The curse of a big hit by Sandra Horn
I can’t remember now how many years ago it was when I first
read Stella Gibbons’ Cold Comfort Farm, but I do remember the delight I felt in
the cast of comical grotesques and the mad inventiveness of the wonky cows, the
sukebind, the whatever-it-was in the woodshed that Aunt Ada Doom saw, that
‘something nasty’ that sealed all their fates. My husband shared my enjoyment of the book but
sailed a bit close to the wind when he christened my parent’s smallholding,
which was indeed in deepest, darkest Sussex, Cold Comfort Farm. We’re still
married and I am still inclined to mutter, on occasions when I’ve achieved
something I alone find praiseworthy, ‘I ha’scranletted the bottom acre.’
I once sent a copy to a friend who was in need of cheering
up and she phoned to say that at first she hadn’t realised it was satirical and
wondered what on earth I had sent it for. I was reminded of the business of
‘not getting it’ recently by Bill Kirton’s humourless and dopey reviewer who
thought his characters unbelievable – and a writing workshop when someone
reproved another writer with ’You can’t call a character Chardonnay, it’s not a
girl’s name, it’s a kind of wine.’ Point of the skit missed completely.
Thinking about not getting it, Cold Comfort Farm has been
adapted for radio twice and made into a film. One of the radio plays got it
horribly wrong. For a start, rural Sussex isn’t Somerset (or Mummerset either) and camping up the
‘Oo-aar’ just wrecks the humour. It’s not meant to be a pantomime and it is
much, much funnier if played straight, or even better played down, as if Flora
Poste is telling it.
Stella Gibbons is a terrific writer, but Cold Comfort Farm
must have been a mixed blessing. It made her name, and I hope, her fortune, but
then she was stuck with it. There are two further stories about the
Starkadders, Christmas at Cold Comfort Farm, and Conference at Cold Comfort
Farm, with long intervals in between. I can almost hear her publisher nagging
her for more of the same...I thought Christmas at CCF was a sequel, which is
why I bought it, but it is actually a collection of short stories, only one of
which is about the Starkadders and the furore caused when Carrie Beetle removed
the coffin nail from the luck charms Adam Lambsbreath had put in the pudding:
‘him as gets the coffin-nail will die afore the New Year.’ The other ‘charms’
confer variously grisly fates: him as gets the sticking plaster’ll break a
limb; the menthol cone means as you’ll be blind wi’ headache; the bad coins
means as you’ll lose all yer money; the mirror’s seven years bad luck for
someone.’
All the other stories are like
her novels (she wrote twenty-five in all), stylish, beautifully crafted, subtle
and often bitter-sweet. She’s particularly good at portraying the sadness in
the lives of women, young and old, confined by the expectations and manners of
the times they live in and finding little oases of happiness. I ’m reading my
way through all I can find now I only
wish she was more widely known for all her other works; Starlight has its full share of odd characters, it’s true – odd but
endearing; drawn from life but enlarged and given sparkle.
Here Be Dragons deals with the shackles of enduring love for the
wrong and entirely undeserving
person.
I’ve found two more on Kindle and I
shall keep looking!
Comments
Your blog makes me feel that I must put that right. But which to choose?
The only plate to hand was unbelievably filthy, unacceptable for a guest even to Mrs F. A cat was walking past her at the time, so she casually scooped it off the floor in one hand, and rubbed it across the plate held in the other. Cold Comfort Farm? For cissies!
This story is true. As is the fate of the cake. I ate it...
But thanks for the pointer to Gibbons's other books - I must give them a try.