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Mary George of Allnorthover
SUSANNA RUSTIN
Financial Times April 14 2001
In a parched corner of south-east England, in
a sweltering summer circa 1975, a teenage girl
named Mary George goes about life in her village.
She works in a hairdresser's on Saturdays, hangs
out with her friend Billy, reels from a romantic
encounter with glamorous Daniel, makes an ambivalent
friend of bohemian Clara, and is rudely interrupted
by her past.
Lavinia Greenlaw's composed and sensuous first
novel is structured around this young woman's
conflicting ties: to her home and the local girls
she has known all her life; to her new, exotic
art-school friends; to Billy; to Daniel; to her
hippyish, indiscreet mother; to her chilly, absent
father. Mary George moves forward and back, outward
and in, as she looks for herself and who she wants
to be, and her fragile, adolescent personality
is this poet-turned-novelist's remarkable success.
Simultaneously self- contained and all over the
place, Mary George is likeable, diffident, vulnerable,
confused.
Running not parallel to but underneath, around,
bubbling up and through Mary George's story is
that of Tom Hepple, newly returned to Allnorthover,
but still suffering from psychiatric symptoms.
At the beginning Tom sees what he believes to
be a miracle and a sign - Mary walking on water
- and is thereafter preoccupied with the fulfilment
of some secret plan.
If Tom's mission, and Mary's part in it, constitute
the crux of Greenlaw's plot, it is her sensitive
concentration on character and setting that holds
her reader's attention. Like Graham Swift and
Rose Tremain, Greenlaw makes of rural south-east
England a backward, unsettling, ghostly place.
The Hepple family home lies at the bottom of a
reservoir, an exile from which Tom has never recovered:
"He'd felt his skin break then, an unbearable
lack of edges." Back in Allnorthover, Tom hovers
around the borders of sanity, where his profound
instability, and the failure of others to apprehend
it, is shrewdly and humanely described. In the
over-charged atmosphere of the Chapel where he
is staying, a radio supplies the ideal metaphor,
both to him and to us: "The thing had leaked memories
of times when it had been his head that had buzzed
and crackled, as if badly tuned, when it had picked
up what appeared to be fragments of different
stations."
Yet while the mood of this story is sombre and
oppressive, Greenlaw's wry evocation of an era
and its entertainments lightens the overall effect.
There is the Summer Fete, a tense, sweaty carnival
of Victoria sponges, "stewed, lukewarm tea", tombola,
and fancy dress: "The commuters turned out with
their sulky, untidy children who had Victorian
names. The adults spent a lot of money but they
talked in shrieks and exclamations, and were sloppily
dressed. 'Come in their gardening clothes,' observed
Edna Lacey."
There is the multi-generational situation comedy
of the Harvest Festival Disco, presided over by
local DJ Terry Flux: "Several teenagers turned
up early, skulking along the lane, trying to hide
a tray covered with a teacloth or doily which
they would shove into the hands of the nearest
person at the hall before hurrying off to make
a second entrance with their friends." And there
is the melancholic spectacle of the English seaside,
autumnal in every sense, where the wind "came
slamming through the wide walkways, ripping off
hats and tossing, rattling and loosening anything
it could get in its grip - signs, posters, tiles,
sweet wrappers, squashed cans, plastic bags."
On Saturday nights the girls stand at the bus
shelter: "They smoked one cigarette after another,
holding them against their palms and keeping a
watch for grown-ups who knew them. They scrutinised
each other's erupting bodies, the puppy fat, volatile
skin and growing breasts." Socially awkward, self-conscious,
thirsty and on edge, uneasily suspended between
progress and decline, these adolescents and this
England seem made for each other. I don't think
I do the writer a disservice by suggesting she
remembers it that way.
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