A reader has taken my suggestion that she read the fiction of the English writer Francis Wyndham (1924-2017), and reports she’s enjoying herself. “I see a little Henry James in his stories,” she writes, “but he’s really not like anybody else.” Exactly right.
Wyndham’s
writing career was peculiar. In his late teens, when he was invalided out of
the army after contracting tuberculosis, he wrote the stories that make up Out of the War but was unable to get them
published. Only in 1974, after working in publishing and journalism, were the
stories published as a book. In 1985 he published Mrs. Henderson and Other Stories, and two years later a brief novel,
The Other Garden. All are splendid
books, charming, funny and haunting – the best English fiction I have read in
years. New York Review Books published The
Complete Fiction in 2009. In a 1988 interview with Alan Hollinghurst,
Wyndham says:
“In a way,
the theme of those books and of the early stories is a side of life which is
boring and vacant, but which was rather dramatised by the fact that the war was
going on. People like myself were immobilised in one way or another. So that’s
a ready-made paradoxical situation. I think what I’ve always wanted to do in
fiction is to write about that – the hours and hours and hours, the enormous
proportion of life which is spent in a kind of limbo, even in people’s active
years. It seems to me that isn’t sufficiently celebrated in fiction. The
obvious reason why it isn’t is that it’s so terribly boring.”
Readers often
equate fiction with what we might call “adventure” or "action" – crime, war, aliens, even
marriage, the prefabricated conflicts of literature and life. But think of
Proust (yes, I know, German zeppelins over Paris in the later volumes) and James (marital
betrayal in The Golden Bowl). No one
thinks of those novels as action-packed or escapist. War hovers silently over
Wyndham’s early stories but his focus is on seemingly average, undistinguished people doing
nothing heroic or supernatural. Like at least a few other writers, his people
are recognizably like ourselves – holding down jobs, flirting, going to school
or the movies. There’s a vast reservoir of human experience out there that seldom
gets touched. Even the commonplace can be fascinating, depending on the writer's gifts. I have previously quoted an excerpt from an email the late literary
critic D.G. Myers sent me in May 2013, a little more than sixteen months before
his death from cancer:
“I’ve been
thinking how much of life is absorbed with ‘small cares’ that seem
overwhelmingly important at the time--or at least disabling--which are
forgotten in the sequel: the headaches, stomach aches, the traffic jams, the
appointments which are late. Do these take up the majority of our time? They
almost never make it into literature, and in fact literature seems an
unstinting propaganda on behalf of the dramatic occurrences of human life. I
may try to write about the ‘small cares,’ but I'm not sure yet what I want to
say.”
You'll find this in Anthony Powell’s A Writer’s Notebook (2001): “One of the most difficult things to realize when one is young is that all the awful odds and ends taking place round one are, in fact, the process of living.”
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