Tuesday 3 August 2010

Cold Comfort Farm

Cold Comfort Farm, by Stella Gibbons, is (according to the back of the book) "a hilarious and merciless parody of rural melodramas". Unusually for books which claim to be hilarious, it actually is - I laughed out loud a number of times which is rare for me when reading.

CCF was written in the 30s as a parody of novels by the likes of Mary Webb, which were popular between the wars. I suspect that many of the references are lost on me, being completely unfamiliar with the genre, but it can be appreciated despite this.

Each character is an embodiment of a cliche - not hidden beneath the surface, in the usual way of cliches, but out & proud. The cows are called Graceless, Pointless, Feckless and Aimless (presumably taking issue with the prevailing fashion for naming people & animals after desirable qualities). There is a strong & silent son called Reuben, another son, Seth, who is the brooding embodiment of the farmer's son with the animal instinct (fathering a child per year with the kitchen maid); Amos, the father, a hellfire and brimstone preacher, and Elfine, the daughter of nature who drifts around in the fields and woods. The Starkadder family are trapped on CCF by Aunt Ada Doom (more subtle naming), who saw something nasty in the woodshed when she was a girl and hasn't been right since. Flora Poste, a sophisticated 19yr old, comes to live at CCF when she is orphaned and decides to take the family in hand. It's difficult to say much else without giving the story away...so, read this book.

This is one of the few books I've read so far from the list that I know I will read again - Gibbons' ability to put together evocative phrases which are just slightly over-stated and therefore both striking and funny is rare and makes it an immensely rewarding read. Enjoy it! It's such a shame that none of the rest of her books are in print.

This week, I am mainly modelling myself on Miss Flora Poste...

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