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Two Lives: Reading Turgenev and My House in Umbria (1991)

door William Trevor

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In Reading Turgenevan Irish country girl is trapped in a loveless marriage with an older man but she finds release through secret meetings with a man who shares her passion for Russian novels. My House in Umbriatells of Emily Delanhunty, a writer of romantic novels, who helps the survivors of a bomb attack on a train to convalesce, inventing colourful pasts for her patients. Two novels, two women who retreat further into the realm of the imagination until the boundaries between what is real and what is not become blurred . . .… (meer)
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Two riveting stories or novellas or whatever they need to be labelled. "Reading Turgenev" and "My House in Umbria" have subtle links with respect to the women who are the principals of each story. The action in both unrelated pieces takes place in 1987. Both women have endured hardship and lack of love but each eventually makes some lemonade out of the lemons they have inherited. The are survivors of utterly different personal histories who at a late stage in life emerge as redeemed.
William Trevor is a superb writer - full of compassion, unsentimental, and one who lets his characters control the action.
  ivanfranko | May 5, 2023 |
Two novels by William Trevor in one volume. Reading Turgenev is the tragic story of Mary Louise Dallon, who marries a man twice her age for the stability and the opportunity to move from the family farm into town. They apparently never consummate the marriage and she suffers harassment from her husband’s two sisters. Mary falls in love with her cousin, is presumed mad, and finds a way to escape the marriage for thirty years.

In My House in Umbria a fifty-six year old Englishwoman knows how to survive: “Men have offered me gifts, probably all of which I have accepted.” She has a past, perhaps unsavory, which has financed the purchase of a house in Umbria which she shares with Quinty, an Irishman who “can be dubious to a degree that makes him untrustworthy.” They run the house as an “informal hotel” and she has written and had published several romance novels while there. She is the victim of a terrorist bomb on a train and when out of the hospital offers several other victims use of her home while healing. Her full shattered personality and past traumas then come to the surface.

Two excellent novels, which is really the only kind Trevor wrote. ( )
1 stem Hagelstein | Sep 19, 2022 |
(49) Every time I read one of Trevor's short novels (and all of his are short,) I am reminded that fiction can be art. Not in a gimmicky, reductive, pretentious way a la the last book I read (We The Animals) but in a beautiful, tight, quiet and powerful way. 'Two Lives' is interesting in that the book consists of two seemingly separate novellas, yet the page count doesn't start over with the second and the title clearly is meant to encompass our two female protagonists.

'Reading Turgenev' in my opinion is the stronger novella - a young Irish girl, afraid of leading a too small life, marries a dullard of a man much her senior, to escape the family home. When she finds herself disappointed, she retreats into a fantasy. This is a similar story in 'My House in Umbria,' just a completely different woman in completely different circumstances - but still, retreats into a fantasy life given the ugly realities that have made up her real one. 'Turgenev' was so sad and powerful in Trevor's understated way - you could feel Mary Louise's quiet desperation in her every action and reaction - the writing is just exquisite. I did not enjoy 'Umbria' as much (though I think there is a movie based on it) - Mrs. Delahunty was harder to empathize with and her fantastic musings were not as affecting for me. This novella brought the rating down a bit for me as I was ready for this tale to wrap up. And I thought the wrap up would be better than it was.

Overall, this is lovely fiction -- Memorable, powerful, dramatic tension and crystalline prose with remarkable few pages. Perhaps the best living writer? 'The Story of Lucy Gault' remains my favorite. ( )
1 stem jhowell | Oct 21, 2018 |
Two novellas, of which the first only was short-listed for the Booker Prize. Reading Turgenev is a very moving, tonally exquisite novella about a young girl from a dying protestant community in Ireland, trapped in an unhappy marriage in one time frame, and about to be let out of mental hospital into care in the community in the novel's present. As the onion layers of the novel are revealed, a narrative of love and freedom, found in the most unexpected of places reveals itself in Mary Louise's brief love affair and her collusion in her capture. A surrounding cast of characters in the narrow community, claustrophobic and closed, act as a chorus of counterpoints. For me this was much better for being juxtaposed with My House in Umbria - a first person narrative with a crackingly unreliable narrator. 'Mrs Delahunty', a lady of dubious past, doubtful name and a taste for the local hooch, runs an occasional guesthouse in Umbria on her shadily gotten gains. A train crash brings her together with a small band of survivors and begins a story that might be entirely fantasy or perhaps, on some deep level, true. Women's lives, and unexpected ones, are at the heart of each of these.
1 stem otterley | Jun 3, 2015 |
I'd never heard of William Trevor but I enjoyed the two novellas here very much. The first, "Reading Turgenov", drew me in quickly. It made me think somewhat of Doris Lessing's The Grass is Singing, a young wife driven to madness by her situation. Here it is hard to put a finger on what it is. Certainly you are not meant to even remotely like her two harpy sisters-in-law but her weak husband and reticent family are also part of it. I liked the way it moved bewteen times in the chapters, slowly bringing the past and present together. Dark and more than a little depressing but well done. The second, "My House in Umbria" was a bit more difficult. I was unsure what to expect and I think the narrator as the mildly delusional Mrs. Delahunty made it hard to follow the ins and outs. I couldn't really get a grip on her, perhaps that was the point. Well done as well but a bit more enigmatic. Worth seeking out more by this author.
1 stem amyem58 | Jul 3, 2014 |
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In Reading Turgenevan Irish country girl is trapped in a loveless marriage with an older man but she finds release through secret meetings with a man who shares her passion for Russian novels. My House in Umbriatells of Emily Delanhunty, a writer of romantic novels, who helps the survivors of a bomb attack on a train to convalesce, inventing colourful pasts for her patients. Two novels, two women who retreat further into the realm of the imagination until the boundaries between what is real and what is not become blurred . . .

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