Author: Tim Dracup

  • ‘Novel on Yellow Paper’ (1936) was the first of three written by Stevie Smith, now better remembered as a poet. The book is about writing a book – and is also the book that results. The author is nominally one Pompey Casmilus, a publisher’s private secretary, who records her thoughts on yellow paper, to distinguish…

    Novel on Yellow Paper – Stevie Smith
  • Marghanita Laski (1915-1988) published ‘Little Boy Lost’ in 1949. It concerns Hilary Wainwright, an English poet and intellectual, whose wife, Lisa, has been murdered by the Gestapo in Paris. Just before her capture, she managed to smuggle away their baby son. Now, after the War has ended, Hilary revisits France to find his son. He…

    Little Boy Lost – Marghanita Laski
  • Clarice Lispector (1920-1977) was born in Ukraine to Jewish parents who emigrated to Brazil in 1922. She published her first novel in 1943, aged just 23. It is known in English as ‘Near to the Wild Heart’, from the book’s epigraph, which is from Joyce’s ‘A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man’. I…

    Near to the Wild Heart – Clarice Lispector
  • Unusually, the principal events in the life of Christopher Long Dracup are already available online. This chronology is part of a website paying tribute to the 21st Battalion of the Canadian Expeditionary Force (CEF) – an infantry battalion formed in Kingston, Ontario – which fought in the First World War. Though briefly a member of…

    Christopher Long Dracup: An Elusive Man
  • Céline was the nom de plume of Frenchman Louis Ferdinand Destouches (1894-1961). ‘Voyage au bout de la nuit’ was his first and most celebrated novel, published in 1932. I read the 1983 English translation by Ralph Manheim. Destouches was a medical doctor whose later anti-semitism and Nazi sympathies have undermined his literary reputation. Even so,…

    Journey to the End of the Night – Céline
  • Muriel Spark published ‘Memento Mori’ in 1959, two years before ‘The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie’. The novel is about several old people whose earlier life paths have crossed in different ways. Now, as they approach their final years, they begin to receive anonymous telephone calls. The caller sounds different to each, but always relays…

    Memento Mori – Muriel Spark
  • Journey by Moonlight (1937) is the English translation of a novel by Hungarian author and academic Antal Szerb. Mihaly is honeymooning in Italy with Erzsi. He is still haunted by his youthful relationship with brother and sister Tamas and Eva, and their friends Janos and Ervin. They form a death cult, holding that the end…

    Journey by Moonlight – Antal Szerb
  • In June 2023 we resumed our progress along the Coast Path, this time basing ourselves in Salcombe for the week. We were starting from the ferry crossing at Plymouth’s Mount Batten Point, having completed the stretch from Par in March, and were aiming to reach Torcross. This we achieved, with the following schedule: According to…

    South West Coast Path: Plymouth (Mount Batten Point) to Torcross
  • Six weeks on from our Sandling to Hollingbourne experience, we returned to Hollingbourne in June 2023. We’d opted to walk on Friday for a second trip in succession, departing from our normal Saturday excursions to benefit from better rail services. We travelled to London Victoria, connecting there with the 09:55 Southeastern service to Ashford International,…

    North Downs Way: Hollingbourne to Charing
  • As the sixth anniversary of Kate’s death approaches – only just preceded by her 62nd Birthday on 4 July – I find myself reflecting once more on how different life would be had she lived. Would we have retired together, Devonwards, as we had vaguely planned, and would our relationship have blossomed in that new…

    #Kateday23
  • ‘Excellent Women’ (1952) is probably the best-known novel by Barbara Pym (1913-1980). It deals with the humdrum middle class existence of one Mildred Lathbury, part-time charity worker and pillar of the local church. She mostly interacts with the vicar and his sister, two new neighbours and a spare anthropologist. These characters revolve around each other…

    Excellent Women – Barbara Pym
  • In May 2023, we travelled to Croatia for a Dalmatian Island Explorer holiday, arranged by Titan Travel in conjunction with Saga, its parent company. Aside from our Channel Island Hopping experience of spring 2022, this was our first journey abroad since Covid restrictions were lifted. There were some problems initially. When we first booked the…

    Dalmatian Island Cruise
  • William Dean Howells (1837-1920) published ‘A Hazard of New Fortunes’ in 1890. It deals with the lives of several inhabitants of New York, most of them connected in some way with the publication of a fortnightly review called Every Other Week. The owner, Dryfoos, was once a farmer but has made his fortune from natural…

    A Hazard of New Fortunes – William Dean Howells
  • Elizabeth Taylor – the other one – published ‘A Game of Hide and Seek’, her fifth novel, in 1951. Harriet and Vesey meet as teenagers: she is weak-willed and passive; he is thoughtless and neglectful. She falls in love with him anyway. He disappears from her life, and, after working as a shop assistant, she…

    A Game of Hide and Seek – Elizabeth Taylor
  • Elizabeth Jane Howard (1923-2014) published her second novel ‘The Long View’ in 1956. It tells the story of a middle class marriage in five episodes, arranged in reverse chronological order. We first encounter heroine Antonia Fleming in 1950, when her coercive husband Conrad has become almost completely detached. We trace their story back, through infidelities,…

    The Long View – Elizabeth Jane Howard
  • Our progress along the North Downs Way continues, albeit slowly. We resumed towards the end of April 2023, some six months after completing the previous stretch, from Cuxton to Sandling. Sandling is some miles before the official end of the Cuxton to Detling leg, and we had needed a 101 Sapphire bus to connect us…

    North Downs Way: Sandling to Hollingbourne
  • I intended my next book to be Maurice Baring’s ‘Cat’s Cradle’, but soon discovered that I’d read it already! So I switched to ‘Marcella’ by Mrs Humphry Ward, aka Mary Augusta Ward. This is her. Previously I’d read only her ‘Robert Elsmere’, which I very much enjoyed. ‘Marcella’ was written six years later, in 1894.…

    Marcella – Mrs Humphrey Ward
  • As you can see from the cover, William Boyd (no less) rates ‘The Polyglots’ (1925) as: “The most influential English novel of the Twentieth Century.” I would be inclined to award that prize to ‘Ulysses’, perhaps, or else ‘To the Lighthouse’. Those are both great literary masterpieces, while this, emphatically, is not. The narrative, such…

    The Polyglots – William Gerhardie
  • This is Mary Cholmondeley (1859-1925) whose novel ‘Red Pottage’ (1899) is, in my opinion, a neglected classic. It tells the story of two very different female friends, Rachel West and Hester Gresley. The main plot revolves around the consequences of adultery: at the husband’s behest, he and his rival draw lots. The loser is honour…

    Red Pottage – Mary Cholmondeley
  • Storm Jameson published these three novellas in the early 1930s – and they are heavily redolent of that period. Each examines the life of a woman who struggles to overcome her circumstances: First, a novelist, increasingly overshadowed by her less talented but more charismatic, beautiful (and promiscuous) childhood friend. Second, a wealthy heiress who, escaping…

    Women Against Men – Storm Jameson

Eponymous, better known as timdracup.com, contains long-form posts drafted by a real human being. Everything is free to read. I specialise in Dracup family history, British walking trails and literary book reviews. But you’ll also find writing about music, bereavement and much else besides.

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