Literary Lesbians

Thursday, May 24, 2007

MAY: The Night Watch by Sarah Waters

Our discussion of The Night Watch started with a quote from Kay in the novel:

"People's pasts, you know, being so much more interesting than their futures."

This led into a discussion about Sarah Waters' use of tense in the novel. Although I think we all agreed that it was an interesting technique, and that in one sense it kept us in suspense while we were waiting to discover how the characters had ended up where they were in the start of the novel, most of us found it rather irritating. Interestingly, nearly everyone went back and read the beginning of the book again after finishing it.

We also discussed the way in which this book differed from Sarah Waters' earlier novels - particularly that one of the things we loved about her earlier books was the depth of description, which this book lacked. Amy pointed out that this could have been a stylistic choice to emphasize that in war time things were fairly bleak. Thanks also to Amy for introducing us to the phrase "classic technique of alienation" and its development by playwright Bertolt Brecht.

There was also some discussion about the role of the characters Viv and Duncan. Some thought they were superfluous to the story, others thought they needed to be there (there was some suggestion that Viv was the token 'straight' character, although I think we ended up dismissing this as a theory - Sarah Waters told Lynnie that she wrote books about characters, not "gay" characters).

Thanks also to Lynnie for sharing with us the in-depth and cutting edge details of Sarah Waters in person following her interview with her in 2006. This provided us with some good background about the author and her interpretation of her own work. We thought it particularly interesting that Sarah Waters said that she would never write a book set in her own era as she "lived that every day" and that she preferred to either write about stories set in the past, or ghost stories.

General consensus was that we didn't like Julia, were rather annoyed by Helen, but grew to love Kay.
posted by Literary Lesbians at 9:05 PM 1 comments

Inaugural Literary Lesbian Meeting

On Tuesday 22 May a group of incredibly sexy and intelligent (not to mention well-read) lesbians met at an establishment (the location of which must remain secret for obvious reasons) for the first Literary Lesbian reading group discussion.

Over a couple of drinks, dinner and some comfortable lounges, we discussed Sarah Water's third novel "The Night Watch" and planned our reading list for the next few months.

Thanks to Sam, Jude, Ange, Lynnie, Amy, Laura, Caroline and Sal for enthusiastically participating in the discussion. Special thanks to Sal for being such a dedicated minute taker.

The notes from our discussion will be posted later this week, so if you missed the meeting you can read all about what we thought of the book of the month. You can also comment on the posting if you want to discuss the book further or debate any of the points of view represented.

"She is too fond of books, and it has turned her brain."
Louisa May Alcott (1873)
posted by Literary Lesbians at 8:57 PM 0 comments