After writing a discussion of Chris Ware's Building Stories last month, in which I discussed some common ground between that book and B.S. Johnson's The Unfortunates,
I thought I'd have a look online and find out which of Johnson's books were
available these days. Coincidentally, it turned out that this month is the 80th
anniversary of Johnson's birth, and later this year will mark the 40th anniversary
of his death. As a result, Picador have seen fit to republish a few of his novels
that were long out of print, and have in recent years only been available in an
omnibus edition. One of these books is House
Mother Normal.
It's weird, really, that Johnson fell off
the map in the way that he did. He might still be languishing in obscurity were
it not for Jonathan Coe's 2004 biography. Why is it that Johnson was so long
out of print and so little known in his own country while novels by Alain Robbe-Grillet and Georges Perec are available in most
decent English bookshops? Unlike those two, and unlike his hero Joyce for that
matter, Johnson never really wrote a book that was difficult to read. Some
argue that his lack of popularity is simply down to the fact that Johnson's
experimental modernist approach to fiction is at odds with English literary
culture. All our big names of the last 30 years have been formal conservatives
working in a tradition about which Johnson was scathing. We don't mind it when
the French, or even the Irish, engage in high modernism, the argument goes, but
when a working class Englishman tries to reinvent the novel, we see him as a
pretentious irritant.
Well, maybe. But
reading House Mother Normal, I was
struck by some other issues that may account for Johnson's lack of readers.
House
Mother Normal takes the form of eight stream of
consciousness monologues from inmates (there is no better word) of an old
people's home, preceded by an introduction from the House Mother of the title, who seems to be the sole carer in the institution.
At the end of the book, House Mother gives the reader her own monologue and a
short closing statement. Each monologue is 21 pages long, and the pages are
numbered accordingly. This is because the monologues are simultaneous—while
they focus mostly on a given narrator's thoughts and reminiscences, they
occasionally make reference to what is happening in the room, and these
external events can be found in exactly the same place in each
account. For example, a song the characters sing together appears about halfway down the fifth page of each chapter. Part of the experience of reading the book is the process of trying to
piece together what is going on in the care home from these fragmented
accounts. I found myself flipping back to previous chapters to build a
picture of what was happening to the characters. It seems clear from pretty early on that they are being subjected to abuse, but of what kind?
The old people are put to work on banal
tasks, made to play a perverse version of pass the parcel, set to jousting one
another, and then forced to watch the House Mother "entertain" them.
Quite what this entertainment involves does not become clear until the House
Mother gives her own account at the end of the book, but it is repeatedly described
as "filth." What is in the package the old people play pass the
parcel with? It is several chapters before that is revealed. All we know at
first is that the contents represent "a dirty trick." And, even once we find out what
the parcel contains, it makes no sense beyond an act of saddening cruelty. Here
we're staring to get to the problem with the book. But we'll come back to that.
At its core, House Mother Normal is a collection of Beckett influenced stream of
consciousness monologues which present the reminiscences of eight elderly
individuals, each given a distinct and convincing voice. That said, one of
them is too preoccupied with hellish pain in his anus to reminisce so very
much, and at least two others are demented to the point of being largely unintelligible.
To represent a lack of mental agility in some of his characters, Johnson uses stretches of blank space on the page, a technique which can feel a bit contrived
(is there ever a time when the mind is completely without content?) but which
is also effective and at times genuinely distressing. To drive home his point
about the decline of the mind with age, he also arranges the monologues so that they become progressively more senile as the
book goes on, such that the reader can get a sense of what it might be like to
lose ones faculties entirely. This dimension of the book shows some real
compassion, mixed with a real bleakness. The characters sit and relive parts of
their past as best they can until the day comes when their confusion becomes too
great. The lives Johnson gives his creations are fully imagined, realistic
and scattered with striking details and pathos. As a passionate atheist, and
also someone committed to truth in writing, Johnson uses the book to stare down
what he perceives to be the inevitable horror of aging and dying. As House Mother says in her closing passage, "worse times are a-coming,
nothing is more sure."
This is grim stuff, make no mistake, but
it's made all the grimmer by the fact that this is also a book about abuse of
the elderly and institutional sadism. House Mother is a monstrous character; so
much is clear from early on. She beats her charges with a "twitcher,"
she feeds them food which she literally considers too poor for her dog, and she
organises a farcical jousting game in which two of the more able inmates (or
"friends" in House Mother's parlance) push two people in wheelchairs
towards each other. The two people in the wheelchairs have to try to strike
each other with mops. The game ends with a severely confused man being
knocked unconscious.
Here is one of the core issues with the book. Every event that does not take place only
in the mind of one of the characters is either an act of exploitation or an act
of abuse. Further, the abuse is of an active and perverse kind and I found it
deeply sickening. It is often said of Johnson that his books are infused with
black humour. A case in point is Andrew Motion's foreword to this edition, in
which he claims the author's novels are "lit with bleak comedy." A
part of what makes House Mother Normal
quite an unpleasant book to read is the suspicion that the acts of degradation
and humiliation the characters are subjected to are supposed to be read with a
guilty mirth. This possibility seems all the more likely when you know that the book's
full title used to be House Mother Normal: A Geriatric Comedy.
It's not more than a couple of years since
hidden cameras showed a nurse in an English residential home walking into the
room of a frail old woman and punching her in the head unprovoked. The kind of
abuse presented in this book is not so far from what still happens today, and it
is not amusing. If Johnson wanted this side of the book to be funny on any
level, he shot himself in the foot by making the characters convincing and
human enough for the reader to empathise with and pity them. If he hadn't done
that, but had instead created a farcical tone and two dimensional characters,
maybe the insanity of the abuse could have been slightly funny, but this approach would have undermined
everything the book says (very effectively) about the decline of human life.
So what I'm getting at here is that House Mother Normal presents a hellish
view of life, but also makes you
question whether you are being asked to laugh at something which you find
deeply shocking and sad. It seems to look for humour where there is none. On the other hand, this is a grim, sometimes scatological, rather perverse,
but in some ways brutally honest book about an area of life that most writers
either sentimentalise or avoid. It makes the reader look at fears most people
try to forget, and then says explicitly: this is coming to you.
In his foreword, Andrew Motion is at pains
to point out that Johnson's book is a call to celebrate life in the here and
now. I don't buy that. Or at least I would say that if the book is anything of the sort, then it fails on that level, just as it fails on the level of comedy. It is
not the tricksy modernist structure that makes the book difficult (in point of
fact, the textual innovations make it more readable), but rather the abject
nature of the content. Not that House
Mother Normal is a bad book. It is far from a being bad. Purely on the
level of execution and writing alone, it is excellent. But it is a foul book with a grim
vision; it is dark and almost unremitting, with only occasional flashes of
beautiful humanity that make it all the more sad and disturbing. So, perhaps it is not so surprising after all that Johnson's work has struggled to find a wider readership.
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