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May 2015: A Game of Hide and Seek

The Other Elizabeth Taylor by Nicola Beauman. The review offers some interesting information about Ms Taylor. Interestingly she feels that our book for May, Hide and Seek, is her finest novel, mirroring her long standing affair with Ray Russell. It looks like Elizabeth and her husband had a understanding worked out about their "friends" .
This is a piece is from fro the Times Literary Supplement.:
http://web.archive.org/web/2009050717...
Here is a article from the Telegraph:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/bo...
Here is a article from the Guardian:
http://www.theguardian.com/books/book...
Enjoy.
Okay, folks, it's time! We're following in good footsteps:

(from the back of the NYRB Classics' edition of A View from the Harbour)

(from the back of the NYRB Classics' edition of A View from the Harbour)
Just last night I finished Taylor's A Wreath of Roses, the book she published right before A Game of Hide and Seek, and I cannot wait to dig into this one.
I read Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont years ago and liked it, but somehow it's only now that I get the inkling Taylor's novels are going to be very important to me. Excited to take this further step with all of you.
I read Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont years ago and liked it, but somehow it's only now that I get the inkling Taylor's novels are going to be very important to me. Excited to take this further step with all of you.

I read Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont ye..."
I recently watched the film of Angel which I really enjoyed. I've also got a library copy of Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont which I was going to read before 'Hide and Seek', but it didn't work out. Maybe I'll read if after.

I especially liked this quote:
Julia poured tea gracefully, but it all ran over into the saucers.And the description of Julia which included this:
She seemed to be lovely still to herself, as if no amount of looking into mirrors could ruin her illusion.
I stayed up much to late last night reading the first 35 pages, and I loved it. So far, it's been a fascinating, rather biting, portrait of several people, and I see why you (Jonathan) were wary. I also wonder how people who dislike strong "telling" feel about this. I think the perspective is so acute, and so subtlety layered, that it's just my kind of thing, but a few months ago when The New Yorker published a piece by Elizabeth Harrower I loved her similar style but think I was in the minority.
Anyway, so far, I'm a big fan!
Anyway, so far, I'm a big fan!


Ms. Lazenby's treatment of her eyebrows is humorously stated, "She was always plucking her eyebrows when they had these conversations. She did so whenever she could spare a moment, peering into a smeared mirror, her mouth open. She had scarcely any eyebrows left, only an inflamed expanse, but that was fashionable at the time."

And what does Harriet actually see in Vesey?
Not being an Austen fan I'm guessing that there are parallels with Austen's novels but don't know for sure. Can anyone help with this? Am I missing much here?

The shop ladies are very funny and their advice to Harriet is hilarious yet terrible.

I agree with Jonathan. The story lagged a bit till Ms Jephcott burst on the scene. The shop ladies are a welcome addition. These newer more pronounced characters are bringing Harriet's character out, and more defined.
On Austen, I am not seeing any big connections yet (though I also have not finished the book). Reading around, it seems most who compare her generally to Austen (some of her books are apparently more Austen-influenced than others) talk about Taylor's ability to probe self-deception. I don't think comparisons, then, come from structure or from character development in the plot (Austen's characters don't so much as change as become revealed after we strip away misunderstandings, and I don't see that happening much here).
Harriet loves Vesey in spite of herself, something that shocks her. So far, I think the book is fascinating in exploring this phenomenon, which, though hard to understand rationally, is certainly common. What moments of thrill do we latch on to while excusing moments of meanness?
Austen may have a likeable character revealed to be unlikeable, at which point the protagonist distances herself. Or an unlikeable character is revealed to be likeable all along, at which point they often finally get together and marry. Taylor seems to be saying to us: here is an unlikeable character, and here is our protagonist in love, aware of some unlikeable attributes yet hopeless.
At least, that's what I'm seeing about 75 pages in :-), so take that for what it's worth at this point in the game!
Harriet loves Vesey in spite of herself, something that shocks her. So far, I think the book is fascinating in exploring this phenomenon, which, though hard to understand rationally, is certainly common. What moments of thrill do we latch on to while excusing moments of meanness?
Austen may have a likeable character revealed to be unlikeable, at which point the protagonist distances herself. Or an unlikeable character is revealed to be likeable all along, at which point they often finally get together and marry. Taylor seems to be saying to us: here is an unlikeable character, and here is our protagonist in love, aware of some unlikeable attributes yet hopeless.
At least, that's what I'm seeing about 75 pages in :-), so take that for what it's worth at this point in the game!


I was actually surprised by the ending. I did think that the story was heading in the direction of a cliché, but Harriet's choice at the end surprised me.

I don't know, I mean at no point did Harriet and Vesey actually seem to like (let alone love) each other. Their protestations of love to each other just seemed like acting to me. So I couldn't envisage Harriet running off with Vesey as I couldn't see what she saw in him in the first place.
I found the Betsy/Bell infatuation quite entertaining.

I thought that the book could have ended where Harriet leaves Charles for Vessey and decides she has made a horrible mistake that was based on a youthful crush. I was glad, and surprised, she made the decision to stay with her family.

But wasn't it really Vesey that made the decision to end it? After all, he made up the story about moving to South Africa.
I really liked the parts concerning Betsy and her infatuation with both Miss Bell and Vesey. In some ways aren't Betsy's infatuations more normal than Harriet's icy-cool obsession with the idea of Vesey?

Austen introduces male characters who present a temptation to the main female characters:
Pride and Prejudice: Elizabeth who is otherwise the sensible one of the family, is initially drawn to Wickham before she realizes what a cad he is.
Then there's Willoughby and Marianne in Sense and Sensibility.
This theme is much more developed in Emma and is at its strongest in Mansfield Park (incidentally my favourite Austen). In Mansfield Park, Austen even goes as far as to create rather, what shall I say, goody two shoe characters (Fanny and Edmund) who spring to life with the crackling sexuality of the siblings Henry and Mary Crawford.
Fanny and Edmund are drawn to the much more glamorous, worldy Crawfords.
Both Fanny and Edmund operate at a different speed from the Crawfords, and I see this same dynamic between Vesey and Harriet.
So far at least, Harriet seems rather dull and rather ordinary and Vesey seems dangerously out-of-her-league.
I've just got to the part where Charles enters Harriet's life, and while he seems as dull as dishwater too, he seems to be much more Harriet's speed.
This was the thematic comparison I made with Austen and one that woke me up at 2 in the morning.

At a later part of the book Charles is absent-mindedly reading Persuasion, a book that's he read several times. He may have been better off reading Madame Bovary.

Haven't got to that part of the book w/Charles yet. Some men are attracted to kamikaze women and some women are attracted to bounders. I've yet to see if Vesey is a bounder...


I've been hit and miss w/Taylor BTW and have yet to decide on this one.

I've only read this one so far but I have a library copy of Mrs Palfrey at the Claremont which seems to get favourable reviews - I may read it soon. I like her style, especially when she comes out with these short snappy phrases such as: 'the rain hit the windows like rice', 'she made a fence of little phrases', 'She needed no more encouragement than silence' etc...
I feel that she could have written some great comic novels...maybe she did. I'll certainly read some more by her.


I think you're right Melissa. But it is a bit odd that Vesey still pines for Harriet after fifteen years. It's a bit vague in the novel but I believe that they only met once in the period inbetween so I suppose it is largely nostalgia. After all, they're both at difficult periods in their lives.
I don't usually spend much time worrying about characters' motives or choices in love as I know in real life other people's choices are usually unfathomable. :-)

Mrs P at the Claremont was excellent, IMO

It is significant that Charles is reading Austen's Persuasion as it is a novel about regret. Teenaged Anne Elliott fell in love Capt Wentworth but was persuaded, by her father, to break the engagement. Then Wentworth returns years later with all the trappings of a suitable suitor while Anne is now considered an old maid. Wentworth's return causes Anne to mull over her choices and regret them.
There are some huge differences between the two plots so it's not as though Taylor mirrored Austen, but there are connections.

Thanks for the Austen comparisons Guy.
I'm reading 'Mrs Palfrey' at the moment and I'm loving it - it was the one that most appealed to me when I was first reading up about Taylor.
I still like 'Hide and Seek', I liked a lot of things about it such as Taylor's style, the construction of the novel, the humour, the minor characters etc. But I found the main story and the main characters rather dull and hackneyed. I keep wondering if this was a deliberate choice by Taylor, whether their story was supposed to appear rather dull compared to the others? But then, maybe I'm just being harsh towards the characters...

And what did Vesey see in Harriet? And why did they still pine for each other after so many years? It would have been more believable if their relationship had been a bit more explosive when they were younger.

IMO, there's been no closure--a terribly overused phrase but when it comes to personal relationships, when there's no closure, there's unresolved business. We know that Harriet thought of Vesey often. Perhaps he just enjoyed the worship.

I can see being somewhat frustrated with Harriet as a nonentity, but as Vesey hides himself behind his irritating behavior, she keeps a low profile so as not to reveal her inner life. It's a pretty rareified relationship, but I think Taylor played it about right in not giving them a happy ending, though a not a terribly tragic one either. At least, I assume Vesey will survive what ails him.


Do you have more difficulty understanding what Vesey sees in Harriet? Or do you have more difficulty seeing what Harriet sees in Vesey?
Or neither?


The thing with 'the road not taken' is that it's very easy to imagine that things would be different/better if only we'd made other choices, but just one choice would have created an entirely different reality.
I wonder how happy Harriet would have been if she'd married Vesey. Hard to imagine her being happy trouping around drab little towns as he moved from theatre to theatre, but then again, perhaps if he had married Harriet and had a family, he would have taken a job with his father and resented the hell out of Harriet for it.
I thought Julia was a great character. Horrible m in law though

Maybe she would have ended up marrying Charles, or someone like him anyway. But she would have come into that marriage better armed.
My question is, what are we to make of Betsy? She is supposed to be in some sense a later version of Harriet, I think, but her passions aren't given the serious treatment by Taylor that she gives her mother. I did like the scene where even as she is getting Miss Bell to help her believe that Vesey is her father, she betrays the truth by making a gesture made by Charles's mother. Although of course Miss Bell doesn't know.

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Here is the page on Goodreads where you can read more about the book's details, including the NYRB Classics blurb.
Enjoy the book and the discussion!