Monday, September 30, 2013

Margaret Drabble, THE PURE GOLD BABY

The cover copy would have you believe that the subject of Margaret Drabble's new book is motherhood, but though that's certainly a topic of interest in this rich, wide-ranging novel, I'd say a bigger issue in The Pure Gold Baby is change. Drabble's first novel was published exactly fifty years ago, when she was in her early twenties, which is not so far off from the characters and the historical moment with which this novel begins, and the narrator offers a steady stream of reflections on how different the world was at that time. The force of that difference is made especially evident by contrast with title character Anna, the mentally-challenged daughter of protagonist Jess, who is much the same in her forties as she was in childhood. Jess delayed a possible career in anthropology to become a single mother, and when Anna's difficulties became evident, the delay became permanent. Both are happy with their conjoined lives, at least to the extent that Anna's emotional state can be determined. But the possibility raised by the Plath quote in the title, of a darker side to their relationship, is one of the undercurrents beneath the novel's placid surface.

The narrator is another member of Jess' social circle, bright young things of the 1960s literary and intellectual world. Too smart to be cheaply nostalgic, she is nonetheless all too aware of how the physical world of her youth has disappeared, and of how beliefs and practices have developed over time, especially in terms of how an implicitly white, male, and psychologically stable elite relates to women, racial minorities, and the mentally ill. There may be a few too many of these "We wouldn't have called it that then" asides, but in the main Drabble strikes a good balance between reflection and other forms of thematic momentum, using the narrator's crisp recollections to remind readers, as only an elder (but not yet "elderly") novelist can, of how much things change within a single lifetime. She describes the characters-- poets, producers of TV documentaries, charity executives-- in a way that evokes that time and place without creating a caricature; it's a group of people, not an over-elaborate portrait of an era, and the course of the narrative is shaped by credible events rather than contrived dramas. A deep, humanist sympathy is evident throughout, an awareness of universal frailty that's never soppy or morally feeble. Drabble understands the tragedy of growing old, of not being able to control one's body or mind. There may be ambiguities in Jess and Anna's relationship, but it's not due to any failing in either of them; it's simply the nature of our imperfect capacity to connect with one another.

There are novels that succeed by examining a single theme, character, or situation in ruthless clarity, and there are novels that succeed by tangling several issues in a way that reflects the complexity of life as it is actually lived. This is one of the latter. It would take many more words than I'm prepared to write to explain how this novel weaves together care homes, Dr. Livingston, Pearl Buck, and a doctor who specializes in bladder ailments. But I should emphasize that the flow of the narrative is so natural these intellectual concerns never feel shoehorned in, or like work. Drabble is unafraid to be flatly expository where necessary, allowing her to cover simple material more succinctly than the unnecessary application of "show don't tell" would allow. The result is a novel of three hundred pages with the richness of an epic, punctuated by dry asides ("Air terrorism has had some small beneficial side effects, and the habit of carrying resealable plastic bags on one's person is one of them") and tangential pieces of elegant or moving description. I say that this is a novel about change, but really that's not true: there are books that not "about" anything but the world and characters they describe. In that sense, then, this is a novel about how certain aspects of the 21st century look to London academics and writers who lived through much of the 20th. It can be read and enjoyed simply as a story about a group of characters, but its real power is as a compendium of linked observations on past and present, health and illness, change and stasis. Some readers may be put off by the lack of an obvious narrative or thematic focus, but I for one prefer such complexity to overly-detailed elaboration of overly-familiar themes. The Pure Gold Baby was my first Margaret Drabble novel, and it won't be my last.

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