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Since I got a smartphone I've been surprised to find that the ability to take photos no matter where I am is like an extra pair of eyes to see through. Early in my time at my current flat -- which was before the smartphone -- we thought one of the cats had got out, so I was wandering up and down the street in the cool misty evening scanning the pavement and the neighbors' gardens, and realising that I'd barely taken notice of the street I lived on before, and that it was a lot of fun having an excuse to stare into gardens, calling 'Here, kitty kitty kitty' not as a summons to the cat but as a reassurance to residents that this staring stranger meant no harm. (Of course the cat had been waiting just outside the back door, and was discovered almost at once by my flatmate Angelo, who followed me down the street calling "We found him!") The ability to photograph has heightened my attentiveness as though I'm constantly looking for someone's cat. I expect it will wear off with familiarity, but I'm enjoying it for now: seeing that a building's facade has a strip of sky blue along the top of it, with upward-pointing blue arrow designs below, and experiencing that as the building saying, "Be of good cheer!" under a sky of the same colour and brightness.*

The tangential relationship of all this to The Matisse Stories is that I have more in my experience to compare A.S. Byatt's painters to than before I developed the habit of looking at a particularly vivid contrast and thinking, "My camera can't catch that. I wonder what I'd have to know about cameras before I'd know what could?" Byatt is good at artists in general and painters specifically, painters who care very much about solving colour problems, sometimes in ways that make sense to almost no one else.

There are three stories in this book, all of which involve one or another Matisse painting. The second, Art Work, is my favourite, a portrait of a household which begins with the black-and-white reproduction of a colour painting and all the colours which can be imagined to fill its forms, and goes on to Debbie, design writer, income earner, chief parent of her children, and to Mrs Brown, who cleans the house and knits wild patchworks, without whom Debbie could not cope but whose life and concerns are partly mysterious to her, and then to Robin, Debbie's husband, who would probably have expected to be introduced first, certainly before Mrs Brown, in terms of household importance; who paints, whose painting is an attempt to capture the experience of really seeing something colourful, and whose ignorance of the house in which he lives is partly self-protective and has been corroding Debbie and himself slowly for a long time. The story feels Margaret Mahy-ish in its depiction of domestic work, in its liking for patchwork and for varied aspirations and art forms, and in its sympathy for everybody involved.

The first story in the book is Medusa's Ankles, which I liked fairly well but which does not leave me with anything to say about it -- hair, the ageing of beauty, a hairdresser who "resembles a balletic Hamlet" and whose virtues do not include reliability.

And the third story is The Chinese Lobster. Two academics meet in a Chinese restaurant to discuss an accusation of sexual harassment made against one of them by a student with mental illness, and what kind of work -- less what kind of product, than what length and depth of attention -- should be accepted as worth a thesis; they discuss, too, Matisse as incompletely though not wrongly interpreted as a painter of male eroticism, but also as the great painter of the sort of relaxed pleasure whose ultimate opposite is suicide, a discussion which is ultimately of personal significance to each of them. The story's shadow is the fact that the accusation of sexual harassment is dismissed, and the student who made it is viewed as partly though not unsympathetically culpable, on the accused professor's word that he did not harass her and wouldn't have wanted to. Perhaps her accusation was false. But convincing charm is a survival trait in professors who sexually assault their students, and I'm not sure the story wants the professor to be doubted. If I read it as doing so, it becomes sharply cruel, but I'm more inclined to take the professor as innocent as he seems and says, in which case my liking for the story also has a shadow. But I do find it interesting.



Did I see any Matisse when I was overseas? Unsure. He didn't stick with me, if so. The reproductions on the cover of this book are more interesting to me the more I look at them, having started by finding them nothing in particular, though for me they've not yet grown into the images the stories in this book are structured around -- despite being those images.









*I have just read a Grant Morrison comic called Happy! in which an ex-policeman made cynical by long exposure to the world's vileness is enlisted by a small talking blue horse with wings to save the young girl who imagined it. Descending into/ascending through The Invisibles seems to have increased my affection for Grant Morrison. This is a self-contented and well-formed mini-series in which someone spends a lot of time say "fuck you" to a small talking blue horse with wings; what more could one want? Also, while we're on colour, I like that the villain is called Mr Blue, because blue is emotionally contronymical.

(While I'm tracking comics, I may as well add volumes two and three of Saga, which I really liked).
landingtree: Small person examining bottlecap (Default)
...and which was mostly written a month ago. Really I should just post these things as I go, shouldn't I, only I get to the point where I have not written up my thoughts about a book in a way that really explains them, and have begun to forget the things about the book which would let me do so, and then I get stuck, and then I go to my mother's house and write a diary-entry-post sort of thing in a notebook, which has no reason not to keep getting longer, and then I realise that I have to post my book post first because there is not no worthwhile thinking in it...

Also I have just discovered that my current sash windowsill, unlike my last, can be sat on with no particular danger of falling three storeys, and spent a while looking at the evening light, which partly explains and is partly explained by my current mood. (I had just spent another few minutes doing that and pleasurably failing to come up with a good description of the way in which the clouds were beautiful, when coming back in I knocked this laptop off my bed, and the battery out of it. So dangers remain. Thank you for still being alive, laptop. I realise that at the age of seven it is difficult, and that I am not helping).


The Outskirter's Secret, by Rosemary Kirstein.

Even better than the first one. It's the kind of book whose invented culture is complicated enough to make me notice that I live in one too. I went up to a water fountain on campus to refill my drink bottle and thought about how freighted with oddness that simple description is. Such a long interesting conversation could be had with a steerswoman about campuses and water fountains -- I like it when s.f. does that. And also when it makes me laugh with delight in one chapter, and laugh and cry in the next, at people taking actions based in their culture which would have meant nothing to me in chapter one. I do not want to give spoilers for the other things I like about the book. Everything is so nifty. Thinking back to a conversation I had years and years ago with someone about fantasy travelogues to equal Tolkien's -- this is now a book I'd name, although it's a very different kind of travelogue. And it isn't often that being surprised by turns of plot and working them out in advance are equally satisfying. I did some of each, and they were, and I have just written a long email to leaflemming in which I try to work out the possibility space of [redacted]. And I am trying to put off book three at least two days, which will be difficult. [Note: I put it off less than four hours. Now I have read all of them, and it will probably be years before I get to read Rowan's next bit of thinking. The Outskirter's Secret is my favourite, but that is really not a criticism of the two after. ]

When I wrote it this bit of the post was to be locked to prevent a certain grandmother being forewarned about part of a Christmas gift, but Christmas has gone by, so Jan, I hope you enjoy them too!

A Desert in Bohemia, by Jill Paton Walsh.

I like this, but not as much as A Knowledge of Angels, the other book of hers I'd read. They both have elegant, clear prose, casual erudition, realism heightened toward fable, settings which never existed but are nearly possible, and an interest in moral philosophy. But A Knowledge of Angels is very well-balanced on the core of what it's about, and I think A Desert in Bohemia is off more to the side. The moral philosophy, here, is about the possibility of individual moral choice, when the choices presented to any given person are governed by amoral chance. The setting is a European nation faced the Second World War, followed by a Communist revolution, running down the generations of a family variously in exile and not. [And that is where my thoughts got cloudy and I stopped writing them out, but I think my lesser liking for the book comes down to my being more interested in the possibilities of Communist successes than in the aristocrats who, here, are genuinely wronged by its failures.]


The Invisibles, by Grant Morrison.

While reading volume three of this, late at night and quite tired, some odd-looking new characters turned up, and I said to myself, 'Oh, these are the ones who were on that vase in my tutorial on the origins of drama last week, the one about which the tutor said, 'Well, if this isn't depicting early drama then we don't know what the hell it is depicting.' It took me a moment to realise that only the contents of a comic can be part of its plot, even when the comic is by Grant Morrison.

And then in a bus on the way into town a few days later I looked down a sidestreet I seldom notice, to see another double-decker bus going the other way, and I thought, 'Oh, there's myself at an earlier point in time,' and then, 'Dammit, Grant Morrison would be very happy about this and I don't want to give him the satisfaction.' I generally enjoy being put into altered states of consciousness by books, but when a self-described chaos magician claims to have has written a series of comics as an efficacious hypersigil simulating alien abduction, and then I dislike many things about the series, well, humph.

The series has little truck with character, or as far as I can see (despite what Grant Morrison writes in the epilogue) many bits of human experience I've ever had. A lot of its structure exists to purely to support its own complexity. The author insert character is a super-assassin, and there are characters I thought could have done with more character besides 'is badass, has associated paradox, wants to sleep with super-assassin'. Each team member has a role defined by one of the four elements, and at one point they exchange them to maintain versatility, but after the exchange I couldn't tell the difference, either because there was no difference or because Grant Morrison is quite willing to make things subliminal.

But in the end I would not say I dislike the series. I would say 'Based on previous reading I had not thought Grant Morrison could get more so, and look at that, he did.' When I came out of the film society screening of Last Year at Marienbad and was about to mark the little rate-out-of-five slip they give you, I thought, 'I will mark this as five stars because I'm not going to mark it as one star and 'rating not applicable' isn't one of the options.' Last Year At Marienbad... very successfully exists. I feel that, less intensely, with The Invisibles. Probably it's the shared metafictionality that does it.

The fact that I finished and enjoyed The Invisibles and am likely to reread it, and what I wrote about Black Oxen, and the [then-]recent Dreamwidth discussions of Gideon the Ninth and people's preferences for tone in books, lead me to think that I am quite susceptible to authorial self-indulgence as long as a) it is done at a high level of craft and b) characters occasionally turn around and comment on it to each other. This is a comic about a secret conspiracy of vigilante heroes facing a world-constricting conspiracy of conformist dark gods which may or may not in fact be the same conspiracy, in which the heroes are at one point attacked with a psychic weapon which causes them to uncontrollably critique the role of the vigilante hero in conformist systems. I can pretty much decide whether I'm going to be charmed by that on any given day, and hey, why not?

(Also, incidentally, this series' preoccupations are oddly like my grandfather's. The cultural roots he draws on seem to be under Grant Morrison too).

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