Tuesday, January 26, 2016

Less Than Angels, by Barbara Pym

The first person we meet in this story is Catherine Oliphant, "brooding over her pot of tea" and watching people around her settle down with trays of food. She is a writer, of "stories and articles for women's magazines and had to draw her inspiration from everyday life..."  We learn that "Tom, her present love," is in Africa, studying a native tribe. In the crowds passing outside, Catherine sees two of his colleagues, senior anthropologists. The story then shifts to follow them to a gathering at a new anthropological library and research centre. The funds for it have been coaxed out of the recently-widowed Minnie Foresight by the retired but still active Professor Felix Mainwaring. Students are already making use of the library, and rather than shooing them out, the manager Miss Clovis reluctantly invites them to join the meeting. Among them is Deirdre Swan, a first year student; and two older students, Digby and Mark, hoping to win grants to do field work.

Digby and Mark are friends of Catherine's through Tom Mallow, who lives with her when he isn't in Africa. The story moves between Catherine, in her comfortable little flat "on the shabby side of Regent's Park," the students and staff at the centre, and Deirdre's family. She lives with her mother and her unmarried Aunt Rhoda, and her brother Malcolm. Their house is next door to a church, where the older women have become devout members of the rather High congregation. Like Catherine, both are keen observers of their neighbors, particularly Alaric Lydgate, who has just moved in next door. He too is an anthropologist, retired from the field, with boxes of notes that he has never managed to write up into articles. His sister Gertrude, herself an anthropologist, shares a flat with Esther Clovis and is often at the centre.

The first chapters introduce us to this large cast of characters, establishing their connections and relations. Then one morning Tom Mallow walks into the centre. He has returned after two years in Africa. Finding no one he knows at the centre, he introduces himself to Deirdre, takes her out for a drink, and is soon meeting her regularly. He invites her to a party at Catherine's flat, where she is shocked to learn that he lives with Catherine. But it doesn't stop her from meeting him. Eventually Catherine sees them together - at a restaurant across the street from her flat, where she often eats with Tom herself - and things come to a head. Tom however escapes much of the reaction by returning to Africa, leaving both Catherine and Deirdre to deal with his absence.

At the moment of crisis, after seeing Tom with Deirdre, Catherine thinks "I'm not one of those excellent women, who can just go home and eat a boiled egg and make a cup of tea and be very splendid..."  But I thought she was a wonderful character, and I deeply wanted to smack Tom's face for treating her so badly. There is such life in her. I liked her determination to deal with the situation with Tom. She doesn't wallow, she just gets on with things. She is unconventional, not just in living with Tom outside marriage (which I found rather surprising in a novel from 1955). She asks questions, she is interested in people, and she often says whatever comes into her mind. She also seems to have a gift for friendship - and perhaps the need for it. To the astonishment of the Swans, she barges into Alaric Lydgate's life, and she even manages to work out a friendly relationship with Deirdre.

I also enjoyed the familiar Pymian elements to this story, particularly the squabbles among the anthropologists, competing for funds and recognition. Professor Mainwaring plumes himself on the grants that Minnie Foresight will provide to deserving students, but his pride is destined for a spectacular fall. He is a great trial to Esther Clovis, as she tries to manage the centre. Few people know why she left her previous position as secretary to a Learned Society.
...it had something to do with the making of tea. Not that the making of tea can ever really be regarded as a petty or trivial matter, and Miss Clovis did seem to have been seriously as fault. Hot water from the tap had been used, the kettle had not been quite boiling, the teapot had not been warmed . . . whatever the details, there had been words, during the course of which other things had come out, things of a darker nature. Voices had been raised and in the end Miss Clovis had felt bound to hand in her resignation.
I am still wondering about those "things of a darker nature..." Perhaps she was skimming off the tea funds.

The front cover of my Plume edition of this book has a quote from the Chicago Tribune: "One of Pym's sleekest and funniest novels." I thought the words of the Kirkus Reviews on the back a better fit: "Ironic, shrewd, a bit sad...especially diverting."  I did find this story rather sad, both in Catherine's situation, and in something that happens to another character - quite suddenly, and with no warning.

Since anthropologists play a major role in this book, I was not surprised to find references to Helena Napier and her husband (Rocky), and Everard Bone and his wife Mildred. Miss Clovis considers Mildred "a rather dull woman," which proves she isn't all that bright herself, but at least she admits that Mildred is "a great help to him in his work" out in the field. I will add this to my list of cross-over characters. I would quite like to meet Catherine in another story, or at least to find out where her story takes her.

18 comments:

  1. Is it spooky that I'm reading a Barbara Pym too? :)

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  2. Cue the Twilight Zone music - and after we were both just reading a Margery Sharp book :)

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  3. This was the first, and still the only, Barbara Pym book I've read, although I am hoping to read another one soon. I loved Catherine too, but I also thought Mark and Digby were fun - I remember enjoying the scene in the restaurant where they're trying to order all the cheapest things on the menu!

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    1. Oh yes, they spend a lot of time thinking about food and drink - cadging meals from Catherine too! And the restaurant scene is wonderful - where they invited Miss Clovis, and she invited Miss Lydgate to join them - and the poor young men with only a pound and some odd shillings between them :)

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  4. I haven't read Pym in a couple of years and miss her!! Familiar character mentions are always fun and I love when they make cameo appearances. Have not read Less Than Angels and it sounds wonderful. A Few Green Leaves waiting on my shelf at home.

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    1. I have A Few Green Leaves on the shelves as well. The Pym section is still well-stocked :)

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  5. I just finished a Pym novel myself! I read An Unsuitable Attachment, and the anthropologists are present there, too (though Esther, I believe, is still in the Learned Society). I'll have to look this one up - I actually think I have it on Kindle, so shouldn't be too difficult :-)

    I would say that ALL of Pym's novels meet the description by the Kirkus Review. At least, the ones that I have read.

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    1. Oh Aarti - thank you! I was looking at my paper copy, and I found not only a mention of Miss Clovis, but also of Digby! I will update my list post-haste :)

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  6. I've read most of her books, but not this one, in fact I don't even remember hearing about it before. I'll track it down. Thanks.

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    1. I think I have most of the novels now, thanks to a windfall last year at a used-book store. I hope this one is easy to find.

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  7. "Ironic, shrewd and a bit sad" does sound like a Pym novel. I like her writing so much! This is one of her novels that I am looking forward to reading sometime this year. I hope. I also really want to read either No Fond Return of Love or An Unsuitable Attachment. Or maybe An Academic Question. Have you read any or all of those? Is one better than the rest? I'm just wondering which one to buy next. :)

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    1. I haven't read An Academic Question yet, but I've read the other two, and they're both very good. An Unsuitable Attachment is a little different - several of the characters go off on a trip to Rome! Not a typical Pym setting.

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  8. It's ages since I read Barbara Pym - I really must find the time for another of her books soon.

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    1. I like to leave some time between her books. She is definitely not an author to binge on!

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  9. I have read far too little Barbara Pym and I really should do something about that. This one sounds as though it would be just the thing for a weekend afternoon round the fire. I have to say, though, that if Esther had offered me tea made in that manner I would have sacked her too.

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    1. Alex, sadly that sums up 90% of the "tea" served in the US. It's awful, particularly when I travel. Esther would never have had to resign over here - at least for that!

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  10. The blogosphere will make a Pym fan of me yet! I read and didn't love Excellent Women, but you've made this sound wonderful. I think it could make a good book to try again with Barbara Pym.

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    1. I'm sorry you didn't get on better with Mildred, she's one of my favorite characters. I haven't loved all her books either, though - and there are some later ones, "finished" by her literary executor, about which I have my doubts.

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Thank you for taking the time to read, and to comment. I always enjoy hearing different points of view about the books I am reading, even if we disagree!