I first heard about Susan Ertz from one of the Persephone Quarterlies, when they put a list of titles they were vaguely considering publishing. (I should dig out that PQ for further reading suggestions, thinking about it.) I can’t remember which book they recommended, but the name was distinctive enough that I’ve kept an eye out for her over the years – and have three on my shelves. Madame Claire (1923) is the first one I’ve read.
Who is Madame Claire, you ask? She is the matriarch of a several-generation family, 78 years old and living in a hotel. As the novel opens, she has reconnected with a close friend – Stephen – whom she has not seen for nearly two decades, as he disappeared from her life when she (as a recent widow) turned down his proposal for marriage. They have begun writing again. And it is an elegant conceit for her to bring him up to speed on her extended family…
These cover some favoured tropes of 1920s domestic novels. One of her children, Eric, is in a loveless marriage (or, rather, one where the love has become buried beneath resentment and bitterness); another, Connie, has abandoned her husband and is living with a man who doesn’t truly care for her. Her grandchildren (from yet another children) are young and feckless – and the granddaughter Judy is in danger (!) of settling into a spinster lifestyle. Luckily, she hits an affable young man with her car, and they can get to know each other over his sickbed. And Claire and Stephen continue to write back and forth; her letters are a delight.
This sort of novel from this sort of time is so good at combining high emotion with high comedy, expecting the reader to feel sad on behalf of a tortured marriage while simultaneously laughing affectionately at witty, foolish young things falling in love. It is expected of the reader, and we deliver – or at least I did. A bit like soap operas today, we can adjust our emotions and responses to the scene in question. It helps, of course, that Ertz writes very well – only occasionally letting the melodrama get to her head with a few overwritten passages.
Above the fray, and helping everybody in the right direction, is Madame Claire herself. She is something of a benevolent dictator, loved by all and cloaking her dictatorship beneath good advice and expectant patience. Scott wrote an interesting blog post that is partly about manipulation in this novel, but I think I’m fine with it in a novel like this – which uses metonymy but never quite has the stakes of real life.
If you are a fan of Richmal Crompton, EM Delafield, or any number of Persephone authors – this will be up your street. Relaxing and fun, even when the characters are in high peril – but I think my favourite story was Judy and her hit-and-not-run victim. Maybe I’m a romantic at heart after all.
Well, it does sound like perfect Persephone material, so I can’t imagine why they haven’t reprinted it. I *have* seen the old orange Penguin versions around but nevertheless it would obviously look lovely in Persephone grey! :D
I love the sound of this, right up my street I think. I wonder if someone would reissue it as I can’t cope with the print in orange penguins these days.
I’ve read this – because I once read a boxset of the first 10 Penguins (reproductions, obv) and this was one of them. Not quite clear why it was one of them – it really is an odd selection of books. But then apparently not everyone was keen to get into Penguins when they first started, which is easy to mock in hindsight but probably seemed sensible then.
Anyway, I remember it as perfectly enjoyable and interesting.
Those first ones are an odd bunch, aren’t they! I’d forgotten this was one of them. William by EH Young was there, wasn’t it? Such a good book.
This does sound like one Persephone should do, doesn’t it! Or Furrowed Middlebrow. Come on, think of the Older Eye!
Thank you for the recommendation. Really enjoyed this – a perfect holiday read! Your point about Madame Claire being a benevolent dictator is a fair one, in some ways she’s quite like the wise headmistress in school stories who knows what’s best for her pupils before they can see it. I’m sure I’m not alone in thinking that the Claire and Stephen relationship reminded me of All Passion Spent. Now tempted to read some of the other first Penguins as an eclectic TBR list (not that I really need any more of those…). K
Oh lovely, Katrina – and yes, both those comparisons are very apt.
Thabks for the recommendation. Currently reading Now East Now West by same author and really enjoying it so will check this out soon