by Diana Wynne Jones
Sophie has the great misfortune of being the eldest of three daughters, destined to fail miserably should she ever leave home to seek her fate. But when she unwittingly attracts the ire of the Witch of the Waste, Sophie finds herself under a horrid spell that transforms her into an old lady. Her only chance at breaking it lies in the ever-moving castle in the hills: the Wizard Howl's castle.
To untangle the enchantment, Sophie must handle the heartless Howl, strike a bargain with a fire demon, and meet the Witch of the Waste head-on. Along the way, she discovers that there's far more to Howl—and herself—than first meets the eye.
In this giant jigsaw puzzle of a fantasy, people and things are never quite what they seem. Destinies are intertwined, identities exchanged, lovers confused. The Witch has placed a spell on Howl. Does the clue to breaking it lie in a famous poem? And what will happen to Sophie Hatter when she enters Howl's castle?
All fans of classic fantasy books deserve the pleasure of reading those by Diana Wynne Jones, whose acclaim included the World Fantasy Award for Life Achievement.
Sophie Hatter is cursed. After the death of her father, her stepmother settles Sophie into a life at the family hat shop, but an encounter with the evil Witch of the Waste leaves Sophie magically transformed into an old woman. Sophie ventures to the castle of the wizard Howl, who is said to steal the hearts of young women, where she makes a deal with the castle's resident magical fire demon, Calcifer: he will break Sophie's curse if she helps him break his mysterious contract with Howl. Caught up in Howl's ensuing misadventures, Sophie must decide what kind of person she wants to be and help prevent the Witch of the Waste from hurting the people she loves.
The opening lines of Diana Wynne Jones' Howl's Moving Castle firmly establish the novel as a whimsical, tropey fantasy: "In the land of Ingary, where such things as seven-league boots and cloaks of invisibility really exist, it is quite a misfortune to be born the eldest of three." Sophie Hatter is the oldest of three sisters, and so, according to the fairy tale-like rules of Ingary, she's set up for failure. She hides herself away in her family's hat shop, too anxious to go outside, where she will fail at anything she tries and may encounter the terrible, heart-eating wizard Howl, who is stumping around town along with his magical moving castle. But Sophie's curse forces her out into the world, where she realizes that everything is not as it seems as she meets a cast of quirky magical characters: Howl, who, although powerful, is more worried about the threat of his own curses than about attacking young women; Calcifer the fire demon, who is responsible for keeping the castle moving and running; and Michael, Howl's young apprentice who becomes Sophie's friend and helper, when he isn't running into town to woo the girl he loves.
As Sophie and her friends experience the novel's catastrophes and adventures, they realize that in spite of Ingary's supposedly rigid fairy tale rules, their fates are not set in stone. Sophie's sisters, too, have their expected destinies—but unlike Sophie, neither of them resigns themselves to the life that is chosen for them, and instead they use magic to change their fates and achieve their own dreams. By having the characters successfully fight against their destinies, Jones introduces clever and often humorous twists that keep the story feeling fresh amidst a familiar fairy tale backdrop.
Another interesting and unique aspect of Howl's Moving Castle is how the specifics of the magic system are never explained. Howl is a wizard, but how his power works and where it comes from remain a mystery. Magic can be taught, as evidenced by Howl's apprentice, which implies that it isn't an innate ability, but another character exhibits their own type of magic that isn't replicable by anyone else. Even more intriguing is the revelation that Ingary is a parallel world to our own and that several characters have crossed between the worlds using magic. The presence of the real world alongside a fictional one breaks the fourth wall of a fantasy story—and fits in perfectly with the whimsical chaos of the novel.
Over the course of the novel, the characters in Howl's Moving Castle learn both to love themselves and to love others for who they are on the inside. Sophie's transformation from a timid young girl to an old woman makes her less afraid of what other people, including a powerful wizard like Howl, think of her. "As a girl, Sophie would have shriveled with embarrassment at the way she was behaving. As an old woman, she did not mind what she did or said," Jones writes. "She found that a great relief." Howl's journey is to overcome his vanity and learn that one's outward appearance is not the most important part of romantic love. Early in the novel, it's said of Howl that he won't truly be in love until he forgets to "spend at least an hour in the bathroom" getting ready; later, when Howl comes to rescue Sophie, she realizes that he has "not bothered to shave or tidy his hair… his eyes were still red-rimmed and his black sleeves were torn in several places." Sophie and Howl's character transformations are slow but realistic, resulting in a splendid finale that highlights the unmistakable and heartwarming reward of love.
Since its publication in 1986, Howl's Moving Castle has amassed many fans, won numerous literary awards, and been adapted into an Academy Award-nominated film (see Beyond the Book). Filled with flawed but entertaining characters, unique magic, and plenty of humor, Howl's Moving Castle will win over readers of all ages with its whimsy and heart.
Book reviewed by Jordan Lynch
Diana Wynne Jones' 1986 novel Howl's Moving Castle was beloved by fans but not globally known until 2004, when Japanese filmmaker Hayao Miyazaki adapted the film into an animated feature.
In a 2011 interview with Empire, Miyazaki said that he was "snared in a trap" by Jones when he read Howl's. This was partly because "she doesn't care anything about how the world is set up," he said: "And magic without any rules… you know, it kind of loses control. But I didn't want to make a movie that explains the rules."
Despite loving the book's homage to classic fairy tales, Miyazaki's version focuses on another element: the violence of war. Although the book mentions war as a result of the Witch of the Waste's machinations, fighting is ultimately avoided. But as Miyazaki, an outspoken pacifist, began adapting the story, the United States invaded Iraq (with the support of many countries, including Japan); and in response, Miyazaki incorporated shocking war imagery and anti-war themes into the film, turning the story into a warning about the dangers of war and how one can lose their humanity in it.
The resulting film, while still technically considered a faithful adaptation, has many significant changes to the plot and characters. Miyazaki was surprised by people's mixed reactions: there were "people who really loved it and people who didn't understand it. It was a horrible experience," he said.
But one individual who did understand the film and who quite enjoyed it was the book's author herself. Jones was a long-time fan of Miyazaki and his work when he asked to adapt her book. "It was wonderful," she said of seeing the final product for the first time. "I don't think I've ever met anyone before who thinks like I do. He saw my books from the inside out."
She also liked some of deviations that Miyazaki made from the source material, including Calcifer looking different than how she had written him; Miyazaki's portrayal of the castle ("I had not thought of the castle having feet. In the book I wrote, the castle is more like a hovercraft…but I am very fond of Miyazaki's castle. I have several models of it around the house," she said); and Howl and Sophie's personalities. "Howl and Sophie, both of them are gentler and more noble than the characters in my books," she said.
The scenes that stayed true to her story were also a hit with Jones, including one of Sophie cooking bacon and eggs on the fire demon Calcifer, who grumpily bends down his fiery head to allow Sophie to set the skillet on top of him, and one in which Sophie and the Witch of the Waste are trying to climb an immense flight of marble stairs. "It was like a dream and a nightmare and also very funny," Jones said of the scene in an author interview. Even though it was only partly in the book, she thought it was one of the finest scenes in the film.
The film introduced Howl's to a worldwide audience, which quite pleased Jones, although she had to laugh at the increased number of people who wanted to marry Howl. And despite continued grumblings by the book's purists, the world has embraced Miyazaki's version of Howl's. It is one of the most successful Japanese films of all time, has won numerous awards, and was nominated for the 2006 Oscar for Best Animated Feature.
Watch the trailer for Howl's Moving Castle below:
by Margaret Atwood
Grace Marks has been convicted for her involvement in the vicious murders of her employer, the wealthy Thomas Kinnear, and of Nancy Montgomery, his housekeeper and mistress. Some believe Grace is innocent; others think her evil or insane. Now serving a life sentence after a stint in Toronto's lunatic asylum, Grace herself claims to have no memory of the murders.
Dr. Simon Jordan, an up-and-coming expert in the burgeoning field of mental illness, is engaged by a group of reformers and spiritualists who seek a pardon for Grace. He listens to her story, from her family's difficult passage out of Ireland into Canada, to her time as a maid in Thomas Kinnear's household. As he brings Grace closer and closer to the day she cannot remember, he hears of the turbulent relationship between Kinnear and Nancy Montgomery, and of the alarming behavior of Grace's fellow servant, James McDermott. Jordan is drawn to Grace, but he is also baffled by her. What will he find in attempting to unlock her memories? Is Grace a female fiend, a bloodthirsty femme fatale? Or is she a victim of circumstances?
Alias Grace is a beautifully crafted work of the imagination that reclaims a profoundly mysterious and disturbing story from the past century. With compassion, an unsentimental lyricism, and her customary narrative virtuosity, Margaret Atwood mines the often convoluted relationships between men and women, and between the affluent and those without position. The result is her most captivating, disturbing, and ultimately satisfying work since The Handmaid's Tale—in short, vintage Atwood.
When Grace Marks was sixteen years old, she was accused of killing Nancy Montgomery and Thomas Kinnear. On the farm that Kinnear owned, Montgomery and Kinnear had snuck around in secret; they were lovers. After the crime (Kinnear was shot, Montgomery strangled), Grace fled to the United States under an assumed name and was captured. Post-conviction, she received a death sentence, which was commuted to life in prison.
Alias Grace is a historical novel based on this true story that occurred in 1843 in Upper Canada (now Ontario). Written by Margaret Atwood and published nearly thirty years ago, Alias Grace is brilliantly structured in its balance and pacing and lovely prose that explains how violence is built. One parent, one sadness, one jealousy at a time. Atwood supplies a quote before the first page credited to South African writer Eugène Marais: "I cannot tell you what the light is, but I can tell you what it is not." It makes sense to assume Atwood's inclusion of this quote is to explain at the very beginning that her protagonist isn't easily defined or understood, even by Atwood herself. While there is inherent darkness in the escalation of violent behavior, Grace Marks defies a single description, and Atwood isn't going to appease those who want simple classifications.
The novel begins eight years after the murder when Grace is assigned a doctor named Simon Jordan. He is eager to determine if she should be freed but he is also seduced by the science of Grace and the career opportunity she presents: "It is not the question of your guilt or innocence that concerns me. I am a doctor, not a judge. I simply wish to know what you yourself can actually remember."
Atwood navigates the central question of Grace's guilt or innocence by examining her life linearly. Alias Grace is not primarily a story of how Grace feels but rather what Grace remembers. Most of which is forlorn. For instance, when Grace and her family leave Ireland for Canada for better wages, her mother falls ill, and her lifeless corpse is tossed overboard in the middle of the ocean voyage. Grace is bereft. She feels like a refugee. The waves that bounce her mother's corpse into the horizon also carry Grace's dreams of a better life into oblivion.
Atwood implies that immigrants like Grace's family can never achieve happiness. The freight of poverty, displacement, isolation, and abuse are their continuing burdens. Take Grace's father. He is written as bitter and cruel, a violent man who overdrinks. Except for Grace's uncle in Ireland, who engineered a plan to get Grace's father out of the country and out of his hair, none of the men in the novel have redeeming qualities, nor are they moral. It feels ordinary, then, that Grace fantasizes about murdering her father with an iron pot that "could smash his skull open and kill him dead."
Desperate to escape him, she takes a job with the Parkinson family in a snobbish enclave of Toronto. She lives in the attic and shares a bed with Mary Whitney, who works in the laundry. Mary is the first friend Grace ever has, and they love and protect each other ferociously until Mary dies abruptly of a high fever after an abortion. While Mary lies on her deathbed, Grace hears Mary speaking to her, something Dr. Jordan will refer to as an auditory hallucination. Grace sells Mary's few possessions in the days that follow. She admits, "I cried as if my heart would break. I was thinking of my poor mother as well, who'd had no proper burial with dirt on top the way it should be, but was just tossed into the sea."
While Alias Grace is classified as historical fiction, it is also a study of grief, and what grief does to the traumatized mind. Trauma often triggers impulsiveness and violence and misremembering. Grace told multiple stories to the police about what happened to Nancy Montgomery and Thomas Kinnear, which could be the landscape of the liar or the outcome of the mistreated.
After Mary's death, Grace goes to work for Mr. Watson, a shoemaker. She soon discovers that a farmer named Thomas Kinnear is looking for a servant girl, and he pays a hefty sum, more than Grace is making. Grace is fascinated by the opportunity because the housekeeper for Thomas Kinnear is a young woman in her twenties named Nancy Montgomery who reminds Grace of Mary Whitney. She loves to laugh and has beautiful brown eyes. Because the pay is more and because Grace is starving for the company of someone like Mary, she swallows her anxiety about living in the country and takes a coach to Richmond Hill.
Grace reports to Nancy, who oversees all the household staff, and friction begins soon after Grace arrives. This is a country house; Grace is used to aristocracy. Gold watches. Chandeliers. Ballroom-sized dining areas. Her reactions to the house are noticed and to Nancy's way of thinking Grace is ungrateful. She is an immigrant housemaid Nancy has rescued. How dare she thumb her nose at Mr. Kinnear's way of life.
Grace is shrewd and picks up on Nancy's disdain and knows she has to be careful. Nancy is not like Mary Whitney, they will not be sisters or friends, but rather competitors. Nancy's moods are stark and inconsistent. The same woman who gives Grace the day off because it is her birthday calls her a slut because her hair is unpinned when she is scrubbing the floors.
The servant class is the cartilage of Alias Grace. The other side of wealth is the housemaids who work tirelessly, rarely with a day off, and are heavily monitored. The house has to look as if it runs itself, without effort. In the nineteenth century, working immigrant girls were relegated to being housemaids, laundry maids, or lady's maids. Atwood imagines the servants as mostly supportive and clannish, a united front against the accumulation of indignities from their employers.
I was riveted by the character of Grace Marks partly because she was accused when she was sixteen and I wondered what went wrong in her life. What happened to her? I liked the narrowness of the story, and its blatant subjectivity. That said, Atwood sticks to the basics and never tips her hand. She is an experienced storyteller and rarely overwhelms with too much information. What I appreciated the most was her respect for the reader's intelligence, the assumption that we can think for ourselves.
There is a thread of thought I disagree with that remains popular. Awful things happen to horrible people, and so their personal failures and tragedies are deserved. But I believe we have an innate responsibility to know one another, even when that includes the revealing of secrets, inconsistencies, and lies, when people's fragilities are exposed. That makes us more human, not less. The takeaway of Alias Grace is just that. Secrets will be unearthed when you least expect it. Lies will unravel. People do terrible things in silence. What matters is listening to what happened to them when they were supposed to be loved—and were not—before settling on a judgment.
Book reviewed by Valerie Morales
The novel Alias Grace, handsomely written by Margaret Atwood, is based on the true life story of housemaid Grace Marks, convicted of taking part in the murder of Thomas Kinnear, who employed Marks, and his housekeeper/lover Nancy Montgomery. The murders took place north of Richmond Hill, Upper Canada (now Ontario), on the farm Kinnear owned. Kinnear was shot in the left side of his chest and Montgomery was struck in the head with an axe and then strangled before being dismembered and stuffed under a tub.
Grace Marks fled for the United States under an alias and was captured in Lewiston, New York, along with James McDermott, who was also a servant on the Kinnear property. Both were immigrants who were new hires to the Kinnear farm and when they fled they carried with them stolen property.
Grace Marks and James McDermott never stood trial for Nancy Montgomery's murder. It was superfluous after the dual convictions for the death of Thomas Kinnear, the trial for which took place in November 1843 in a packed courthouse.
Marks was stoic at the trial and was often described as beautiful and perhaps stupid to fall for a rogue like McDermott. According to the newspapers at the time, she came to court wearing clothes that she had stolen from Nancy Montgomery. Some thought she was crazy. Others, that she had been manipulated and victimized by McDermott, who was summarized as having "a swarthy complexion, and a sullen, downcast and forbidding countenance."
Both were convicted and sentenced to death; upon hearing the sentence, Grace Marks fainted. Right before McDermott was hanged, he blamed the crimes on Marks. He called her an "evil genius" and claimed she strangled Nancy Montgomery with a white cloth.
Marks's death sentence was commuted to life in prison because the jury asked for mercy. She served her time at the Kingston Penitentiary. Her stay at the penitentiary was interrupted for fifteen months when she was sent to the Provincial Lunatic Asylum, a horrible place with documented abuses. After twenty-nine years, Grace Marks was pardoned and disappeared from public life.
In the 1960s, Margaret Atwood read Life in the Clearings Versus the Bush, which chronicled nineteenth-century pioneer life. Part of the book was devoted to the Lunatic Asylum in Toronto, where the author, an English immigrant named Susanna Moodie, visited and interviewed Grace Marks. Moodie believed Marks was suffering from madness, a common opinion.
Atwood's fascination with Grace Marks was expressed in several different iterations. She published The Journals of Susanna Moodie, a book of poetry based on Moodie's writings, in 1970. She wrote a screenplay about Marks called The Servant Girl, filmed by the CBC and released in 1974, and in 1979, produced a stage version simply titled Grace. By the time she wrote Alias Grace, the story had settled somewhat. Other accounts had been published, and Atwood had come to believe that Moodie had fictionalized parts of her document about Marks. Atwood writes, "Moodie said at the outset of her account that she was writing Grace Marks's story from memory, and as it turns out, her memory was no better than most."
In Alias Grace, as expected with a historical novel, Atwood's inventions amplify the melodramatic, and she has defended her approach. There were so many gaps in the true story, witnesses with conflicting accounts, and unknowns. It was fertile ground.
What Atwood accomplished in Alias Grace, without definitively proving guilt or innocence, was to shift the narrative around nineteenth-century women killers, who had often been considered unfeminine, unlovable, and possessed by demons. Atwood writes Grace as tall and pretty, using her looks to manipulate.
After her release from prison, Grace Marks was asked, "What has been the general cause of your misfortunes?"
Her answer: "Having been employed in the same house with a villain."
A sketch of Grace Marks and James McDermott as they appeared at their trial for murder in Toronto, Ontario, 1843
Courtesy of the Toronto Public Library, via Wikimedia Commons
by R.C. Sherriff
Meet the Stevens family, as they prepare to embark on their yearly holiday to the coast of England. Mr. and Mrs. Stevens first made the trip to Bognor Regis on their honeymoon, and the tradition has continued ever since. They stay in the same guest house and follow the same carefully honed schedule—now accompanied by their three children, twenty-year-old Mary, seventeen-year-old Dick, and little brother Ernie.
Arriving in Bognor they head to Seaview, the guesthouse where they stay every year. It's a bit shabbier than it once was—the landlord has died and his wife is struggling as the number of guests dwindles every year. But the family finds bliss in booking a slightly bigger cabana, with a balcony, and in their rediscovery of the familiar places they visit every year.
Mr. Stevens goes on his annual walk across the downs, reflecting on his life, his worries and disappointments, and returns refreshed. Mrs. Stevens treasures an hour spent sitting alone with her medicinal glass of port. Mary has her first small taste of romance. And Dick pulls himself out of the malaise he's sunk into since graduation, resolving to work towards a new career. The Stevenses savor every moment of their holiday, aware that things may not be the same next year.
Delightfully nostalgic and soothing, The Fortnight in September is an extraordinary novel about ordinary people enjoying life's simple pleasures.
"All men are equal on their holidays: all are free to dream their castles without thought of expense, or skill of architect."
In April 2020, several weeks into a stressful nationwide COVID lockdown in our resident country of Spain, I read an article in which novelists were asked to suggest books that would "inspire, uplift, and offer escape."
Many of the writers didn't seem to understand the assignment. "I don't go to novels for comfort," stated one. Others made decidedly harrowing recommendations, such as one novelist's suggestion of Chuck Palahniuk's bleak satire Survivor (the writer adding, "When I say fun, it's about a death cult, so it's not light fun"). This was not my idea of inspiration, uplift, or comfort—the very elements I craved at that particularly apprehensive moment in history.
Thankfully, Kazuo Ishiguro gave a superb recommendation: R.C. Sherriff's The Fortnight in September, a new-to-me British novel first published in the early 1930s. According to Ishiguro, the novel was "just about the most uplifting, life-affirming novel I can think of right now." Now here was exactly what I was looking for. I immediately ordered a copy, dove in, and lost myself in the story for a few days.
When I learned that BookBrowse reviewers were highlighting older titles in this issue, I remembered The Fortnight in September. While the lockdown phase of the COVID pandemic may be behind us (knock on wood), it feels as though recent tumultuous political events may once again stimulate readers' appetites for novels that provide uplift, escape, and—at least momentary—comfort.
Sherriff's novel follows the Stevens family of Dorset—Ernest, an accounts clerk; his wife, Flossie; daughter Mary (age 19), a dressmaker's assistant; and sons Dick (17), a stationer's clerk, and young Ernie (10)—on their annual two-week family trip to the southern seaside resort town of Bognor Regis (see Beyond the Book) to which they have returned every summer since Mr. and Mrs. Stevens first visited on their honeymoon twenty years earlier.
The book opens with the flurry of preparations taking place the afternoon before the holiday begins, in recognition that anticipation can be the highlight of any journey. The rest of the novel relates the days that follow and in close character observation captures the family's delight in stepping away from routine jobs for two weeks of blissful freedom. What happens, you ask? Well, honestly, not much. Family members gather for meals, play games on the beach, attend a concert, walk along the shore, meet new friends, and attend a fancy lunch at the home of an insufferable wealthy family.
As the focus moves from one character to another, the reader begins to build a sturdy appreciation for the dynamics that create this highly functioning domestic unit. The novel's events are relatively mild, but as they become important to the family, they do to the reader as well. This is a family that shows its connection through small, non-cloying acts of thoughtfulness and kindness. The novel is narrowly focused and provides a compelling exercise in noticing modest joys and overcoming small hurdles.
The Fortnight in September was the first novel by Robert Cedric (R.C.) Sherriff, a young playwright whose 1929 play Journey's End had seen immediate success. The play was based on Sherriff's own traumatic experiences in the First World War; as second lieutenant in the Ninth East Surrey Regiment, he was severely wounded at Ypres (where a horrifying four-fifths of the original British Expeditionary Force were killed) and hospitalized for six months.
This was followed by The Fortnight in September, in many ways the exact opposite of a war novel but still speaking directly to the yearning that must have been felt by Sherriff and other young soldiers when they were stationed far from home. In the novel, Sherriff captures the quiet fulfilment of ordinary lives. "I wanted to write about simple, uncomplicated people doing normal things."
Perhaps this is what Ishiguro had in mind when he recommended the book during the COVID lockdown and why this novel is so enjoyable to read. During those early months of the pandemic, I found myself missing simple things most, like a casual lunch with a friend, a hike with my son, or even a friendly chat with the cafe barista. Comfort lies in reminding ourselves of the familiar, unspectacular moments of ordinary life. Sherriff understands, perhaps as only a veteran of trench warfare can, that in any crisis we most crave the quotidian over the extraordinary.
Book reviewed by Danielle McClellan
The Fortnight in September by R.C. Sherriff takes place in 1930 at the West Sussex seaside resort town of Bognor Regis on the south coast of England. The Stevens family is spending two weeks at the same holiday boarding house that they have been visiting since Mr. and Mrs. Stevens spent their honeymoon there two decades earlier.
For the American reader, the name Bognor Regis may be less familiar than other more well-known UK seaside destinations such as Brighton, Newquay, Scarborough, or Blackpool. What is the history of this seaside resort? What made it a popular destination for over one hundred years? How has it fared in today's travel climate?
The town of Bognor has one of the oldest recorded Saxon place names in Sussex. In a document from 680 AD, it is referred to as Bucgan ora, meaning Bucge's shore or landing place (Bucge being a female Saxon name). It later became known as Bognor, and up through the 18th century, it was a quiet fishing village that was also occasionally utilized by smugglers.
According to the town's historical website, in 1784, Sir Richard Hotham, a British MP, visited the town to experience the recuperative qualities of sea air. He liked the area so much that he decided to turn the village into a resort. He bought up 1600 acres of land and, in addition to building himself a sprawling mansion (now called Hotham Park House), he constructed large, terraced houses to entice wealthier visitors to his exclusive seaside destination.
Hotham was a man of vision and excellent timing. Seaside holidays in the UK were just beginning to gain popularity in the 18th century as interest gradually shifted from the health benefits of bathing at inland spas—such as the famous thermal spas of Bath, the setting of two Jane Austen novels (Northanger Abbey and Persuasion)—to the increasingly fashionable alternative of bathing in the sea.
Initially, seaside resorts were mostly accessible to the wealthy, but by the late 19th century these beach holidays became popular for a broader group of UK citizens. This was largely due to the expansion of the railway and the introduction of the bank holiday in 1872. By the beginning of the 20th century, millions of people headed to the seashore each year. The resort town of Bognor began to grow rapidly when the railway arrived in 1864. Many artists and writers were drawn to the beauty of the region. For example, while holidaying in Bognor in 1923, James Joyce wrote part of his novel Finnegans Wake.
Certainly, Bognor received its greatest boost in 1929 when King George V spent three months there recuperating from lung surgery. His doctors believed that Bognor's fresh sea air and sunshine would help with the king's recovery. King George and Queen Mary stayed in Bognor for a total of 13 weeks, and they entertained many visitors, including their granddaughter Elizabeth (later Queen Elizabeth II) who was only a toddler at the time. After the king returned to London, he bestowed upon Bognor the honor of its Regis suffix, and the town became known as Bognor Regis. (There is a popular rumor—probably apocryphal—that in January 1936, as King George V lay dying, someone in the room told him that he would soon be well enough to again visit Bognor to recuperate. His final words were said to be: "Bugger Bognor!")
It continued to be a popular resort through the 1950s, but by the 1970s many of Bognor Regis's original Victorian buildings were demolished. The introduction of inexpensive flights and package holidays to Spanish hotspots further eroded the popularity of domestic resort holidays in general, and the town of Bognor Regis saw gradual decline over the years. These days, the visitors still come, but Bognor Regis is a faint echo of what it once was. Its crime rate is one of the highest in the region, and in a 2025 survey of "UK's Best Seaside Towns," Which? Magazine reports that Bognor Regis now rates as one of the least desirable seaside towns in the UK, quite a comedown indeed from its heyday as a royal retreat.
The beach at Bognor Regis, August 1990, courtesy of Barry Shimmon, CC-BY-SA 2.0
by Percival Everett
Thelonious "Monk" Ellison's writing career has bottomed out: his latest manuscript has been rejected by seventeen publishers, which stings all the more because his previous novels have been "critically acclaimed." He seethes on the sidelines of the literary establishment as he watches the meteoric success of We's Lives in Da Ghetto, a first novel by a woman who once visited "some relatives in Harlem for a couple of days." Meanwhile, Monk struggles with real family tragedies―his aged mother is fast succumbing to Alzheimer's, and he still grapples with the reverberations of his father's suicide seven years before.
In his rage and despair, Monk dashes off a novel meant to be an indictment of Juanita Mae Jenkins's bestseller. He doesn't intend for My Pafology to be published, let alone taken seriously, but it is―under the pseudonym Stagg R. Leigh―and soon it becomes the Next Big Thing. How Monk deals with the personal and professional fallout galvanizes this audacious, hysterical, and quietly devastating novel.
Erasure by Percival Everett, first published in 2001, has reached great heights with its author's escalating fame and the 2023 film adaptation American Fiction. But it retains within the confines of its pages an odd smallness. Like much of Everett's work, it feels blunt yet malleable, static but approachable from multiple perspectives, like a sculpture meant to create optical illusions that depend on your particular distance from and orientation to it.
Protagonist Thelonious "Monk" Ellison is a middle-aged professor and writer of relatively obscure intellectual fiction. A significant part of the book centers on Monk's frustration with how he is limited as a Black author. As he struggles with sales, he witnesses others being rewarded with a place in a narrow field of literary success by appealing to white people's desire for representations of Black stereotypes, namely Juanita Mae Jenkins, made famous by her bestseller We's Lives In Da Ghetto. In response, he crafts his own "ghetto" novel that he supposedly intends to be a parody of such books (the full text of which is included within Everett's novel), first called My Pafology—later, Monk insists, under cover of the pseudonym Stagg R. Leigh, that the title be changed to Fuck. It follows a young man named Van Go Jenkins who turns to a life of crime. Surprisingly for Monk, the book is taken seriously by a publisher and picked up with a hefty advance.
In a simpler novel, the driving force behind Monk's writing of My Pafology/Fuck might only be Jenkins' book. But in the story-outside-the-story, that is, Monk's story, the inciting incident that seems to spur the plot into action is the murder of his sister Lisa, a doctor shot at her clinic serving a poor section of DC, probably by an anti-abortion extremist. Along with the family housekeeper, Lorraine, Lisa has until now taken primary responsibility for the care of her and Monk's mother, who is developing signs of dementia. Their father is long gone, having died by suicide years earlier. Their brother Bill has made a lucrative living as a plastic surgeon, but, having recently admitted to his wife that he is gay, he is in the process of losing nearly everything to her and their children in the separation, and becoming an emotional wreck. All of this leaves Monk to deal with the logistics and finances of their mother's situation, which he means to mitigate with his parody-turned-anticipated-bestseller.
Erasure is many different things. It is narratively challenging—including not just the internal novel but additional snippets of Monk's writing, bursts of Latin and French, and other textual tidbits not immediately obvious in meaning—yet still relatively straightforward, accessible enough to enjoy from beginning to end without picking apart too much. That is, if you choose not to dwell on Monk's notes and elaborations, and thereby miss out on the pleasure of getting lost in a Joycean thicket. It is a linear and entertaining, if dramatic and fever-dreamish, series of events. Its relationship to real-world culture has shifted, somewhat, since first publication. As Everett commented in 2024, the landscape of American publishing has changed in the ensuing years, though the simplified thinking around race that created the conditions featured in Erasure remains. Perhaps partly because of this, it doesn't seem outdated, but another reason for its ongoing relevance is its seemingly endless layers.
One of these is the significant presence of guns, which may not appear significant at first glance because this is a basic reality of America that hasn't shifted much, if at all, since Erasure's release. In Monk's novel, Van is set on obtaining a gun, with which he intends to rob the store of a Korean man he has a grudge against. Monk's father, a veteran of the Korean War, shot himself, and Monk will later find that he was keeping a secret related to his time in the military. One of the events that pushes Monk to finally have his mother committed to a care facility is a nerve-wracking incident in which she aims a loaded gun at him. And of course, Lisa is killed by gunfire in her clinic. A reader can analyze Monk's conscious or subconscious reasons for integrating firearms and certain parallels into his fictional narrative the way he does, to consider what his choices say about the American military's overseas reach and its role in immigration, who is incentivized to join the military, America's cultural weaponization of East Asian immigrants against Black people, and so on. One can also consider the irony that alongside Van's participation in gun violence within his impoverished world, Monk, an educated man from a well-off family who seems to make no habit of being around guns, has been unable to avoid a brush with at least the strong possibility of every type of firearm tragedy: accident, suicide, murder.
But more notable than any of this is that we don't see Monk, a highly analytical thinker, comment on these elements or ponder how he may have put his own experience into his book. What he does dwell on is how the hype around the novel threatens his artistic self. As he attempts to navigate his new universe, appearing in various forms as Stagg Leigh—behind a screen on a talk show, in dark glasses at a meeting about movie rights—he operates as a split personality, and considers how to resolve this. The answer seems obvious. As his agent Yul remarks, his other books will probably sell better once he comes out as the author of this one. But Monk tiptoes around this inevitability like it's an impossibility.
One of Erasure's textual interludes consists of a dialogue between the artists Robert Rauschenberg and Willem de Kooning, based on real events. Rauschenberg offers to fix de Kooning's roof in exchange for a drawing, saying that it doesn't matter what it's of because he intends to erase it. Weeks later, Rauschenberg informs de Kooning that he has erased the drawing, taken credit for this "Erased Drawing" himself, and sold the "erasing."
What is the erasing in Erasure? Stagg Leigh's novel and its hype blotting out the multiplicity of Black literature and existence? The publishing industry and mainstream white readership doing the same and patting themselves on the back for it? Monk erasing himself as a writer with the persona of Stagg Leigh? Or is Everett just messing with us by hinting at there being any one particular parallel to this cute philosophical vignette? The book, with what it leaves out, doesn't allow any of these interpretations to be the only story. With all that's packed into Erasure—its madcap pace, its series of urgent situations, its literary doodlings—it's easy to be distracted, to not notice what's missing. For instance, despite being inside Monk's head, we know so little of his conscious intentions, what he was thinking as he wrote his novel. And what was he thinking and feeling following the death of his sister, a death barely remarked upon, a death inevitably bound up in politics and race but that can finally be assigned no meaning? A better question might be, who would want to think or feel anything about that? To have thoughts and feelings about an event whose reasons or causes do nothing to mitigate its stark, undeniable result, a devastating, violent event whose full impact on Monk we never see—except, of course, in how it seems part of all we do see.
Book reviewed by Elisabeth Cook
Percival Everett's 2001 novel Erasure was adapted for film as American Fiction in 2023, leading to director Cord Jefferson's Oscar win for Best Adapted Screenplay. The year after, Everett's new novel James scooped up major awards, including the National Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize. While these exposures and honors gained him some long overdue stature in the world of mainstream literature, Everett had already built a decades-long career with his inventive, often satirical and frequently acclaimed literary novels. He may be more adept than any other contemporary writer at marrying low-brow tropes with high-brow concepts—or rather, making these categories lose all meaning. Despite some distinctive elements to his writing style, the ground he has covered as an author is vast. Below are a few of his novels besides Erasure that may be enticing to those just discovering his fiction, though these still represent only a small portion of his overall body of work.
James (2024)
James reimagines Mark Twain's Adventures of Huckleberry Finn from the perspective of the enslaved character Jim. Everett's take on the classic mixes sharp action sequences with entertaining explorations of language and the concept of freedom. Its relatively straightforward story (particularly compared to some of his previous work) offers appeal for book clubs and those who enjoy meaningful historical fiction.
Dr. No (2022)
If James isn't weird enough for you, try Everett's take on James Bond. This clever and absurdist caper features mathematician Wala Kitu and his beautiful colleague Eigen Vector, self-identified Bond villain John Milton Bradley Sill, and elements of real history revolving around the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr.
The Trees (2021)
The Trees addresses the history of lynching in America both with and without doses of heavy humor, using a variety of narrative forms and storytelling traditions, including zombie fiction. Devastating, profound, and absolutely outrageous, this novel challenges the reader to make meaning of its clues, testing the limits of reading and literature, and creates surprising possibilities for interacting with the past.
Telephone (2020)
The format of Telephone is a telling example of the playfulness Everett brings to his work: three versions of the book exist, each with various differing details and a different ending. The story focuses on a geologist dealing with the tragedy of his daughter's deteriorating health, and explores aspects of narrative, grief, loss, and fate.
So Much Blue (2017)
This may be the closest thing Everett has written to "normal" contemporary literary fiction, and would make a great follow-up read for book clubs who enjoyed James but aren't necessarily hoping for more of the same. It deftly juggles three timelines in the life of artist Kevin Pace, introducing plot points related to an extramarital affair, war in El Salvador, and a secret painting.
Assumption (2011)
Assumption is the kind of book that inspires strong opinions. Technically a group of three novellas, it includes the throughline of a murder mystery featuring Ogden Walker, deputy sheriff of a town in New Mexico. Those with specific ideas about how mysteries should be structured should probably pass, but readers who welcome the unexpected may find themselves fascinated.
Your guide toexceptional books
BookBrowse seeks out and recommends the best in contemporary fiction and nonfiction—books that not only engage and entertain but also deepen our understanding of ourselves and the world around us.