Alice Thomas Ellis: The Summerhouse Trilogy; A Couple of Noirs
Two Three By Chandler

Goodreaders on The Summerhouse Trilogy; More Noir

Lat week when I wanted to check certain details about The Summerhouse Trilogy but didn't have access to the book, I looked around on the web a bit for reviews or summaries which might help. I didn't find any, but I ended up looking through all the reader comments at Goodreads. Most were positive, and at least one reader says that she reads the book every year. But the negatives...well, they say much more about the reviewer than the reviewed.

Some seem not to have paid very close attention, as the full story is not "retold" in the three sections, but rather revealed gradually and cumulatively. Unless my memory is wrong, which it could be, or I missed something, the most startling bit is not revealed until the third section. But these folks didn't get it. Or maybe they're just that jaded:

I could have done without the third re-telling of the story.

I had hoped this final chapter would shed some light on things, but it really didn't. I wish I had given up after the first chapter spent time with a book I enjoyed.

And these two people, especially the second, seem to be the sort for whom anything not of the present day and culture is for precisely that reason dull and irrelevant:

Depressing first section in a supposedly funny British satire on trite callous middle class values.

Gah. This book did not age well at all. It was awful and prehistoric.

I don't see exactly how "callous" comes into it. I do have some sympathy for those who found the book dull, as much of it is subtle and without visible drama. Several readers complained about Margaret, the miserable girl of the first section--"a dishrag," one said. That's not unjustified, but it's an aspect of Margaret's problem. Still, these three apparently would have preferred a romance or thriller: 

A perfectly adequate, well written, thoroughly dull book. Not even hashish, sex and suicide could save this book from the monotony of the characters.

I am still reading this book, which is a book club nomination. It is awful! The characters are extremely unlikeable (except for Aunt Lily, and that is only because she is intoxicated most of the time and wears garish clothes). Even the dog has no name. It is the most uninspiring, slow moving, non-interesting book I have read.

Blecchhhh! I can't believe I finished reading this book, or that anyone would think it was interesting enough to make a movie out of! I hated it to the very last page.

At least that last one did push through every hated page.

This one I rather liked, and would suggest to the reader that she keep thinking about the book:

The author is an English Catholic whose work I’ve seen compared to that of Flannery O'Connor. She does not provide a nice, tidy, Christian ending or even tidy Christian answers. If I had read this book in my youth, I think I might even have interpreted it as anti-Christian.

*

Detour is an excellent example of the noir genre, apparently considered one of the classics. It has a pretty simple plot, which makes it different from many of its type. A famous story has it that William Faulkner and another writer working on the script for The Big Sleep were puzzled by a plot point and asked Raymond Chandler for clarification--and he didn't know, either. 

A young man and a young woman are working together as a night club act in New York. They plan to be married, but the young woman leaves for Hollywood, hoping to become a star, and the young man stays behind. (It isn't entirely clear to me why he didn't go with her, but never mind.) Later he decides to follow her after all, and begins hitchhiking across the country. He gets as far as Arizona when he gets a ride from a man in a big expensive car. Thus begins the detour. 

Detour

It's a low budget movie, starring people I hadn't heard of before (Tom Neal and Ann Savage), and it's not much more than an hour long, but it really works. 

*

I'm often struck in these older films by little things indicative of the degree to which many things have changed since the films were made. Many big things are striking, too, of course, but I mean the almost trivial ones. When was the last time you heard someone say "Give me change for a dime"? Or one which I think I may have heard as a child or a teenager, but which has disappeared for very good reason: "That's white of you." I mean that it's disappeared as a compliment. You may still hear it today, but if you do it will be  as an insult. 

Before the young man leaves for California, he calls his girlfriend. Remember long-distance calls? His brief New York-Los Angeles call costs him five dollars. That's eighty-two dollars in today's money, according to this site, which says that the dollar has lost 94% of its value since 1945. That sounds like a catastrophe, doesn't it? 

Another phrase you don't hear anymore: "sound as a dollar."

Comments

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I wonder whether "this book did not age well" means "it had a lot of things like long-distance calls that I'm not familiar with."

I remember long-distance calls! The first summer my now-husband and I were dating, and each living at home with parents, I got into trouble for how high the phone bill was. The remember when AT&T broke up? I think calls from long-distance companies trying to get you to switch were the first telemarketing spam calls.

Another trivial difference: I have noticed that when my grandkids (all under age 8) mime making a phone call, they don't hold out their pinky and thumb with the three middle fingers to the palm; instead, they hold a flat hand against their cheek.

You are very kind to the "did not age well" commenter, but the long-distance calls were in the movie I mentioned here, not the book. I'm pretty sure she meant the cultural world of the book. She probably didn't realize that although the book seems, vaguely, to be set in the '50s or so, it was actually written in the '80s.

I have some guilty memories of going to a phone booth with several dollars in quarters to make a long-distance call that I should not have been making.

Interesting about the phone miming. Fine with me because I never could get the old thing right without thinking it through first. But then I never had much occasion to use it.

Since this post is at the top I guess it’s as good a place as any - Happy Thanksgiving, Mac. And everyone.

Thank you, and happy thanksgiving to you and to all.

Happy Thanksgiving, Mac and everyone.

Thank you

I hope everyone had a good Thanksgiving. Ours was grand and huge. When I finally feel up to it, I have to go around the house finding everything I tucked away before the company got here.

AMDG

We're still trying to tuck things away and will be for a long time. We (she) did manage to get the number of boxes sitting around down to a fairly small number.

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