Until
recently the only book by Louis Auchincloss (1917-2010) I had read was his
best-known novel, The Rector of Justin,
published in 1964, along with a handful of his short stories. A fiction writer
could hardly devise a serious novelist less likely to pander to contemporary readers
and critics than Auchincloss. He wrote almost exclusively of old New York and
New England, the moneyed classes, just as J.F. Powers seldom strayed from his
devotion to Midwestern priests. Auchincloss is a realist of manners. He worked
fulltime as an attorney in Manhattan while maintaining the Victorian
productivity rate of a book a year. He published more than thirty novels, eighteen
collections of nonfiction and seventeen of stories. In nonfiction he specialized
in brief biographies that sometimes started as, and often read like, essays or
reviews. His subject in any form is human character.
A recurrent presence is Henry James. In his foreword to Reflections of a Jacobite (1961), his first nonfiction title, Auchincloss writes that “I have called myself a Jacobite because so much of my lifetime’s reading has been over the shoulder of Henry James,” whom he describes as “a kindly guide of infinitely good manners, who is also infinitely discerning, tasteful and conscientious.” In a sense, I’m coming to Auchincloss by way of James, whom I reread often. The subjects of the essays that follow in Reflections suggest a self-assembled tradition. In addition to James he considers Saint-Simon, George Eliot, Trollope, Edith Wharton, Meredith, Proust, Marquand and John O’Hara, among others. Auchincloss is a novelist for whom the novel constitutes his essential education. In the collection’s first essay, “Early Reading and Daudet,” he writes:
"For a
person who has derived so much of his pleasure in life reading novels, I came to it surprisingly
late. It was not until my war service in the Navy that I began to read fiction
in any quantity with no aim but that of enjoying it. It was escapism, of cource,
the sheerest escapism, but who but a Churchill would not be an escapist in
wartime? As I look back on those long years in the Atlantic and Pacific, the
oceans seem linked in my mind by the isthmus of the Victorian novel. I
associate the atolls of Ulithi and Eniwetok with Barsetshire and Mrs. Proudie
and the amphibious-training base at Camp Bradford, Virginia, with The Spoils of Poynton. Nothing else
stood so well in that time of spasmodic anxiety and prolonged boredom.”
4 comments:
I'd love to see a blogpost regarding your impressions and opinion of Trollopw, my favorite English novelist. I've read him for years, and he never disappoints.
If you like Auchincloss, Powell and Trollope, try C.P. Snow. He was a wonderful and perceptive novelist who held his own in the real world of men and affairs, while writing books on par with the three names previously mentioned.
Auchincloss hits the reader's trifecta: excellent, prolific, and neglected. (The last is important because it means that it's easy to pick up secondhand copies of his many books, cheap. I have dozens that I've gotten that way.)
Just finished. Well suggested! Some notes.
p 134 I pray that the sin of boredom shall never fall upon me.
167 His daughter doesn't want a life of her father, she wants a floral tribute.
202 Johnson's behavior, on the sale of Thrale’s brewery
256/257 No sermons or recriminations. Father knew when milk had been spilt, and he was not one to try and scoop it back in the bottle. … I have not reproved you, because I feel you have suffered enough.
Youth is hopelessly astigmatic … [incapacity for observation or discrimination]
283 Wouldn’t I rather see Dr. Prescott howl like the anguished Lear in the tempest, and bring ruin to all, so that the usurpers and the dethroned perish in a single fifth act of cataclysm?
319 [lung cancer] A speedy, efficient little killer, isn’t that what we all want? ... I have always deplored the selfishness of old people who embarrass the young with unnecessary references to their demises.
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