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Ladataan... A Month in the Country (1980)Tekijä: J. L. Carr
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A Summer Idyll Review of the NYRB Classics paperback edition (2000) with an Introduction by Michael Holroyd of the Harvester Press hardcover original (1980). But one thing is sure - I had a feeling of immense content and if I thought at all, it was that I'd like this to go on and on, no-one going, no-one coming, autumn and winter always loitering around the corner, summer's ripeness lasting for ever, nothing disturbing the even tenor of my way (as I think someone may have said before me). This is one of those rare books that evokes a perfect time and place and is especially wonderful in the way it provokes memories of idyllic summers in one's own past, even if they weren't in the same situation as the protagonist here. Tom Birkin is a survivor of the First World War. He is recovering from the trauma of battles such as Passchendaele and has developed various nervous ticks as a result. His wife has left him and he is at loose ends. He takes on a summer job of restoring a medieval wall painting in a Yorkshire country church. Over the course of the summer (it is much more than a month, but a title of "Three Months in the Country" doesn't have the correct ring to it) he reawakens to life, makes friends and falls in love, while pondering the past lives of the people in the painting he uncovers. Summertime! And summertime in my early twenties! And in love! No, better than that - secretly in love, coddling it up in myself. It's an odd feeling, coming rarely more than once in most of our lifetimes. In books, as often as not, they represent it as a sort of anguish but it wasn't so for me. Later perhaps, but not then. See DVD cover at https://m.media-amazon.com/images/M/MV5BNGY0ZjE5NTAtNmYzZC00ZGMxLTg5OWEtMGM0MDEz... The cover of the DVD/Blu-ray reissue of the film adaptation. Image sourced from IMDb. Somehow I previously overlooked this book, but having discovered it now I was quick to add it to my all-time favourites. See original book cover at https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/b/b0/A_Month_in_the_Country_96dpi.jpg The dust cover of the original UK hardcover published by Harvester Press in 1980. Image sourced from Wikipedia. Trivia and Links A film adaptation of A Month in the Country was made as the same-titled film (1987) directed by Pat O’Connor and starring Colin Firth, Kenneth Branagh and Natasha Richardson. You can watch a trailer for the film here and, roughly 30 years later, Colin Firth is interviewed about the making of the film here.
Reissued as part of the Penguin Decades series, JL Carr's slender, Booker-shortlisted and semi-autobiographical novel was published in 1980 but looks back to an earlier time. The narrator, Tom Birkin, reflects on a summer spent in the small Yorkshire village of Oxgodby in 1920. Near destitute and still visibly shaken by his experiences during the first world war and through the painful break-up of his marriage, he has been assigned the job of restoring a medieval mural hidden beneath whitewash on the wall of the village church. As he painstakingly removes several centuries' worth of paint and grime he becomes gradually less closed off and begins to make friends within the community, in particular with Moon, another war veteran, who is camped in the churchyard, ostensibly looking for a lost grave. As Birkin uncovers patches of gilt and cinnabar up on his scaffold, Moon digs his pits outside the church walls; both of them are striving for some sort of, if not restoration, then freedom from their past, and for Birkin, at least, his stay at Oxgodby is a time of healing. Slim as it is, this is a tender and elegant novel that seemingly effortlessly weaves several strands together. Carr has a knack for bringing certain scenes into sudden, sharp focus, rather as waves lift forgotten things to the surface. He writes with particular precision and admiration about the joys of skilled men going about their business. He also subtly evokes lost rural customs and ways of living that, even at the time, had begun to fade from view: cart rides and seed cake and honey-thick accents that had not yet been filed down by mass communication. The sense of things lost to time is pronounced but not overplayed and there's a gently elegiac quality to the developing picture of a warm and hazy English countryside summer. This pleasant vision is countered by his rawer and more acute account of the deep mark left on a man when a chance of happiness is glimpsed and missed and left to settle in the memory. Kuuluu näihin kustantajien sarjoihinPenguin Decades (1980s) Sisältyy tähän:Mukaelmia:PalkinnotDistinctionsNotable Lists
In J. L. Carr's deeply charged poetic novel, Tom Birkin, a veteran of the Great War and a broken marriage, arrives in the remote Yorkshire village of Oxgodby where he is to restore a recently discovered medieval mural in the local church. Living in the bell tower, surrounded by the resplendent countryside of high summer, and laboring each day to uncover an anonymous painter's depiction of the apocalypse, Birkin finds that he himself has been restored to a new, and hopeful, attachment to life. But summer ends, and with the work done, Birkin must leave. Now, long after, as he reflects on the passage of time and the power of art, he finds in his memories some consolation for all that has been lost.Copyright © Libri GmbH. All rights reserved. Kirjastojen kuvailuja ei löytynyt. |
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So when he looks back you see, not that the pastoral ideal was false, exactly, and not even that there's "dark secrets" or something like that - it's that it's something that you can only experience as an ideal when you're there for a month. All the cracks can be glossed over but everything would fall apart if you stayed there too long. And when you look back maybe you can't think of why you didn't stay but that's what distance does - you can't experience the full thing in your memories or through a writing or art. But there's always something you carry with you. (