Saturday, October 3, 2020
Two Novels on Aging: "Hieroglyphics," by Jill McCorkle, and "The Weekend," by Charlotte Ford
I have just read two novels featuring “older” characters, both books at least partly about the topic of aging. “Hieroglyphics” (Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill, 2020), by the wonderful writer Jill McCorkle (whose books I have read for decades), is a deep dive into the lives of a recently retired couple, Lil and Frank, who have moved from Boston to North Carolina, where Frank spent his childhood. Frank is obsessed with the house where he grew up, and Lil is equally obsessed with going through old letters and diaries with the idea of leaving a family history for the couple’s adult children. Both of them are remembering both good and bad events in their lives. At the same time, both of them find that they are having more trouble remembering things in general. The novel is also about secrets, families, parenting, and the role of place in our lives. “Hieroglyphics” is both profoundly human and humane, on the one hand, and quite discomforting, on the other. There is some joy, but there is also much melancholy, and overall the book felt bleak to me. The other novel I read "about" aging is “The Weekend” (Riverhead, 2020), set in Australia and written by the Australian author Charlotte Ford. Three lifelong friends in their early seventies gather at the beachside home of their late fourth friend, in order to clean out her belongings, at the request of her lover. Their weekend together illuminates both the friends’ deep connections and the ways in which they have diverged. They get on each others’ nerves, and old secrets are revealed. The author does not avoid facing some of the inevitable problems of aging, and this book too has its bleak aspects. Yet at the end we know that the women’s friendship is deep and lasting, despite everything. I am always glad to see novels with older characters, as this is a stage in life that is too often neglected in fiction. I am also always glad to read fiction with the theme of friendship, especially female friendship.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment