Neighbourly Love
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Mat Twassel
(The Fishtank) |
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Oosh
(The Fishtank) |
There is a great deal to admire in this story. It is rich and dense in texture, full of allusions, making points and sparking ideas left, right and centre. Much of Bradley’s fiction, while located in a perfectly rational universe, involves one startling incongruity, or fantastic element. I’m reminded time and again of Marcel Aymé (whose work I cannot recommend too highly). Here, of course, it’s the clash between the permissive neighbours, with their unblinking acceptance of free love, and Cissy’s unreflective, unbending insistance on traditional marital fidelity. The central idea of the story is
the clash between these two irreconcilable world-views. There are
several scenes in which we witness them colliding, and I felt that
these were the most vividly and effectively written: the dialogue was
spotless and they carried absolute conviction. The author confronts us
with the irresistible force meeting the unmovable obstacle, and it is
like iron striking flint. Lastly - and here I’m going beyond the FT remit as usual - I wanted to agonize a little about the way this story resolves, or doesn’t resolve. The story ends by emphasizing that all Cissy wants is to get out of this situation. She’s an escapist at heart. She cannot negotiate, argue or in any way deal with the problem posed by her neighbours. It’s a case of shutters down. Equally, the neighbours show absolutely no understanding of why their conduct might give Cissy the least trouble. In a way, this stalemate was reached early on in the story. Do the subsequent developments really take the characters any further? Could the story have ended equally well after the first episode of infidelity between Peggy and Ken? What emerges thereafter, except further exasperation? The story is deliberately open-ended, as it is entitled to be. When stories refuse to resolve, we are pointed back to the point of conflict, and made to think and re-think. And so I find myself straying
into deep waters: part of me would like Cissy to have an area of doubt,
of ambiguity - perhaps even temptation. Whether that would improve the message, or destroy it, is not for me to say. In summary: this story is a
conversation-piece, at once congenial and provocative, that raises
dozens of questions. |
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PleaseCain
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The subject matter is
challenging, and even though you date the story nicely with all of the
post-war touches, the topics seem relevant for the present day, at
least here in the States. I admire that. The Roths are
funny, too. |