Los Angeles Times

Short stories long on controvers­y

- By Michelle Huneven

The Assassinat­ion of Margaret Thatcher

Hilary Mantel

Henry Holt: 256 pp, $ 27

The title story of Hilary Mantel’s new collection was embargoed, then published simultaneo­usly in the Guardian and the New York Times newspapers, and now has conservati­ve British politician­s calling for her arrest.

Has any short- story collection ever had — or deserved — such heralding?

Certainly, Mantel deserved her two Booker Prizes for “Wolf Hall” in 2009 and “Bring Up the Bodies” in 2013, the f irst two volumes of her trilogy about Thomas Cromwell, advisor to King Henry XVIII. These books are her greatest achievemen­t and make her nine earlier novels seem like preparator­y exercises. Her depiction of Cromwell’s vast, capacious intelligen­ce is a near- miracle of compositio­n, and it is tempting to conflate his mind, so Shakespear­ean in humanity and scope, with the author’s.

But anyone coming from the Cromwell novels to these arch, contempora­ry tales faces an adjustment. Here is the Mantel of her earlier, darker kitchen- sink novels: harsh and comic, even derisive. Her eye gleefully seeks the unsavory — the “glistening snail trail” of mucous, “horrible stumpy gnawed- off nails.” A bed has a “turd- colored candlewick cover,” an anorexic vomits “in a weak acid dribble.” Such aperçus are not inaccurate, and they’re often funny and also often quite mean. The cumulative effect is a grim, itchy reality where tenderness is rare and the lion’s share of humanity is ac- corded to an assassin. ( Of course, Mantel’s great achievemen­t in the Cromwell books is to make that legendary killer sympatheti­c.)

The superb title story tells of a woman who, expecting a plumber, instead admits a gunman to her f lat. The woman is not unsympathe­tic to his cause — eliminatin­g Margaret Thatcher — although they disagree on motive; hers is an abhorrence of Thatcher’s inhumanity and hairdo; his is singular: Ireland. Mantel humanizes the killer with frayed cuffs, slippery nylon jacket and that he’s unloved (“I don’t get very far with the lasses”). There’s an air of the saint about him, of suffering ennobled, and the woman, now his accomplice, wishes to save him.

There’s a whiff of the saint too about Morna, an anorexic girl willing her way to death through countless battles with parents, doctors and social workers in “The Heart Fails Without Warning.” The story concludes in a vision f it for a 14th century painting: “around Morna there is a bubble of quiet … she wears no readable human expression. But at her feet a white dog lies, shining like a unicorn, a golden chain about its neck.”

These sidelong hints at religious purpose are as close as Mantel comes to epiphany, let alone transcende­nce.

Mantel writes with great economy and control. The stories are intricatel­y constructe­d and subtle, if sometimes oblique. Shared elements echo and glint at one another; intrusions, trespasses and faulty hearts recur, as do female writers prone to migraines and seeing ghosts, and mouthy young girls.

“Sorry to Disturb” was f irst published in the London Review of Books as a memoir, but its shapelines­s and dramatic arc draw so heavily from f iction’s toolbox that it passes as either. A young wife living in Jidda, Saudi Arabia, is essentiall­y confined to her house all day. Destabiliz­ed by strong medication­s for an undisclose­d malady, she listens to language tapes, keeps a diary, works on a comic novel and visits the other wives in her building. One day, the narrator unwisely lets a distressed businessma­n come in to use her phone. Allowing this and his subsequent incursions, she inadverten­tly encourages his attentions, which becomes increasing­ly problemati­c.

“How Shall I Know You” is a take- no- prisoners send- up of the author book tour; the narrator, a migraine- suffering biographer, is sardonic and, well, just plain mean. Engaged to speak to a book group (“… many had beards, including the women”), she is put up in a dingy hotel where her bellhop is a tiny, misshapen young woman named Louise. “An indoor smog hovered.” Hilariousl­y, the biographer wonders, “what would Anita Brookner do?” When the resident men abuse Louise the narrator feels for her, but any real generosity is never an option.

Anita Brookner would never be so grim.

Even Mantel’s children tend to be underloved, smart- mouthed and infected with natural cruelty. In “Comma,” 8- year- old Kitty, with a forbidden older friend, spies on a big house hoping to see an invalid. (“It is like a comma … its squiggle of a body, its lolling head.”). If caught, Kitty has a lie ready: “I’ll say I was out punctuatin­g.” Mostly, both girls marvel that anything so minimally human could be so tenderly cared for.

Mantel is not above constructi­ng a story around a punch line, a pun, an O. Henry twist. In “The Long QT” ( the title comes from a heart disorder that can lead to sudden death), a husband kissing another woman imagines, should his wife “blunder in,” telling her to “be more French about it.” Blunder in the wife does but with quite other results ( see title).

Relentless bleakness, what Mantel may deem the opposite of sentimenta­lity, is its own limitation, a shadow sentimenta­lity that also omits at the author’s whim large swatches of life: the loveliness and mercy. And for what?

A low tone of anger runs through the collection, surfacing in cackles and quips, but lower still is the rumble of pain. In “Terminus,” the narrator spots her dead father on another train and vainly pursues him to Waterloo Station. The story is a plaint, a paean to the eternally unfinished business between daughter and father and the ongoing search for the necessary love that was never — and never will be — received. Huneven’s most recent novel is “Off Course.”

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Henr y Holt

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