Source of book: I own this.
I have enough books in my library that I can’t always
remember where I got them and when. This is such a book. My best guess is that
I found it at a library sale at least five years ago. It is a Franklin Library
hardback signed by the author - and it matches copies of Jurassic Park and The Lost
World by Michael Crichton - so I am pretty sure I found them together.
After all, it is hard to pass up a really nice hardback.
What I am less sure of is that I had any idea who Peter
Ackroyd was when I got the book. I may have been vaguely aware of him, but he
wasn’t on any of my reading lists. In any event, he is still living and
writing, and is best known for having a wide variety of subjects and styles,
from well respected biographies to fiction spanning a range of genres.
English Music is a
somewhat unusual book. One could even argue that it is two books in one and
that either part could stand alone.
The odd numbered chapters form one of the parts: they are a
first person narrative by the protagonist, Timothy Harcombe, of his life. That
part of the story is essentially a coming-of-age story as well as a tale of a
boy and his complex relationship with his father. Clement Harcombe is a former
circus performer turned faith healer, who has raised Timothy alone since birth
- Timothy’s mother died in childbirth. Although the character has all the
hallmarks of a charlatan, Clement actually does have the ability to heal - as
long as he has Timothy to assist him. (It is never clear to the reader or to
the characters exactly how much of the ability belongs to Clement and how much
to Timothy - although it does seem that the two of them have to work together.)
Timothy is taken from his father to go live with his maternal grandparents -
and get a real education and grow up as a normal child. He ends up seeing his father
again a few times during childhood and then as an adult - and eventually goes
back to working with his father. Their both loving and dysfunctional
relationship forms the core of the narrative - and it is clear that Timothy is
torn between his two natures: his conventional aristocratic mother, and his
self-taught bohemian father. These two natures are represented in a rather
metaphorical way by the art which forms the second part of the book. Timothy’s
father teaches him during his childhood using English literature. When he goes
to live with his grandparents, he discovers his mother’s collection of
classical music - primarily English composers. The author combines these traits
in Timothy, and literature and music in what he calls “English Music,” which is
really the entire art of the English people, from painting to music to
literature to poetry.
The second part of the book is rather distinctive. The even
numbered chapters represent dreams (or visions or hallucinations) that Timothy
has during his unconscious spells which afflict him during times of stress.
These dream sequences are told in the third person, who observes Timothy as he
interacts with various representatives of “English Music.”
So, for example, in the first one, Timothy finds himself in
a world which is a mashup of Pilgrim’s
Progress and Lewis Carroll’s Alice In
Wonderland and Through the Looking
Glass. Yes, that is as odd as it sounds. Furthermore, Ackroyd writes these
sequences in the style of those stories - and yes, Bunyan and Carroll mixed
together does make for a bizarre style.
That is just one example. Other chapters feature Great Expectations, Robinson Crusoe, Morte
d’Arthur, and Sherlock Holmes. The poetry of William Blake gets a chapter,
as does the gallery of great English painters. William Hogarth gets a chapter
to himself - a harrowing vision of Gin Alley and Bedlam. Composer William Byrd
gets a chapter as well. There are other authors and books that get at least
small references.
Ackroyd has been criticized for his choices in putting
together his English pantheon. Women are barely mentioned (just George Eliot
and Emily Bronte), and his idea that English art forms a single, coherent
narrative is both a stretch and a bit jingoistic. On the other hand, you can
tell Ackroyd loves the artists he selects, and is intimately familiar with
their works. This isn’t just a greatest hits list, but an exploration of the
artists that made Ackroyd who he is. I myself have mixed feelings about this,
because I am an Anglophile myself. If I were to pick, I would say that English
literature has been the most consistently influential and best written (on
average) for the last 500 or so years. But of course, I am biased both because
my native language is English, and I grew up immersed in the English language
classics. Music and the visual arts, however, are different - England has a
few distinguished names, but is hardly a leader in those areas.
As for the book itself, I thought it was good, but not
great. The writing is excellent of course - Ackroyd is a craftsman of words.
The dream interludes were quite interesting, whether or not you agree with his
theory. I would go so far as to say that his ability to write “in the style of”
is quite impressive - the poetry in particular is spot on. Where I felt it fell
a bit flat was in the basic concept. The faith healing just feels kind of
weird, as it is never given an explanation or a reason for existing. The book
isn’t written like Magical Realism, and it has no other supernatural elements -
or even the acknowledgement of any. We are just to assume that within an
otherwise realistic book that two characters can heal people without knowing
how they do it, or with any natural or supernatural explanation suggested. I
also found Timothy to be annoyingly directionless. He never does seem to have
any idea what he wants to do with his life. And that includes even in his old
age. He never really does find himself or get beyond his tendency to expect
that others will give his life direction. For that reason, it was difficult to
warm up to him as a protagonist. I kept waiting for him to grow or discover something about himself. But it never
really happens.
I am rather curious to read some more Ackroyd, however,
because he is clearly a skilled writer, and his other books are apparently
quite different from this one and from each other.
***
So, a few things from the book:
A number of paintings become part of the story. Here is one
I particularly like, “Landscape With A Castle” by John Martin.
William Byrd wrote nearly 500 works - a prodigious output to
be sure - and also taught extensively. He is one of the few of his time to live
long enough to see his works go out of style. In recent times, his music has
been rediscovered. Here is a taste of his skill:
Although it doesn’t make it into the book, I figure I might
link one of my favorite English composers, Ralph Vaughn Williams. This work is a bit more obscure, but it is one I have played - and it is quite fun.
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