I am so taken with Barbara Pym. She mysteriously manages to touch a part of my soul that even I cannot reach.
I wondered why she chose this title of Autumn? I believe that the following quote that I discovered is quite apt:
"Autumn is the season after summer, when leaves fall from trees. It's also the season when the days get shorter and colder, and everything turns brown and drab, but people like it anyway, for the cocoa and cider, probably."
I'm not so sure about the cider!
This book is so unlike Barbara Pym's previous books as I found that they sparkled. This is "darker". Now whether it was due to her forthcoming death, three years after this book was published in 1977, I don't know but the feeling of regret seems to permeate the book, although the ending quite negates this with a very positive and upbeat feeling.
The story is not at all exciting. In fact it is rather dull as it concerns the lives of four individuals in their sixties who work together in London - Edwin Braithwaite, a widower with a daughter in Beckenham, who has his own house, and is constantly looking for church services to attend, followed by a drink afterwards with his friend Father G; Norman (the only one without a surname) who is cynical, sarcastic and lives in a bedsitter; Marcia Ivory who had been married and lives in her own home with a most absurd penchant for collecting milk bottles, furiously cleaning them and leaving them in her garden shed, with an extreme attachment to her surgeon, Mr Strong even to the extent that she goes to see where he lives. But the heroine of this work, if you can call her that, is the self-effacing Letty Crowe, who had left her bedsit as Nigerians, religious ones at that, had purchased her house with the tenants included and so thanks to Edwin had come across Mrs. Pope, a rather cantankerous eighty or so year old woman. In addition, is Marjorie, a friend of Letty, who hopes that they will live together in the country when Letty retires.
Now you may not believe that this is a very exciting book but it is. How interest can be sustained with four individuals who have been working together in clerical positions for several years in London (close to the British museum and Library - where they all go, not together, from time to time) and you just don't know what kind of company they work for or what work they do. In fact when Letty and Marcia retire, at their farewell speech even the deputy managing director did not know what they did. As a result, their jobs were nor replaced and luckily for Edwin and Norman, they could spread all of their work and food over the former Letty's and Marcia's places.
What is so delightful about this book is that Barbara Pym gives excitement and life to what basically would be thoroughly boring existences.
I so loved the poetry/comments that are scattered throughout. Norman makes the comment on a rather sad occasion:
"Dust to dust, ashes to ashes,
Into the grave the great Queen dashes."
All in all a pleasure to read, even though it was somewhat "dark". I felt as if I were entering into the soul of Barbara Pym with all of her expectations, be they of now, another world or afterwards. Wonderful.