Of all things to come from the mind of Robert Aickman, one of the most unexpected would be this novel: a tender, haunting, elegiac tale of a brief lesbian love affair that changes its heroine's world, and her world view. Griselda starts the novel as a passive, placid young woman who is vaguely discontented with her lot in life yet willing to go with the flow. After the tragic extinguishing of that very brief affair, she is still a placid and passive woman, but one who makes an abrupt life change and is quietly determined to live life how she pleases. This shift is accomplished with all of the subtlety, ambiguity, and off-kilter sense of dislocation that are this superb author's hallmarks. As the Times Literary Supplement described his craft in their October issue: "an 'Aickmanesque' story envelops the reader like a mist, leaving uncertain clues and contradictory rationales." Such is the case with this novel.
Aickman has for many years been one of my favorite authors. I thought I knew him! A man given to telling strange stories, a semi-modern master of the weird tale, expert at conveying oblique threats and horrors in the most ordinary of settings. Also, someone with a distinctly conservative set of mind. And yet, should I have been surprised? He has always been interested in writing vignettes detailing peculiar, often shattering changes, in the inner lives of women, and in the friendships between them. The more I consider it, the less surprising this book becomes. But barely a whiff of the supernatural! The Late Breakfasters is almost defiantly mainstream, given the author's prior output. It still fits well within his oeuvre.
The two things within this excellent novel that gave me the most pleasure: the long time spent at a country manor during a weekend get-together, where Griselda meets the woman who will change her life, and the sublime ending. Regarding the former: I loved the leisurely comedy of manners of the manor chapters (over 150 pages of the book), the mundane yet intriguing characters, the mysteries left unsolved. That part was an immersive experience. To the latter: I love an ending where a character finds not what they have been specifically looking for, but instead has found something just as important. For Griselda, that would be her freedom to live as she sees fit, with people who feel similarly about life. An ideal ending, and one that was actually spelled out in the novel's first paragraph. I should have paid closer attention to that opening; if I had, I wouldn't have spent so much time worrying over Griselda's fate. One does not expect a happy ending from Aickman.