published 1974
[Series heroine & narrator Janet is on board a ship
travelling from the West Indies back to the UK.
A young girl is one of the passengers, and it is Christmas time]
Friday 26th
December 1958
[Helga] was allowed to stay up for Christmas dinner in the
saloon and her pleasure in her small gifts was the only thing that made the
party bearable. A steward had produced an iron which I had applied to the
organdie dress over which she wore her quiver and on her head the green hat.
The quiver no longer held arrows. In it she carried her clock, her calendar, a
little red-bound address book that one of the officers had given her and a
little figure of a Jamaican market woman that
had been Roddy’s gift…
Nearly everyone had managed to produces something for Helga,
but the gift that particularly charmed her was a black velvet eye-mask, trimmed
with glittering brilliants.
Not until she was seated beside Roddy at the table did she
produce the mask from the quiver and put it on. It gave her a slit-eyed
unchildlike air as she looked up the table at the Captain or down it at the
Misses Kindness, an air that made the ladies flutter uncomfortably, and even
shook a little the Captain’s self-confident ill-nature.
commentary: All pictures of people in black masks are slit-eyed and
unchildlike, otherwise I might have had doubts about using this photograph,
which is from a very grown-up German website via Pinterest.
Helga has a Robin Hood fixation, hence the quiver and green
feathered hat. It would be nice to see what she looked like in this particular
combination of dress and accessories, but I don’t think such a photo exists. Everyone on this journey has some kind of mythological role:
Helga perhaps is some kind of messenger figure.
I am coming to the end of this series, but saved
this one for Christmas. I kept asking who would want to read 19 books about
this rather uninteresting woman’s life, but of course the answer is, I did. I
couldn’t stop myself, she did have something. And this particular one was very
unusual – ten days on board ship, all kinds of life happening all around, and a
lot of very unpleasant people. It has a portentous structure.
As ever, Janet is very hard on everyone else and rather easy
on herself – for example she lies to people (including close friends and
family) very consistently throughout the book, for no apparent reason. Not very
Reachfar, I’d have thought. But as ever
she is merciless on others. The child is ‘nice’ of course – all the good
children in this series are the same child, who bears a huge resemblance to
Jane/Janet’s idea of herself as a child.
As she leaves the West Indies, where she has lived for ten
years, I like her description of ‘the odour of the islands, that mixture of
spices, fermenting fruit, lilies and human sweat.’ And I like the detail that on a ship with few passengers and
no female crew, the women passengers would be asked to look after each other
for medical matters including seasickness.
The hideous Misses Kindness are adult triplets who do
everything together, have never married, and wear the same clothes in different
colours. They are particularly criticized for wearing matador pants, a look we
like on the blog, where we sometimes find them as toreador
pants or as capris.
And in a 3rd missed photo opportunity (I feel a
failure on this book) another character wears this splendid outfit:
a bunchy cotton skirt with scarlet
donkeys and blue palm trees printed on it and a bunchy ‘peasant-style’ blouse
of white muslin that exposed her bony neck and shoulders.
See many (many)
earlier entries on this series, and some conclusions on this one, an overview and list… there is one more book for me to read.
The Bello imprint has republished the My Friends series as ebooks, so they are easily available.
I found a couple of other people who knew the books well, but have shamefully lost their details - I hope they might contact me again at clothesinbooks@hotmail.co.uk if they would like to.
Oh, I like that description of the scents of the West Indies, too, Moira. And there is something about a sea voyage that just lends itself to a story. All sorts of things can happen. And about Janet? I'll bet she's not the only one who's harder on others than she is on herself, if I may put it that way...
ReplyDeleteYou are right Margot - and in the end, she did keep me reading, so not all bad...
DeleteNope
ReplyDeleteNo definitely not for you.
DeleteThat top photo does look very adult but I love it. Just gorgeous.
ReplyDeleteI always like images of sewing pattern envelopes, because in a former life I sewed some of my own clothes from patterns, and my mother used them, and my grandmother used them. Many memories.
I love pattern envelopes too, even though hopeless at sewing myself. I try to ration myself not to use them too often on the blog!
DeleteYou've inspired me to track down and re-read these - I read a lot of them when I was in my very early 20s, as an escape from a very difficult situation. I don't know whether it was my own problems or the fact that Bradford libraries didn't seem to have a complete set, but I spent a lot of time being utterly baffled (and utterly beguiled, or I wouldn't have finished the first one). Will they make any more sense to me 16 years later? Only one way to find out...
ReplyDeleteThat's exactly how I feel about them - baffled AND beguiled. Hope you will report back on them...
Delete