Jan 23, 2009
Here's some advice for anyone starting a job as literary editor for a Catholic online journal: For your first book review, avoid novels whose central character is an atheist lesbian who fights to adopt a child and who eventually commits suicide. Not that these elements make a novel bad, of course, but you may have to do some fancy dancing to warn readers who expect you to review a novel that presents Catholic ideas and beliefs.
If you choose to ignore that advice, at least get the necessary caveats out of the way early. And be sure that the novel is actually good, with interesting characters, vivid settings, evocative language, and a compelling plot, like Jonathan Coe's The Rain before It Falls.
Coe's novel begins when Gill, a middle-aged mother of two, learns that her aunt Rosamond has died, and travels to Shropshire take care of her effects. There, Gill finds that her aunt has left behind a collection of taped recordings that she had dictated in her final days, along with a number of family photographs. Confirming the old saying that "the family that listens to mysterious recordings by dead relatives together stays together," Gill and her daughters gather one evening to listen to Rosamond's tapes. The bulk of the novel consists of Rosamond's recorded biography, and particularly her relationship with her extended family.
As I said, this is a good novel, which naturally means that its families are dysfunctional. The root of its conflict is, simply put, bad parenting. Consecutive generations of mothers neglect and abuse their daughters, with disastrous consequences. Rosamond's own aunt mistreats her daughter Beatrix, who then neglects her own daughter Thea, who -- you guessed it -- mistreats her own daughter Imogen. These tragic repetitions constitute the novel's emotional core.