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rushthatspeaks ([personal profile] rushthatspeaks) wrote2011-04-26 12:41 am

The Summer Book, Tove Jansson (365 Books, Day 239)

As I have said before, bless the press of the New York Review of Books, for they consistently print things I want to read. I picked this up at Raven Used Books in Harvard Square while I was in town over the weekend; Raven is one of those places where you may as well just hand your wallet to the cashier when you walk in, and go from there. They stock a lot of NYRBs.

Jansson is primarily known for her magnificent Moomin books, those friendly but still numinous collections of the adventures of funny, endearing, never ever human people of several different peculiar varieties. This is one of her novels for adults, and I have to say, it is fascinating watching her write human characters, as I have never seen her do that before. She is, unsurprisingly, very good at it.

The Summer Book is--

well. I need to resort to analogy here for a moment. There is a French movie I am very fond of by Jacques Tati, called M. Hulot's Holiday, which is set at a seaside resort, and which has the peculiar property that it is so timelessly filled with summer that every time you watch it it does not feel as though you are watching the same film of the same summer over again, but rather that you are watching the next year along, with everything going on about the same as last year, just as it ought to, in the subtly shifting rhythms of the world. I can tell without having reread it that The Summer Book will have this quality.

It is composed of short vignettes, which might take place in the same summer, or in different ones, or in all summers at once. There is an island in the Gulf of Finland, and every summer for forty-seven years the same family has lived on it (according to them they live there always, and they are quite contemptuous of summer people although they clearly have a winter house; the island is where their real existence lies). Right now there is a little girl, Sophie, and a grandmother, and a father, though he spends most of his time in his study typing away at something. And there is no mother, which is the one change from the way things have always been, and not a good one.

Sophie and the grandmother have the island in their bones. Sometimes there are visitors, who don't, which is confusing for everybody. Sometimes there is weather, all the drama of storm and wave. On Midsummer there are meant to be fireworks, but they are a bit salt-encrusted. The grandmother carves animals out of roots in the thickets, builds a tiny scale model of Venice for her granddaughter, smokes too much, is intemperate and intransigent and impossible to live with and absolutely without question the best grandmother I have ever seen in fiction, end of sentence. Sophie is writing a book on the natural history of the angleworm, to explain whether it is all right that it splits into two halves to avoid being put on a fishhook. (Does it live, after all that, happily? Does the tail end grow a new head, or does it decide to be the head, and move up in the world?) She has a complex and tormented relationship with her cat, as who does not. She is a bit young to have grasped the concept of generations and doesn't remember her grandfather, but she is invested in asking questions and is fairly convinced the Devil has something to do with death-- the grandmother says that at her own age she is too old to start believing in the Devil and she's damned if she's going to.

This is clear water of a book, both deep and crystalline, the work of a writer at the height of her powers, using them lazily and in perfect mastery, with a crooked smile. Jansson was over sixty when she wrote this, and it shows, a lifetime of having learned herself and her art and her oceans. It is the kind of book that invalidates many standard ideas about the nature of the novel, because it is in a conventional sense plotless, arcless, conflictless, not even really a pastoral. This is one reason I am quite often annoyed at standard ideas about the nature of the novel: The Summer Book is vital, there is nothing else like it. It is full of the sound of an old woman and a little girl laughing and quarreling, on an island, in the shadow of a newish grief, somewhere in the Gulf of Finland, every summer.

It is perfectly itself.
chomiji: Doa from Blade of the Immortal can read! Who knew? (Doa - books)

[personal profile] chomiji 2011-04-26 11:42 am (UTC)(link)

Oh yay, you read it!

This is one of my favorite books of all time. The shifts from spooky or elegiac back to sunny and bright are amazing. (I love the scene where Sophia is imagining the suitcases in the attic drifting away, filling with darkness, "and none of them ever come back.") And Moppy. Oh, Moppy! And the sad but funny visit with Berenice.

[identity profile] rainjoyous.livejournal.com 2011-04-26 03:04 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh my god I *loved* The Summer Book. I always used to recommend it to people who said they always read depressing books, or their book club insisted on reading really bleak things, because it envelopes you in this world where . . . where yeah, it's hard to describe, but summer is *everything*, and it contains you without stifling you, like a bath. It's *wonderful* and one of my favourite happy-making books ever, and Tove Jansson is *so* much love <3

[identity profile] deliasherman.livejournal.com 2011-04-26 05:06 pm (UTC)(link)
In one of those plate 'o shrimp experiences, where somebody mentions a fairly rare phenomenon, after which references to it proliferate, ellen_kushner forwarded this to me via her Israeli Swordspoint translator:

Fans of Tove Jansson: see this elegant virtual museum, with views of her tiny island in the Baltichttp://www.moomin.com/tove/eng/saari.html

It's the Summer Island island, sure as green apples.

I need to own this book. I shall reward myself for un-Passovering the kitchen by ordering it. And I have thoughts about books made of patterns rather than narrative arcs, but I'm too distracted to put them into words.

[identity profile] nipernaadiagain.livejournal.com 2011-04-29 06:55 am (UTC)(link)
Thank you!

Not only have I taken out and nearly finished this from a local library, I have also bought one English language copy as a gift for a friend.

I find it interesting that so many people apparently have been able to like Tove Jansson in early age. Not me, I needed to be an adult to like here writing.