Winston Graham is one of my many favourite authors. I first encountered him with the paperback Marnie (1961), and then discovered his Poldark novels (the first published in 1945). Side by side with these, I read a number of his suspense and historical novels, too. The Japanese Girl (1971) seems to be his only collection of short stories; their publication dates range from 1947 to 1971, though there is no indication when each individual tale was published.
It’s a mixed bag, and not all
of the fourteen were successful for me; yet it’s definitely a worthwhile read. According
to Graham, ‘The Japanese Girl’ stemmed from a chance meeting with a Japanese
girl in a train to Brighton. The story indeed begins in this manner, with Jack the
narrator smitten by her: ‘You couldn’t call her good-looking but just something
about her appealed to me and made me feel queer, and God knows I’m no womaniser…’
(p8) He is married, though the
relationship has gone sour; his wife Hettie ‘was like a may-fly or something,
beautiful for a day.’ (p10)
The narrator works as an
assistant cashier for a big London dock firm. Boring job, a boring life,
really. He engineered another chance meeting with the Japanese girl and invited
her to join him for a drink in a ‘quite nice pub… She didn’t say no, and that’s
how it all began’ (p12) He embarked on an affair with Yodi, the Japanese girl.
As time went on, they dreamed of running away together, travelling abroad. But
for that they needed plenty of money. He decided to rob the firm, small sums
each week, to build up a nest-egg. She agrees to help him. Inevitably, it doesn’t
quite work out.
‘The Medici Ear-ring’ is
another first-person story, with the narrator being an impecunious painter. One
of his models was Lucille, who ‘had the colouring I like: autumn-tinted hair
and short-sighted sleepy eyes with umber depths to them.’ Lucille was the
daughter of a friend, Bob who enjoyed showing off an ancient ear-ring his
family had acquired. Then, one night, during a card game of chance where money
was lost, the ear-ring goes missing. The mystery tried the friendship of all
those present. A twist ending; possibly an early foray into the realm of the
unreliable narrator concept.
‘Cotty’s Cove’ is set in
Cornwall, possibly in the Poldark period. Lavinia Cotty was a 35-year-old
spinster. When she could get away from caring for her ailing father, she’d
spend time in the quite cove and dream of poetry and a little fiction – until she
discovered a man washed up on the shingle. An atmospheric tale about unrequited
love. The cove can be found on any large-scale map of Perranporth beach, just
south of Wheal Vlow adit.
Graham has the pleasant knack
of putting the reader in the scene, whether it’s that cove or elsewhere: ‘… the
frost has come down like thin icing sugar on branch and brick and flag, and the
pools in the dented road are glazing over like the eyes of a man dying.’ (p80)
Or this: ‘The bay windows spread wide like an alderman’s waistcoat.’ (p76) I particularly liked this: ‘Then with sweat
crawling all over him like a nest of worms, he jerked ahead.’ (p86)
‘At the Chalet Lartrec’ comes
of ‘being benighted on the Bernina Pass in the first snow of winter’, Graham
says. The narrator, Major Vane, a British officer attached to UNESCO found
himself caught in a snow-storm. ‘The clouds were lowering all around like
elephants’ bellies…’ (p99) He had to get out often so he could clear the
windscreen: ‘The snow was soft in my face, like walking into a flight of cold
wet moths…’ (p100) He creates eeriness with few words: ‘There was no one about,
and the wind whistled through the slit between the houses like an errand boy
with bad teeth.’ (p100) He obtains shelter at the chalet Lartrec, where he
learns of his host’s recent past in the uprising of Hungary in 1956. Another
fine twist in this tale, too.
‘The Cornish Farm’ is about a
property the narrator and his wife purchase. There is talk of a violent history
in the farm’s recent past. This too has plenty of atmosphere, as well as
humour: ‘… it depressed me to discover the squalor in which so many people
live. Or perhaps it is only people who want to sell their houses who live that
way. It also depressed me to discover the wickedness of estate agents. After a
time one gets tired of being shown into the “well-equipped” kitchen to find it
dominated by an enormous stove installed about the year of Gladstone’s wedding
and smoking from every crack; then, coughing heartily and with eyes smarting,
to be led through a broken glass door into the “conservatory” which in fact is
a lean-to shed with a little stove of its own where all the real cooking is
done…’ (p125) A tale of mystery and perhaps madness; the reader must decide.
‘The Basket Chair’ is a ghost
story – or is it? Julian Whiteleaf had his first coronary when he was staying
with his niece Agnes and her husband Roy Paynter. He was careful with his
money, despite having been bequeathed a vast sum by one of his psychic society’s
patrons. Now, he agreed the couple could look after him and he would pay £5 per
week towards his keep. Over time, he noticed strange sounds in the house. The
basket chair in his bedroom seemed to move of its own volition and creak ever
so slightly; he was convinced he was finally witnessing a psychic event… A
clever tale in the Roald Dahl tradition.
‘Jacka’s Fight’ concerns
Jacka Fawle who moved from Helston in Cornwall to find his fortune in America;
when he had done so, he would send for his wife and children. He was a godly
man and scrimped and saved to this end. One day in the early 1890s he made
friends with a number of Cornishmen who were promoting a fellow in the boxing
ring. Temptation is offered, to make a killing… The culmination of the story is
the five pages of the big fight: the upstart contender Fitz against the champion
Corbett. The telling is as bruising as the fight itself, full of tension: ‘In
the fifth round it appears as if Fitz is done. His lips are swollen, the eye
half closed, his nose bleeding, his body crimson all over, part with the blows
it has received, part from the blood on Corbett’s gloves…’ (p203) An excellent
pugilistic tale.
Finally, there’s ‘But for the
Grace of God’, a tale of the Christ just before and after the crucifixion, movingly
told by the irreverent yet finally enlightened Jesus Bar-Abbas.
At the book’s publication,
the Sunday Times said, ‘Real versatility in setting and background.’ That sums
up this collection. If you appreciate short story writing, you should enjoy
many of these examples.
[Coincidence: my birthday is the same as his; he was born forty years earlier. He died in 2003, aged 95].
[Coincidence: my birthday is the same as his; he was born forty years earlier. He died in 2003, aged 95].
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