What Hetty Did (1988) is the fourth novel I’ve read by J.L. Carr, and each time I feel like I understand him as a writer a little less. He’s so varied! The one he is probably best known for is the elegiac, lovely A Month in the Country. Well, What Hetty Did is not much like that – though it does include one of the same characters. Indeed, characters from at least four of his other novels pop up in this one.
Hetty (actually Ethel) is a bright A Level student who is not much liked by her mother and openly disliked by her father. She decides to up and leave – at least until such time as she might get a place at Cambridge. A chance encounter on a train gets her recommended for a guest house. While staying there she decides to try and find the biological mother who gave her up for adoption. Various other eccentric characters mill around the outskirts.
Eccentric is definitely the key term for this novel. Carr seems to have got odder and odder, as a writer, as he got older – and was in his mid-70s when What Hetty Did was published by an imprint that Carr had set up. Hetty is a whirlwind of a character, and not a very likeable one – more determined than pleasant. And the strange way in which things are described is due to some sort of disconcerting energy in the narrative. It’s like Angela Carter but the events are mundane, even if the prose is not.
Did I like it? I honestly don’t know. It’s an impressive feat, and quite distinctive – but such an odd way of telling a relatively simple plot that I never quite felt I could find myself on stable ground. But if nothing else, it’s nice to read a novel set in my homeland of Worcestershire – that doesn’t happen too often. And Bredon Hill even gets a mention, which was the hill abutting my village!
Sounds a bit odd…. And I *loved* A Month in the Country!
I still haven’t read my copy of A Month in the Country, I really must. This sounds unusual and slightly odd, but you have me intruiged by it.
I haven’t had the chance to comment on all your posts, but you are reading some fascinating books for your 25 books on 25 days project. Several I hadn’t heard of before.
It’s interesting to hear about these lesser-known Carrs, particularly given this writer’s range and diversity. Have you read the one about Steeple Sinderby? I’ve been wondering whether it’s worth picking up…
As well as his own books, Carr inspired a masterpiece: Byron Rogers’ biography of him, The Last Englishman.