Not
everything worth reading is hot off the press. In this section,
Nicholas Reid recommends "something old" that is still well worth
reading. "Something old" can mean anything from a venerable and antique
classic to a good book first published five or more years ago.
“THE BEGGARS” by Louis-Rene des Forets (“Les Mendiants”, first published in
French in 1943; English translation by Helen Beauclerk published 1948)
Here’s a
story for connoisseurs and bibliophiles. When I was a small boy, I grew up in a
house full of books. I became very familiar with the spines and cover
illustrations of many books which I never actually read, as well as a number
that I did read. In some cases, I also became familiar with the cover-blurbs of
books I didn’t read.
When my
mother died, I took, and now have on my own shelves, a considerable number of
my father’s books. In some cases, those familiar spines of unread books still
look at me. Sometimes, when I don’t have other more pressing reading to do, I
take off the shelf a book I have known for years by sight, and actually read
it. In some cases, it is exactly the type of book that the blurb lead me to
believe it would be. In other cases, it is completely different from what I
imagined it would be.
Sometimes,
when I have finished reading such a book, the impression of the
non-existent-and-unread book is still stronger in me than the impression of the
existent-and-read book. In such cases, I have the idea (probably fuelled by too
much coffee) that the book has existed to ridicule me. Imagine all those years
when I was a small boy, crawling around on the carpet; and there it was on an
upper shelf, hiding its unread contents between its covers, looking at me down
below and knowing how wrong I was.
Here is a
case in point.
Louis-Rene
des Forets’ The Beggars sat on an
upper shelf in my father’s house for all of my childhood. In my mind’s eye, I
can see exactly where it sat back then. It has lived on a lower shelf in my own
home for about twenty years. I see it was published in 1948, so that’s three
years before I was born. Probably Dad got it as a review copy.
On its (now
fly-specked) dust-jacket is a very attractive line illustration of people on
a
very traditional-looking quay, leaning over and looking at old-fashioned
sailing boats. There is a variant of the image across the title pages.
Something on the blurb told me that it was a sort of intellectual adventure
story, and comparable with Le Grand
Meaulnes. I don’t know why, but I have for years imagined it to be a Joseph
Conrad-ish affair, or maybe something like Graham Greene’s first novel The Man Within. Intellectual and
connected with the sea.
Anyway, I
finally got around to reading it, and it’s nothing like that at all. Set in a
non-specific, but vaguely-Mediterranean-ish (or maybe South American) country,
it takes place in an old-fashioned sea-port and has a number of discrete and
inter-locking stories. There’s a teenage gang involved in petty theft. One
member of the gang seems the natural “leader”, but other members of the gang
are thinking of challenging him. There’s a group of professional adult
smugglers. A lot of it takes place on the waterfront with either the boys, or
the adult crims, dodging cops. There’s also the story of an actress in the
local theatre – incidentally performing in a production of Othello – wanting to do something about the infidelity of her
lover. All relationships seem thwarted or strained. None of the teenage boys
seem to have two parents. One of the chief narrators spends his time fending
off a brutal grandfather.
There are
many first-person narrators, switching from voice to voice and with the
narrator here being a background character in somebody else’s narration there.
And,
frankly, I found it an almost complete bore.
There is no
momentum to it. Individual scenes are vivid, but the whole thing simply doesn’t
cohere. I found it difficult to distinguish one narrating voice from the other,
although they are meant to be as different as teenagers, a murderer escaped
from prison, a woman running an inn, the actress etc. They all sounded the same
to me, although in fairness this could have at least something to do with the
English translation. I was also irritated by its non-specific setting. Noting
that it was written in 1942-43 and first published in France in 1943, I kept
seeing in my mind’s eye one of those Occupation-era French movies (“L’Assassin Habite au 21”, “L’Eternel Retour” etc.) which are
supposedly set in contemporary France but which are really set in a
non-specific fantasy-land because there is no way that French film-makers would
be allowed to look at current realities at the time of the German occupation.
Not a book
for me, then.
But after
I’d read it and reached this conclusion, I did some Googling and discovered a few
interesting things.
Louis-Rene
des Forets (1918-2000) began to write this novel when he was twenty, in 1938, but
he set it aside for war service, was a prisoner of war and was later active in
the Resistance. He finished it in six months when he was 24. It was very highly
regarded by some critics of the day (including Jean-Paul Sartre and Albert
Camus), although the perceptive Raymond Queneau said (and I agree with him) that its multiple narrators were hard to
distinguish from one another, and it was “too American” in the sense of
being too obviously influenced by the multiple-narrator techniques of William
Faulkner. (Queneau was a good friend of des Forests, and did not make the
criticism lightly.) Three years later (in 1946) des Forets produced a second
and very short novel, Le Buvard, a
monologue narrated by a drunkard, apparently something like the monologue
novels of Samuel Beckett. He seemed set to be a big literary noise.
But it didn’t happen.
In the 50-plus years of his
remaining literary life he produced no more novels, but only one collection of
short stories, a book of verse, a book of personal aphorisms and a translation
of the correspondence of Gerard Manley Hopkins. Apparently his reputation in
France is that of the sparsely-published novelist, very highly regarded by
highbrow critics but hardly known to the public. A bit like a French Richard
Hughes, maybe. Or maybe that underrates the profile of Richard Hughes. Should I
say Henry Green?
Louis-Rene
des Forets also (God help him) has a reputation as a precursor of the “New
Novel”. Marguerite Duras and Nathalie Serrault both admired his two novels. I
came across some pretentious articles that told me his real theme is “silence”
and the inability of real communication between individuals. Hence the multiple
narrators.
Personally,
I wish The Beggars had been an
intellectual adventure story of the Joseph Conrad type rather than the evasive
thing it is.
It is now
back on my shelf, where it will remain unread unless some crazed admirer of obscure
French novels happens to be visiting.
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