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Poor Caroline (1931)

door Winifred Holtby

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Winifred Holtby (1898-1935), journalist, critic, feminist, pacifist and author won the James Tait Black Memorial prize with South Riding, her last novel.
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1-5 van 11 worden getoond (volgende | toon alle)
‘Poor Caroline’ was the fourth of Winifred Holtby’s six novel to be published and it is a little gem, quite unlike the three novels that came before but recognizably the work of the same author; and another book that made me think what a distinguished and era defining author she might have become, had she only been given more years to live and to write.

The novel opens with two of Caroline Audrey Denton-Smith’s young cousins coming home to Yorkshire, after attending her funeral in London. They had felt no great grief for the woman they had never really known or understood, the woman their family had always regarded as a figure of fun; but they had enjoyed their trip to the big city and they had come home with a lovely new winter coat.

Their attitude was sad, but it was understandable.

The Caroline they had known had been a small, plump elderly spinster who dressed eccentrically, who had lived in the poorest of London bedsits, who borrowed money that she had no hope of paying back; because, though she had many grand plans that she was sure would make her rich and successful, they had all been hopelessly impractical.

She wrote a will full of generous legacies, but when she left this life she had not a single penny to her name.

Her last enterprise was the Christian Cinema Company, through which she planned to make British films that would be a corrective to the immoral offerings of Hollywood. She found some support, she was able to assemble a board of directors and a little financial backing, but of course that wasn’t enough and the project – and Caroline – were doomed.

Each person who sat on the board of directors each had their own reason for being involved with the company.

The chairman was a minor aristocrat who was quite unqualified, but his wife had pushed him towards the position as she thought he would be happier if he had something to keep him busy.

A single-minded young inventor signed up because he was sure that the company would want his new type of film; and not realising that while he had been beavering away in his laboratory the film industry had developed something much better.

A Jewish businessman agreed join the board and agreed to provide some initial finance, in the hope that the chairman would arrange entrance to Eton for his son.

The proprietor of the Anglo-American School of Scenario Writing had put himself forward knowing that the company had no chance of success but quite certain that he could make himself a profit from a bunch of amateurs ….

Caroline was blind to all of this, she worked hard as secretary to move things forward, and two well meaning individuals helped to keep things going.

Eleanor de la Roux, a distant relative of Caroline’s, came to London from South Africa after her father had been killed in a car accident. She was an independent young woman who wanted a career, and she was inspired to invest most of her inheritance to to help the one relation who had welcomed her by a sermon …

Father Roger Mortimer, Caroline’s young and earnest parish priest, preached that sermon, and he was drawn into the Christian Cinema Company by his concern for a vulnerable parishioner and by his growing love for her young relation.

Each chapter is devoted to the story of one of these characters. The story-telling is immaculate, and I couldn’t doubt for a moment that Winifred Holtby had considered every detail of the different people, lives and relationships. They were beautifully observed, they were gently satirised, and the different stories spoke about so many things: class, race, faith, prejudice, family, loss, philanthropy, ambition ….

Each chapter was absorbing, and could have been the foundation of a different novel.

The ongoing consequences of the Great War were very well considered; and the many serious points were perfectly balanced by a rich vein of humour.

Every chapter ends with the words ‘Poor Caroline’ Each character sees Caroline in a different light but whether they are contemptuous, frustrated, infuriated or bemused, they all see her as a woman to be pitied.

But consider her words to a younger woman:

‘My dear child, when you’ve lived as long as I have, fighting and striving for what seems impossible, you’ll know there are some questions best left unasked. It will be. It must be. Faith. I will have faith until the heavens fall. Don’t you see, dear, that for people like us, who step off the beaten track and dare to scale the heights, there is no retreat, no turning back. There is no ‘If not’. It must be.’

‘What do you know about the worst? Wait until the iron has entered your soul, Wait until you have gone down to the depths in utter loneliness and risked everything, everything, even your own self-respect. Who are you to tell me about the worst when you have always led a sheltered life, with capital behind you, and a university education? When you have accepted the conditions that lead to utter nakedness of spirit? When your relations wondered if it wouldn’t be safer and more economical to get you certified and put away quietly in a nice mental hospital? When that have told you to give up the struggle and live on an old-age pension in a home for decayed gentlewoman? When there has been nothing, nothing left except success?

This is the story of a woman who had little education, who hadn’t married, who had worked to support herself, and who when she could work no more found that society had no place for her.

The way that is threaded through this book that told me that Winifred Holtby knew that the world had to change, that she knew how and that she knew why.

The book is strongest when it is considering the character and their stories, rather than the rather improbable story of the Christian Cinema Company. In many ways, it is quite unlike anything else of Winifred Holtby’s that I have read , but I saw common threads and shared concerns, allowing it to sit very well alongside those other novels.

‘Poor Caroline’ is both thought provoking and entertaining – I loved it! ( )
2 stem BeyondEdenRock | Feb 22, 2019 |
I can’t help but think this novel would be helped by a better title. ‘Poor Caroline’ is such a negative sounding title for this, the fourth novel by Yorkshire author Winifred Holtby. From the first page, it is clear this is a fond but sharp satire of the inter-war years showing how the expectations of people can on the surface appear aligned but in reality are self-serving.
Caroline Denton-Smyth, honorary secretary of the Christian Cinema Company, works hard in the belief that her company is doing good. But the people on the board of directors each have their own reason for being involved with the company, reasons that are not admitted and which diverge hugely from Caroline’s intentions. One hopes to leverage connections with the chairman to gain entrance for his son to Eton. Another wishes to sell his new type of film. Caroline has so many ideas but little success. At the age of 72 she has no money and is dependent on loans from long-suffering relatives. But she is always hopeful. This is the story of Caroline, her fellow directors, and the Christian Cinema Company. Holtby tells the story of each person in turn so the full picture, and the extent of Caroline’s folly, becomes evident. You can’t help but feel simultaneously sorry for her and exasperated with her inability to see the truth.
It is a while before we meet the eponymous heroine. First we learn of her death, as some distant relatives return from her funeral. In her will, Caroline left bequests of money she didn’t have. “Oh, you can’t alter people like Caroline. She always thought she knew better than anyone. She was always going to do something extraordinary.”
Two scenes in particular stayed with me. The description of the odious Clifton Roderick Johnson’s screenwriting class is a classic. He spits instructions to his paltry four students. ‘They did not know, and indeed Mr Johnson hardly knew, that their lecturer who spoke so confidently of technique, cuts, drama and royalties had himself been able to sell for performance only one scenario and a set of captions.’ And the storm at film inventor Hugh Macafee’s derelict warehouse when he continues to work despite the efforts of two fellow directors to evacuate him before a wall collapses.
This novel requires patience, to allow the author time to draw the full scenario so the true manipulations, fraud, dissembling and love, can unfold.
Read more of my book reviews at http://www.sandradanby.com/book-reviews-a-z/ ( )
  Sandradan1 | Aug 15, 2018 |
Back in the London of the 1920s, Caroline Denton-Smyth had an idea. Cinema was in its infancy, its direction was unsure, but the possibility of it being used in questionable ways was certainly there. Caroline decided she would form the Christian Cinema Company. Its object was to "...combine profit with pioneering and produce only absolutely one hundred per cent guaranteed pure films - talkies and all - made in Britain. You know. The sort the curate could take his mother to."

Caroline knew nothing about the pioneering science of films and very little more about profit, but she was of the sort for whom such limitations were to be dismissed as mere quibbles. Her task was to find a board of directors.

[[Winifred Holtby]] starts her novel with an Opening Chorus, in which Caroline's second cousins have just returned from her funeral, a great excuse for a shopping and theatre expedition to London. Their description of Caroline as a woman who "...would cadge, borrow or steal from anyone in the world that she could get hold of" is brutal, and immediately gives the reader a decidedly less than favourable impression.

Holtby then devotes a chapter to each board member in turn. Each was in it for their own ulterior motives. None, with the possible exception of the young assistant Anglican priest, actually believed in the cause. While some of the characters' descriptions seem somewhat of a cliché, Holtby writes of them so well that this can be forgiven, for her sly wit rounds them out.
Hugh Angus MacAfee, so far as he was made at all, was a self-made man. The great disadvantage in making oneself lies in the difficulty of getting both sides to match. Hugh's development was distressingly one-sided. ...

To do him justice, he was not dissatisfied with his own production. Disapproval was his favourite hobby, but he rarely applied it to himself.

As each member's story is told, we see not only their motives, but also their thoughts on Caroline and her company. While each person offers a different perspective, they are all in agreement with one sentiment, for each chapter ends with the refrain "Poor Caroline!"

Was she a pitiable deluded old spinster in her lonely bedsit, a conniving swindler, a motivated crusader? Did her board members get what they wanted or wind up getting their just deserts? There are hints in the last chapter, the Final Chorus, recounting the day of the funeral, but wisely Holtby lets the reader decide.

An entertaining read, but very much of its time and place.
2 stem SassyLassy | Nov 15, 2016 |
This book begins with the title character's funeral. Caroline Denton-Smyth is an eccentric lady whose great project was a Christian Cinema Company intended to produce good clean British movies for the viewing public. Each chapter talks about the key figures in Caroline's life and how she becomes an object of derision or pity. This book is recommended more for those who prefer character sketches over a plot; I became weary about halfway through and decided to peek at the end to see how one of the plot threads was resolved, rather than continue with the book. I also found the character of Clifton Johnson annoying because he was described as a Canadian but his speech patterns were much more American; his dialogue grated on the page.

If you're going to read Winifred Holtby, read South Riding instead. ( )
  rabbitprincess | Oct 25, 2016 |
this was funny but so many characters just passing through. ( )
  mahallett | Apr 12, 2013 |
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» Andere auteurs toevoegen

AuteursnaamRolType auteurWerk?Status
Holtby, Winifredprimaire auteuralle editiesbevestigd
Davidson, GeorgeIntroductieSecundaire auteursommige editiesbevestigd

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On that April evening, in 1929, the five-thirty train from King's Cross to Kingsport was half an hour late.
Poor Caroline was hailed as 'easily the wittiest novel of the season' upon its appearance in 1931. (Introduction)
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His new ideas ... had just reached that stage when the first delicious movement of creation stirs the faculties. Afterwards would come labour and disappointment, but at the moment no details clouded the fluid and radiant vision of achievement.
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She turned up the ends of her thick curling hair with a pair of heated tongs. She was trying out the tongs on a sheet of the Churchman's Weekly, left in the flat by an Anglo-Catholic charlady, and the smell of scorching paper mingled pleasantly with the scent of [her perfume] and cigarette smoke.
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Winifred Holtby (1898-1935), journalist, critic, feminist, pacifist and author won the James Tait Black Memorial prize with South Riding, her last novel.

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