• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

belgianwaffle

  • Home
  • About
  • Archives

Bitter, bitter, bitter is the lemon to the fritter

15 March, 2007
Posted in: Reading etc.

On Tuesday night, I endangered my marriage by sitting up in bed with the light on until 1.30 am loudly turning pages while Mr. Waffle huffed and tossed and turned. All this to finish “Wives and Daughters” by Mrs. Gaskell. So there I am febrilely turning pages; Cynthia is married and dispatched and all that stands between Molly and Roger is six months in Africa. I realise that only three pages of the tome remain. Odd. Mrs. Gaskell is not one to finish abruptly. This is the kind of novel where there should be a couple of chapters on Molly and Roger’s children sitting on the Squire’s knee. We should hear what happens Cynthia and the Gibsons. When I reached the end it was to discover that the novel was unfinished. Words are totally inadequate to express my indignation but I tried when speaking to the friend who recommended it to me.

Me: “Wives and Daughters” is an unfinished novel.

Him: Mmmm.

Me (ominously): Why didn’t you tell me?

Him: But everyone knows that. It’s what everyone says about it “it’s her

best novel and it’s unfinished”.

Me: Not me or anyone I’ve spoken to.

Him: Can I help it that you don’t come from a literary household?

Me: Speechless indignation. Esprit d’escalier suggests that I should have responded “in our literary household we are not given to reading Victorian potboilers and the talk is all of Samuel Johnson”.

Him: But it makes it almost modern, doesn’t it, that abrupt ending?

Me: But I didn’t want to read a modern novel, I was reading a Victorian novel and to find after 648 pages that it is UNFINISHED is deeply unsatisfactory.

Him: Yes, I suppose, it was the most ill-timed heart attacks in the history of literature. But it could have been worse, imagine, if it had been Graham Greene.

Me: Eh?

Him: Apparently he used to finish his work mid sentence and pick up and finish it off in the morning.

In other reading unhappiness, at bedtime the other night, we decided to read to the Princess from a book of fairytales that a friend of mine gave her for Christmas. It’s a book for slightly older children but it is beautifully presented and illustrated and the Princess is getting interested in stories with more text and fewer pictures. I read through the table of contents and, of course, she picked the story in the middle entitled “The Girl with no Hands“. I had never heard it before but let me tell you one thing, they’re called the Brothers Grimm for a reason. This story has as its centrepiece a girl whose father chops off her hands. Great bedtime reading. I found it quite disturbing but both the Princess and her father when I showed it to him later were unmoved as it all finishes happily in the end.

To recover from it all, I’m reading Mavis Cheek, who, despite her dreadful name, is fantastic; faber’s only chick-lit author, what more could a girl ask for?

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. em says

    18 March, 2007 at 11:38

    Oh goodness I remember the bitter disappointment when I “finished” W&D… terrible, shattering disappointment… Why couldn’t EG have lived for another day or two and wrapped things up?!

    I like to reread my favorite victorian novels but not W&D – I stick to North & North instead.

  2. Melanie says

    19 March, 2007 at 04:53

    Oh my. I thought it was only me who read it unawares and ended up turning the last page with no warning (there were still many pages…of notes). I ended it wishing bitterly that Mrs. Gaskell had just stayed home and finished it. Sigh. Still, the opening lines just about make it worthwhile for me, and I plan on rereading it someday.

Trackbacks

  1. Semicolon says:
    24 March, 2007 at 05:14

    […] 21. Carrie K. (Take Joy)22. Lori (Year Zero)23. Lori (Dakota: A Spiritual Geography)24. Laura (Yellow Lighted Bookshop)25. Jen Robinson (The Zoo)26. Fay (19th Century Historical novels)27. Kevin Stilley (A Pocket Mirror For Heroes)28. Cornflower (A Gathering Light)29. Brooke (The Space Child’s Mother Goose)30. Mindy (How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents)31. Chris Book-a-rama (The Birth House)32. Booklogged (A Prayer for Owen Meany)33. Andrew (Collected Letters of C.S. Lewis)34. Belgian Waffle (Wives and Daughters)35. Kara (Agatha Christie)36. ChristineMM (The Over-Scheduled Child)37. Sam Houston (The Blunderer by Patricia Highsmith)38. Joy (The Double Bind)39. Heidi (Unless by Carol Shields)40. Heidi (The English Patient) […]

Primary Sidebar

Flickr Photos

More Photos
March 2007
M T W T F S S
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031  
« Feb   Apr »
Tweets by Belgianwaffle

Categories

  • Belgium (144)
  • Boys (877)
  • Cork (206)
  • Daniel (619)
  • Dublin (455)
  • Family (591)
  • Hodge (46)
  • Ireland (843)
  • Liffey Journal (7)
  • Michael (603)
  • Miscellaneous (71)
  • Mr. Waffle (554)
  • Princess (1,058)
  • Reading etc. (562)
  • Siblings (205)
  • The tale of Lazy Jack Silver (18)
  • Travel (167)
  • Work (192)

Subscribe via Email

Subscribe Share
Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy

© 2003–2023 belgianwaffle · Privacy Policy · Write