Yorkshire Post - YP Magazine

Ever curiouser

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Baltimore author Anne Tyler builds on her reputation as a masterly examiner of the unexamined life.

his self-sufficienc­y and push him towards engagement at a level deeper than he finds comfortabl­e. It is all done so easily and with such a light but assured touch that you find yourself caring. Tyler believes in kindness, and this is rare in our agitated times.

Sensibly – and indeed good sense is one of her happiest qualities – she has no time for the current nonsense about “cultural appropriat­ion” and sees no reason why she shouldn’t write from a man’s point of view. Micah Mortimer doesn’t exist except as she has imagined him. Fiction is fiction, make-believe and invention. Identity is not private property defended by a notice warning that trespasser­s will be prosecuted. The only question that matters is whether other lives have been well-imagined, not who they belong to. Tyler imagines them very well; end of subject.

In her novels there is very little in the way of plot, but there is always a story, and the story is developed in such a way that people are not only revealed in their complexity, but will be changed by events, conversati­ons, shifting relationsh­ips with others. As with Jane Austen, there is always a learning experience in her novels. Micah, by the end of this new one, is not quite the solipsisti­c creature he is at the beginning.

The comparison with Jane Austen is reasonable, but it is another English novelist who comes to mind, very readily in my case because I have been re-reading some of his novels in recent weeks. Stanley Middleton wrote a novel a year for four decades. Almost all were set in Nottingham where he lived. They deal with apparently ordinary middle-class people usually, like Tyler’s characters, leading apparently unremarkab­le lives. These lives, as they

have been and as they are now, are explored in conversati­on. The dialogue, sufficient­ly persuasive, is even now quite realistic. Questions are asked which in real life mostly remain unspoken.

Reviewing Middleton in newspapers, as I did annually for years, I once quoted what Proust said of Stendhal: “These books reinforce the events of the narrative by giving a correspond­ing layer of the spirit behind the deed.” That was what Middleton did, time and again. It is what Anne Tyler does. Her novels, which read so easily and pleasantly, delve deep below the surface of experience. She presents us with a figure who seems to have let life slip by him till forced by circumstan­ce to engage more fully with it.

Yes, Redhead is indeed “the mixture as before”, but what a rich and enjoyable mixture it is.

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