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When a writer turns to pastiche in the later stages of his career he is either paying a compliment to the muse that
inspired him throughout the difficult times or else the poor soul has run completely
out of ideas. What to make then of John Banville’s Mrs Osmond which is the
second pastiche he has published in the last two and a half years? Banville’s
previous effort, The Black-Eyed Blonde, was a journeyman-like sequel to the
Raymond Chandler novel The Long Good-bye that although lacking Chandler’s gift
for simile, did sometimes echo Chandler’s skill for characterization and occasional seat-of-your-pants
plotting.
Mrs
Osmond is a sequel to Henry James’s A Portrait of a Lady, a novel Banville has
proclaimed in interviews to be the greatest example of the form in the English
language.
Hmmmm.
Portrait
famously ends with the beautiful and brilliant Isabel Osmond (née Archer)
realising that the spiteful Gilbert Osmond has married her for her money and
that his long term mistress is Madame Merle. Isabel quits Rome after visiting
Pansy, Osmond’s daughter, to comfort the dying Ralph Touchett in England, where
she remains until his death. An unpleasant encounter with Caspar Goodwood
forces her to flee again back to Rome. The reader is left in a delicious state
of unknowing, pondering whether Isabel is returning to Osmond to live
heroically for Pansy's sake or whether she is going to somehow rescue Pansy and
leave Osmond.
John
Banville steps into the breach to tell us what he thinks happens next. We
don’t, of course, immediately get the satisfying confrontation with Isabel’s
dirtbag scrub of a husband Gilbert Osmond. Make ‘em laugh, make ‘em cry, make
‘em wait, Wilkie Collins observed and Banville first gives us something of a
Bradshaw’s railway tour of fin de siècle Europe through France and Switzerland
where Isabel meets various characters we encountered in the original. We meet
again the charming Hildy Johnson prototype, Henrietta Stackpole, with her crazy
ideas about freedom for women. The villainous Madame Merle shows up and the two
Osmond women circle one another like sabre wielding duellists looking for an
opening. We rendezvous with the terribly nice Edward Rosier, who pursued
Pansy’s hand in marriage but who was turned down by her snobbish father. Isabel
seeks out her sister-in-law, Countess Gemini who, in Portrait, revealed all
about her brother, and we get another run in with the delightfully batty Mrs
Touchett, Isabel’s aunt, who saved her from a life of genteel dullness in
Massachusetts.
Banville
does a nice job building upon and enhancing these characters although the
conversations don’t do a whole lot to forward the story. Banville has garnered
much praise for imitating the prose, syntax
and page length paragraphs of Henry James. His homaging skills are indeed
impressive and I doubt whether even a James scholar could tell the difference
between a Banville description of a French railway carriage and the actual
article.
The
dialogue is a little harder to swallow, for Banville often attempts a facsimile
of Henry James’s ill judged attempts at wit. James’s genius clearly did not run
to banter, although his admirers urge us to overlook this defect by explaining
that humour does not age well. This defence is unconvincing as Portrait shares
a decade with Oscar Wilde’s first plays, peak Mark Twain and Jerome K Jerome –
all of whom remain laugh out loud funny. A Portrait of a Lady becomes a great
novel once the gears have begun to turn and James stops malleting us with the stale
jokes and ghastly repartee of its initial chapters. When Banville tries to
replicate James’s jocularity the results are almost unbearably tedious.
The
wheels of Banville’s novel inevitably turn towards a revenge plot that many
readers will find satisfactory. I was unconvinced by much of it and found the set to with Gilbert as anti climactic as the Bride’s meeting with
Bill at the end of Kill Bill – a touchstone I’m not sure Banville or James
would wholly approve of. However, this brings me to the larger point: the
ending of A Portrait of a Lady was perfect as it was and when I finished Mrs
Osmond I was left wondering why Banville had done all of this.
The
popular parody Twitter account @John_Banville imagines Banville, Colm Toibin
and Roddy Doyle spitting at one another in a state of perpetual feud. After
Colm Toibin published his best selling biographical Henry James novel, The
Master, the @John_Banville account erupted in a jealous rage, claiming he could
do better and sell more. The actual John Banville, I’m sure, had more lofty
goals in mind but artistically Mrs Osmond doesn’t come close to The Master’s concentrated
brilliance, psychological penetration or deep emotional resonance.
Mrs
Osmond however is not a total waste of everyone’s time. Banville is a
professional and nothing in this book will unduly disturb a Henry James completest.
Fans of the novel and the Nicole Kidman film might well enjoy this as a
harmless entertainment. Mrs Osmond is competent, safe and reliably dull. I am with
Gunter Grass here, it may be an arid book, but it is a book nonetheless and
therefore sacred.
The real psychic toll of Mrs Osmond will not be on the reader but will be on the author. As a Booker Prize Winner and perpetual longlistee for the Nobel Prize (another subject the @John_Banville parody account hilariously mocks) John Banville can petty much publish anything he wants now. We can only hope that something exciting happens to him in real life or else, no doubt, a disheveled, rosy-cheeked Molly Bloom shall arise from her linen sheets and be coming soon to a bookshop near you in a quality hardback edition.
The real psychic toll of Mrs Osmond will not be on the reader but will be on the author. As a Booker Prize Winner and perpetual longlistee for the Nobel Prize (another subject the @John_Banville parody account hilariously mocks) John Banville can petty much publish anything he wants now. We can only hope that something exciting happens to him in real life or else, no doubt, a disheveled, rosy-cheeked Molly Bloom shall arise from her linen sheets and be coming soon to a bookshop near you in a quality hardback edition.