mississippi upbringing in a half-Greek adoptive family and the challenges of being gay in the South. Separate obsessions plagued her marriage; I remember at one point she gave her wife an ultimatum: it’s either me or the hot yoga.

 

#2 Yoga for People Who Can’t Be Bothered to Do It by Geoff Dyer is one of my favourite-ever book titles. The title is his proposed idea for a self-help book, but … wait for the punchline … he couldn’t be bothered to write it. It’s a book of disparate travel essays, with him as the bumbling antihero, sluggish and stoned. This wasn’t one of his better books, but his descriptions and one-liners are always amusing (my review).

 

#3 Another book with a fantastic title that has nothing to do with the contents: Let’s Explore Diabetes with Owls by David Sedaris. Again, not my favourite of his essay collections (try Me Talk Pretty One Day or When You Are Engulfed in Flames instead), but he’s reliable for laughs.

 

#4 No more about owls than the previous one; Owls Do Cry by Janet Frame is an autobiographical novel that tells the same story as her An Angel at My Table trilogy (but less compellingly): a hardscrabble upbringing in New Zealand and mental illness that led to incarceration in psychiatric hospitals. The title phrase is from Ariel’s song in The Tempest, which the Withers siblings learn at school. I’ve been ‘reading’ this for nearly a year and a half; really, it’s mostly been on the set-aside shelf for that time.

 

#5 Another title drawn from Shakespeare: there are more things by Yara Rodrigues Fowler is one of my Most Anticipated Books of 2022. It’s about a female friendship that links Brazil and London. I’m holding out hope for a review copy.

 

#6 Fowler’s title comes from Hamlet, which provides the plot for Ian McEwan’s Nutshell, one of his strongest novels of recent years. Within a few pages, I was captivated and utterly convinced by the voice of this contemporary, in utero Hamlet. Not even born and already a snob with an advanced vocabulary and a taste for fine wine, this foetus is a delight to spend time with. His captive state pairs perfectly with Hamlet’s existential despair, but also makes him (and us as readers) part of the conspiracy: even as he wants justice for his father, he has to hope his mother and uncle will get away with their crime; his future depends on it.

 

Where will your chain take you? Join us for #6Degrees of Separation! (Hosted on the first Saturday of each month by Kate W. of Books Are My Favourite and Best.)

Have you read any of my selections? Tempted by any you didn’t know before?

23 responses

  1. I haven’t had time to write up my six degrees yet. Might just post the picture and ask people to work out the links! Love yours this month – some super links. I like the sound of the Yara Rodrigues Fowler too.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. That sounds like a fun challenge!

      Did you read her debut novel (nominated for STYWA in 2019)?

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  2. Smart links, and I’m definitely tempted by Cooking as Fast As I Can.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I doubt it was published in the UK; I read an e-copy from NetGalley 5.5 years ago. I have a soft spot for ‘foodoirs’.

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Wow… your linking factors are just amazing! And while I don’t know most of these books, I’m totally sure I will NOT be reading Nutshell – narrated by a fetus in utero? Not for me, I’m afraid!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank you. It’s very clever how McEwan does it. And not the first book I’ve read with an unborn narrator!

      Liked by 1 person

  4. Smart chain Rebecca – I’ve only read one Dyer but I really liked it,

    Liked by 1 person

    1. He’s such an erudite writer; he can choose pretty much any topic and make it interesting!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I have a few more in the 746 which is good!

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  5. A great chain, from which it’s the last two that most interest me. But our library system hasn’t got either of them … 😦

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    1. The Fowler isn’t released until April, so there’s hope yet. But I’m surprised you don’t own one of McEwan’s more recent! It’s the sort of thing you might find in a charity shop for £1?

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I’m quite surprised too. Charity shop it is then …

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  6. I love trying to guess the links based on the image in the post – but failed miserably here. Your links were so inventive! The McEwan hasn’t appealed to me sorry….

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Some niche choices this time! McEwan is a divisive author and I don’t love all his books, but Nutshell was a standout for me.

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      1. That’s true about McEwan. Atonement I think is fabulous but Saturday was abysmal.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Ha ha, I loved both of those!

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  7. You rocked this. Anything with David Sedaris gets my vote. And, this ” it’s either me or the hot yoga” HILARIOUS though I’m sure it wasn’t in real life. Like wives of old making hubs choose between golf or hunting (shooting) or what-have-you, but it sounds funny with hot yoga.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks! It’s funny how that hot yoga thing is the only detail about that memoir that’s stuck in my mind.

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  8. My only Greene was The Power and the Glory, probably his most overtly Catholic novel. It was enjoyable and interesting mostly because I read it with a Jesuit book club–I don’t think I would have made it through on my own. But your take on Nutshell makes me think I should try McEwan after kinda giving up on his more recent stuff.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I own Travels with My Aunt but otherwise don’t know that I’d read more Greene. I mostly think about him for his influence on David Lodge, who was one of my favorite novelists in my 20s.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Ah, Lodge–another author to look up. Thanks!

        Liked by 1 person

  9. That Dyer title will forever make me giggle. And I think a lot of my faves are “low on action” but I’ve just never gotten ’round to Greene. I know I should read at least one, but I’m not feeling the “shoulds” these days.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I’m always amazed to find an author whose work you’re not well-versed in 😉 Greene has never particularly appealed to me either, but I was glad to try a couple.

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