More jumble: In A Summer Season by Elizabeth Taylor

In A Summer Season by Elizabeth Taylor

published 1961

 



 

Blogfriend Christine recommended In A Summer Season, having remembered not one but TWO choice moments from a jumble sale – a cardigan and a pogo stick.

- jumble sales much discussed on the blog recently:

The Intricate World of Literary Jumble Sales

Jumble sales 2: Fantastical

Graham Greene: The Man for a White Elephant Stall


The setting of this one is a small Home Counties village – near Windsor, everyone keeps looking at the Castle – and the daughter of the house, 16 yo Louisa, has a crush on the curate, Fr Blizzard, so gets roped in to the jumble sale, despite her mother, Kate, never going to church. Louisa is not going to get far with him, as he is on the way over to Rome, but their relationship is very enjoyable.

We are all used to the mild trope of someone putting down eg a jacket (their own, smart) at a sale or charity shop, and its being swept up and sold. Here there is a nuanced variation:



She had only removed her cardigan for a moment… turning to look for it a minute or two later, had found it laid out on a stall, marked fourpence.

Highly insulting.

Then this happens when the curate tries to join in:

‘And what is this magnificent object?’ he asked, with an attempt at joviality.

‘It is the pogo-stick my brother and I played with when we were children,’ said Miss Buckley, who felt that she  had sacrificed it. Her brother’s having been killed in the war, as everybody knew, made an added embarrassment for Father Blizzard.

Which sent me off to find the history of pogo-sticks, as I wrongly thought they arrived in, say, the 1950s; they didn't.

These are the kind of moments Taylor excels iin – small and specific, but recognizable to us. This is not my favourite of her books, but it is very intriguing.

Kate, widowed after a happy marriage, has married Dermot, a younger man who is flighty and unreliable and who doesn’t seem able to work. Luckily Kate is wealthy. It is made startlingly clear that they have an immense sexual attraction to each other, which they do not resist. It is splendid to see them enjoying themselves so much.

Kate has two children, Tom, 22 and trying to go into the family business, and the schoolgirl Louisa.

Dermot’s mother is a tremendous ghoulish figure in London, always trying to interfere in the family, and full of terrible ideas. Her dialogue is wonderful. I loved that she says ‘Hello stranger’ when Dermot or Kate visit or phone, and how dispiriting this is for them.

Kate used to be part of a pair of couples who were best friends, saw each other all the time. Now her husband Alan is dead, and so is her great friend Dorothea. The other member of the quartet, the widowed Charles, is about to return to his house in the village, along with his daughter Araminta, who has been away at school.

All will be disrupted, but in a gentle, Taylor-esque way – at least to begin with. Araminta is minx-y and beautiful, so Tom falls in love with her. Charles is meeting Dermot for the first time, and can’t help contrasting him with the dead Alan, who was Charles’ friend from schooldays.

Also living in the lovely Home Counties house is an aged Aunt Ethel who trundles round observing, then writes long indiscreet letters to her old friend Gertrude: ‘we were in Holloway prison together years and years ago’ – ie they were Suffragettes back in the day. These two unmarried women freely discuss Kate’s sexlife – and there is plenty to talk about – in a modern and psychological way. Then Ethel says ‘burn this’ in her letter, ‘as if any of the people mentioned it might travel down to [Cornwall] to go through Gertrude’s desk out of curiosity’.

There is a cook, Mrs Meacock, who is allowed status as a full character, though I felt Taylor was paying lip service to this.

Mrs M cooks for a splendidly awful dinner-party with expected and unexpected guests, and a dubious main course. And some terrible conversations.

Tom has bought himself a TV, and I loved the description of him and Dermot sneaking off to watch it. ‘Too good an evening to waste out of doors’ Dermot would say as they drew the curtains against the sunlight. Ethel pops in, and lingers, pretending she isn’t watching.

Tom and Dermot sat rigid and in silence. From time to time, their hands groped on the floor for their glasses of light ale, the cigarettes burnt to their fingers.

‘You’ve got to sleep in here, Tom’ Kate said crossly, flapping at the smoke-haze..

I’ve been talking lately about authors who give all their characters a fair chance, they don’t create horrible people in order to then criticise them. Taylor is one of these good ones: although it is clear that Kate is the heroine, everyone in the book gets a fair deal. And although you wouldn’t be in much doubt that Taylor is one of those who disapprove of television, she has Kate sternly telling Tom to read a book instead, ‘not realising that she very seldom read herself these days and was just off for an evening in the pub with Dermot.’



Araminta wears unusual and dicey clothes – a dress made from a length of black silk draped round herself, and a cheongsam which splits more every time she moves in it. The clothes are attention-grabbing, but very temporary, slipping and falling. Nearly all men who meet her are entirely charmed by her.



It has to be said that the book has a most unexpected ending, one that reviewers called brutal. It is also abrupt. I wanted to know more about the future of the characters – sign of a very good book.

 

Cardigan from Free Vintage Knitting Patterns.

 

Comments

  1. Yes, a very good novel - and a startling end. Not the kind of thing that would happen in a Barbara Pym novel, I feel. There is more of a dangerous edge to Elizabeth Taylor, I feel. And Kate's unfortunate hair do is a brilliant touch. Chrissie

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. How true about Pym! So many wonderful details, it made me laugh and wince with recognition throughout.

      Delete
  2. I love this book, and Aunt Ethel is a brilliant creation. There's so much in it, like the way Dermot assumes that Mrs Gereth is a real person, such an awkward moment. Brutal is a good word for the ending.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, and she does it so well: no-one is trying to get at Dermot or make him feel bad, and it is perfectly reasonable not to know a character from the Spoils of Poynton. But she makes you feel the awkwardness so well....

      Delete
  3. These characters sound so well-construction, Moira! And it is nice when, as you say, all the characters get a fair shake. The writing style has that sly wit in it that always draws me in, too. I can see what appealed to you here.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Once I get into the rhythm of Taylor's writing, I could read her all day

      Delete
  4. I've never read Elizabeth Taylor, and I've always vaguely assumed she was a more serious writer. But when you started sharing snippets of dialogue and observations, I began to get a Barbara Pym vibe. I was just anticipating ordinging it from the library; then I came to the reference to the brutal ending.
    Maybe not, then.
    Still, jumble sales and Fr. Blizzard...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I honestly think you would enjoy it! She is generally seen as a serious writer, but also entertaining. And the ending - well. Open to discussion.

      Delete
    2. Me again. Okay, it's on order fromthe library, and I am #2 in line.

      Delete
  5. I was reading some other reviews which suggested that Dermot was based on the man murdered by Ruth Ellis, and that Taylor knew the murdered man and his family and may have been somewhat attracted to him. Just speculation, but who knows?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Whoa, that is really interesting, I've never heard that. Fascinating if true....

      Delete
    2. There's a biography of Taylor by Nicola Beauman who founded Persephone Books (it's called The Other Elizabeth Taylor, wouldn't you know). I just read a Guardian review of it from way back and it sounds as if, like Pym, Taylor may have not had a prim and proper past!

      Delete
    3. That doesn't surprise me... though I have been reading and liking her for a long time without ever having any great curiosity about her personal life, don't know why.

      Delete
  6. Thank you for the recommendation! I enjoyed this book very much. I wonder if Dermot had dyslexia, and perhaps dyscalculia as well, and that was why he couldn't manage to do anything much. I do think if you marry an alcoholic for sex you will at some point be very disappointed, so perhaps the ending is the easiest way out for both Dermot and Kate, though not for . . . well, no spoilers. I too loved Aunt Ethel, in fact I feel a certain kinship!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Deffinitely a possibility about Dermot, and would never have been diagnozed back then. I love this sentence in your comment: 'if you marry an alcoholic for sex you will at some point be very disappointed'. A usedful rule for life!

      Delete
    2. The sex is so convincing! I always feel that it is a slight failing in Barbara Pym's A Glass of Blessings that the relationship between Wilmet and Rodney seems rather opaque. Good as she was, I think married life and sex and children were not something she could write about well, whereas Elizabeth Taylor excels at that.

      Delete
    3. Yes, you sum that up very well

      Delete
  7. You say this isn't your favourite, Moira, so which is? Would very much like to know. Chrissie

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. A Game of Hide and Seek, which is a wonderful book. But there are some I haven't read, or read a long time ago (when I honestly think I was too young to appreciate her) so as I slowly read my way through I may find one even better! What's yours?

      Delete
    2. I like A Wreath of Roses, though it is slightly marred for me by an element of melodrama. Mrs Palfrey at the Claremont is brilliant. Ages since I have read A Game of Hide and Seek. Must reread it.

      Delete
    3. Now I'm wanting to read them all! I have Mrs Palfrey in my intermediate pile of books to read. Maybe I should move it up...

      Delete
  8. The top photo seems to show tattoos on the woman's left arm - not something you'd ex[ect in an Elizabeth Taylor character.
    Is Fr Blizzard "on the way over to Rome", as in turning papist, or becoming Anglo-Catholic? The latter does not preclude marriage.

    - Roger

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I thought about this after reading your comment: I think Araminta in the book if she was a modern young woman definitely would have tattoos, though perhaps less likely in 1961.
      No, Fr Blizzard is definitely becoming an RC - and his vicar is not pleased....

      Delete
  9. I'm not sure if someone has already mentioned the wonderful Shirley Hughes' book, 'Dogger', where a beloved toy is lost and then caught up in a jumble sale where it is sold before his owner can retrieve him. It's such a brilliantly structured children's picture book.
    I haven't read the book you discuss in the blog but your description of it and quotes make me want to! The Elizabeth Taylor book that has stuck most in my memory is Angel - the main character is unforgettable.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I actually have an illustrated letter from Shirley Hughes where she explains to six year old me that Dogger was a real toy. She must have written it on one of her sketches for her Jessie and Chips books.

      Delete
    2. Anon: of course - great story from Shirley Hughes. When we lived in the US, those books used to make me homesick, because our English house was just like Alfie's - including being quite messy, which was one of the things I loved about Hughes. Real people, real homes.
      I was thinking I should read Angel again, and you're confirming me in that.
      Daniel - how amazing, lucky you! something to treasure. She did always sound as though she was a lovely person.

      Delete
    3. Dogger comment was from me. I forgot to sign in.
      Daniel - how incredible. What a treasure.
      Moira - I thought I saw somewhere that Dogger was going to be adapted for film/tv but now I can't find reference to it. Totally agree the homes and people are comfortingly real.

      Delete
    4. Thanks Bernadette - I know, sorry, signing in is a pain.
      Dogger would make a great film...

      Delete
    5. Lauren Bravo wrote a lovely piece about the clothes the mums wear in Shirley Hughes's books. https://open.substack.com/pub/laurenbravo/p/the-timeless-style-of-mums-in-shirley?utm_source=share&utm_medium=android&r=f94

      My favourite character was Mrs McNally's Maureen and I had a red and black striped jumper just like hers when I was about six.

      Delete
    6. Oh you are so right Susanna - I absolutely loved that piece, speaks to Mums of all generations.

      Delete
  10. Daniel, what a treasure that letter sounds! Do take care of it. Yes, I love all the clothes and details in Shirley Hughes.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, I want to read some of the Hughes books now! The article Susanna mentions above is well worth reading too

      Delete
  11. Lovely review - and the ending of A Summer Season is such a shock, even on re-reading. I’ve loved all the posts on jumble sales, and the recommendations from other readers. Some of the references I knew, and some were new, and other people seemed to have said what I wanted to say so much better than I could! I’m sure that somewhere in my collection of Persephone old green-spined Virago books there are other mentions of jumble sales, so I will let you know if I find them!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Christine Harding8 April 2026 at 17:10

      That was me.

      Delete
    2. Thank you, and you and all the regulars contribute all the time! I still have some jumble sales to come, at least one more post (even though we are all tied up in smuggling right now)

      Delete

Post a Comment