ext_22937 ([identity profile] lilliburlero.livejournal.com) wrote in [community profile] trennels2014-08-08 07:11 pm

Falconer's Lure readthrough: Chapters 10 and 11

Thank you very much to guest posters [livejournal.com profile] highfantastical and [livejournal.com profile] sprog_63 for their thoughtful and detailed prompts to discussion; I’m very grateful to both of them for taking over.



Patrick’s behaviour at the beginning of this chapter is quite enjoyably scrubby, I think, but it’s still rather scrubby. The Sprog’s choice of Nicola (who has, after all, been paying him more attention) perhaps shows the Sprog wiser in his choice of friends than Nicola herself. But I think it becomes clearer still here that Patrick’s interactions with the hawks are deflections and proxies for his grief for Jon; Nicola has a more direct affection for them as creatures in themselves. It’s a nice play on ideas of sentimentality: Patrick might seem the less sentimental in recognising that the Sprog is no sport, and letting him go, but the complex of reasons he does so are actually very much tied up with human sentiment; Nicola, though she might seem to be soppy about the Sprog, has a disinterested care for him as a living creature.

Peter’s feelings about his ciné-camera are marvellously knotty and difficult, I think: his sense of shame and alienation from the family since the cliff incident, his loss of confidence in himself are combined with the thrill of secrecy and aloofness in a very psychologically acute passage.

Lawrie reneging on bargains is characteristic throughout the books, but I’m always interested when Forest deliberately exempts Nicola from direct action (I have an affection for The Thuggery Affair which may not be widely shared.)

Anyone else think it odd that claustrophobic Ginty should even think of ‘skulking in a cupboard’ to avoid the Regatta? Just Forest nodding, or actually a nod to Ginty’s odd mixture of real and fabricated phobia and trauma at this point in the narrative?

The officious duo of Colonel Benson and Captain Marlow getting everybody organised is a delight, and surely worth a fic drabble at least.

Nicola’s patent pleasure in Peter’s win of the dinghy race, and Rowan and Ann’s suppression of same, is interesting in the context of the Marlows’ relationship with the community (and indeed of their conspicuous achievements at Kingscote): so is, perhaps, the rough consolation given Lawrie on her coming last in the swimming: ‘Everyone would have thought of us as That Awful Family That Wins Everything.’ Rowan is, perhaps understandably, since she’s got to live with it full time from now on, but a little uncharacteristically (?) particularly concerned to make a good impression.

We get a little more detail about Ginty’s invention of her marine phobia; and about Unity’s modus operandi. ‘It was sort of a game, a competition Unity had with herself--how mich more hurt and misunderstood she could be than anyone else in Upper IV’: it’s not quite clear in context if this is a move into 3rd person omnisicent narration or a realisation from Ginty’s point of view, but it seems to mark a turning point, as Ginty recognises that she might prefer Monica’s less invasive support.

Nicola’s application of her knowledge of Patrick’s shyness to her mother’s refusal of lunch at the clubhouse is a nice touch, I think: showing her growth of emotional perceptiveness across the novels. Mrs Marlow’s dismissal of Mrs Benson as suburban is inflected with class and perhaps some reflected Senior Service snobbery; useful for pinning down the Marlows’ sometimes nebulous class position: ‘explicitly’ is a perfectly delightful adverb there.

Karen is cross this hols, isn’t she? Snapping at Ginty’s lachrymosity might be understandable, but her bark at Lawrie over the wishbone seems grumpy. Guilt over Rowan taking over the farm?

I enjoy the comedy of the suggestions for Geoff’s ‘ship-warming’ present: so very characteristic of each family member. Nicola has retreated from her insight about shyness into the more childish attitude of being disgusted by the suggestion of a family photograph (I do like it that Forest shows emotional growth so realistically, in fits and starts, not as a steady teleological progression); Lawrie’s ‘binnacle’ always makes me giggle, as do Nicola’s Hornblower-inspired musings. I’m afraid I do imagine Geoff sniggering over the dirty bits in Pepys.

The teasing over the wishbone leads very believably, I think, into the more serious family dynamics of the conversation about Ann. Karen crunching her siblings again; though it’s Rowan here who’s really caustic. Peter seems to see some humour in Rowan’s put-down of Nicola, though I’m not surprised that Nicola doesn’t; perhaps Peter is just relieved that he seems to have got away without being unflatteringly characterised. And what a nice characterisation of Peter: ‘I can do all mine for myself’. He can, too.

Karen’s reaction to Ginty’s disappearance contrasts neatly with Ann’s concern and Rowan’s anger--which, natch, doesn’t affect Rowan’s swimming and diving performance--even Nicola keeps a cooler head than their eldest sister, in reminding her of the futility of worrying Mrs Marlow in addition to it all.

There is fic about this moment in Falconer’s Lure, incidentally.

I love the passage about Peter and Patrick in the diving competition. Peter’s resentment of Patrick overwhelming his pleasure in his other achievements--the very solicitous and sporting other competitors Nine and Thirteen: do they sense some of the atmosphere surrounding Peter and Patrick, somehow?--the Childe Roland allusion (Selby’s rather well-read, isn’t he? And I adore the flashback to Lieutenant Bethune on the bus and his comment about Hamlet; there are a couple of other references to Peter and Hamlet in the series, aren’t there? Hmm)--the magical thinking which links the poem to Dead Man’s Drop--Patrick’s ‘formal but somehow coaxing’ apology--the final irony of Patrick being the first to hear about the ciné-camera.

And finally in this chapter, the rebukes administered to Ginty and her abandonment of Unity-esque sensitivity. Again, I think this is a great bit of characterisation: Ann exasperated to her limit; Rowan furious and contemptuous (does Rowan feel the least bit remorseful about having bullied Ginty into entering the competition?) I feel for Ginty when Mrs Marlow tells her off, though--’if someone wants you to do something you don’t want to do, just say so’ rather underestimates the various pressures on her.





The brief sketch of Ellen Holroyd’s tea-party, its excitements and disappointments, is tantalising (this has been your regular scheduled &c.)

Ginty trying to ingratiate herself always makes me feel a bit glum, but she does seem to become friendly with Nicola again over the course of this chapter. She’s shed her opposition to blood-sports, we notice, and is looking forward to hunting. Some towny naiveté still in evidence in ‘we wouldn’t have to pay for stables and feed and stuff. It’s all at Trennels anyway’? Whatever about livery stables, feed still has to be paid for! I like Nicola’s ambivalent attitude to riding: it is presumably something she enjoys, in a sense, but it’s vexed with her sense of not being terribly competent or comfortable in horsy company. Her dismissal of ‘Pony Club types’ has an inflexion that reminds me of Mrs Marlow’s dislike of the bridge-and-golf set, and leads neatly on to Ginty’s uncomfortable reminder of Rowan’s rebuke to both of them.

Ginty’s social antennae are very lively, as she picks up information about the Reynoldses; it’s Nicola, typically, perhaps who notices that brother and sister don’t seem affectionate: the groundwork for the episode of Wendy’s cheating is being nicely laid here, I think.

Ginty’s sublime unconcern about the family being ‘stung to death’ echoes and contrasts with Ann’s concern about her at the Regatta very neatly, and also with Ann’s later panic over starting a fire in the attic. I also enjoy Ginty’s capacity to be wickedly amused by imagining Unity moving in on her next victim, though it perhaps reflects rather poorly on her.

Nicola’s silent misery over Wendy’s behaviour contrasts neatly with Patrick’s officious indignation, I think; and I enjoy the Greek chorus of Fred, Len and Syd.

Is Ann’s action so very ridiculous? We’re never given much information about the size of the fire, but it is structural, in a roof beam; I would have thought it was a situation that might be worth risking a false alarm.

Lawrie’s method of informing Wendy of her mistake (and discombobulating her in the process) is splendidly pointed, I think: it’s hard to sympathise with Wendy, given that’s she’s willing to risk serious injury to people and horses in pursuit of her vendetta, but there’s a cruel streak in what Lawrie does nonetheless.

Nicola’s divided loyalties over Patrick and Rowan in the jumping are very finely done--the reminder of Jon’s remark about Patrick’s guts always gets me, for some reason. And its culmination in Nicola’s horrified guilt at her own motivation for being upset at Rowan’s fall is Forest at her interpersonally complicated best. Nicola’s embarrassment at Oliver’s offer of the money twists the knife beautifully. Squirm.

The management would like to point out that Patrick Merrick has nothing to do with its LJ handle. (Tristram Shandy and the World Service, if you must know.) Patrick is not exactly gracious in victory: though I very much like the touch that he will tease Nicola about her fall to her face, but recount the truth of the matter to his father in private. As it happens, he has the truth of the matter in Nicola not being shaken and upset because of Rowan’s fall or her own, but there’s a cheerful, callous self-centredness there which is faintly reminiscent of Lawrie. I do wonder if that’s an unconscious attraction for Nicola; Patrick of course, rather dislikes Lawrie, and finds her foolish. Finally, Sprog is saved by the sale of the book, though not, as it happens, renamed Horatio. (It wouldn’t suit him.)



Many thanks again to our guest posters, and to everyone who’s participated so far: go for it!

I think there was general agreement that a break at this point might suit us all. Can I propose that we resume discussion on 29th August with End of Term? That should let most people get their summer hols out of the way (and write some fic?) and has a pleasing confluence with the back-to-school mood of the novel.

Before I go, I should just mention that legionseagle has given the hall-stand a happy ending in this fic, which also features a cameo by a teenage Robert Anquetil, already Bristol-fashion, bless his cotton socks. It was a great relief to me to know that the hall-stand did not end its days far from sea.

Re: Greek chorus

[identity profile] bridgetblood.livejournal.com 2014-08-12 12:59 pm (UTC)(link)
Yes good point re experimental language.
legionseagle: Lai Choi San (Default)

Re: bridge and golf

[personal profile] legionseagle (from livejournal.com) 2014-08-12 03:56 pm (UTC)(link)
I read that personally as "not our sort" because boring, rather than in class terms - after all, Pam must have been pretty absorbed in hunting as a girl, given the information, and Rowan ticks Nicola off for being "hawks and Navy" as a sort of equivalent to "bridge and golf".
coughingbear: im in ur shipz debauchin ur slothz (widget)

Re: bridge and golf

[personal profile] coughingbear 2014-08-12 04:54 pm (UTC)(link)
That's how I read it too. I think I also saw it as a slight age thing, rather than class - bridge and golf to me read slightly older than Pam Marlow, and perhaps associated the senior service wife thing. We don't really see her do any Navy wife stuff; I prefer the image of 'Mum in the Malta snaps', dancing all night.

[identity profile] thekumquat.livejournal.com 2014-08-12 08:19 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you! Even if it did take half an hour to escape from TVTropes...

Re: *I* shall be all right...

[identity profile] intrepid--fox.livejournal.com 2014-08-12 08:50 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm pretty sure it's the only time in the entire series that Ann makes a joke.

Re: *I* shall be all right...

[identity profile] ethelmay.livejournal.com 2014-08-13 02:05 am (UTC)(link)
It's not even so much that she makes a joke, as that she goes along with a gentle mockery that everyone else is involved in, and *in the same way*. Ann's participation in that was definitely something I noticed.

Re: What's behind the title?

[identity profile] schwarmerei1.livejournal.com 2014-08-13 09:12 am (UTC)(link)
Big question for me is the title. I've thought of several possible takes on it: Is Patrick the falconer or the lure? Or is Jon the falconer and Trennels the lure?Or is Nicola the falconer and Patrick the lure? Or perhaps it is the free spirit of the falcon that lures Patrick, Nick, and Peter? What do all of you think.

I assumed the title was meant quite literally (and darkly.) The lure in falconry is a fake bird used for the raptor to chase and learn how to take a real quarry. In FL it's described as actually having scraps of meat attached to be extra tempting. So it's something enticing that turns out not to be the real thing. There's a lot of things that could apply to in this novel: false sentiments, illusions of friendship, decisions about one's future.

Anyone else?

BTW, sorry to have disappeared from the readthrough (not that I was commenting much) -- my main fandom interest had our annual ficathon, so I've been too busy for the last few weeks. It wasn't a matter of losing interest!
Edited 2014-08-13 09:16 (UTC)

Re: Karen/Rowan/Ann

[identity profile] sprog-63.livejournal.com 2014-08-13 09:26 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you, delighted to have given pleasure :-)

Re: bridge and golf

[identity profile] colne-dsr.livejournal.com 2014-08-14 10:51 pm (UTC)(link)
My take would be that bridge and golf are her only topics of conversation, and that in her presence no-one else is allowed a topic of conversation.

Re: What's behind the title?

[identity profile] colne-dsr.livejournal.com 2014-08-14 10:54 pm (UTC)(link)
"Lure" has to be a noun, because there's an apostrophe in "Falconer's".

Re: What's behind the title?

[identity profile] sprog-63.livejournal.com 2014-08-15 04:50 am (UTC)(link)
Ah yes, so it does. My turn to kick the sheets tonight!!
legionseagle: Lai Choi San (Default)

Re: bridge and golf

[personal profile] legionseagle (from livejournal.com) 2014-08-15 07:12 pm (UTC)(link)
Yes, that sounds very plausible.

[identity profile] mudkickerkicks.livejournal.com 2014-08-15 11:56 pm (UTC)(link)
Although it doesn't fit in with her short temper in the scene where they all fill in their forms for the Regatta, I always assumed Karen was snappy here because Mrs Marlow had just left and she was therefore now responsible for her siblings.

This works with the beginning of Autumn Term, where she is in a (reasonable, imo) flap about being in charge of the Family At School (she always has been, of course, but this is the first time the 'delicate twins' are going away. And her misgivings are justified when Nicola pulls the communication cord and Karen is crunched so humiliatingly by Miss Cromwell).

Going back to the 'filling in forms' scene, I think her snappiness at Ginty was a way of AF showing readers again that Ginty was being precious a la Unity Logan. (Although I do thoroughly agree with earlier comments that Rowan, one of my favourite characters, was a complete Bossy Type here and that if I were a younger sister I might well dig my heels in too.)
Edited 2014-08-16 00:14 (UTC)

Re: Patrick/Peter/Nicola/fear

[identity profile] mudkickerkicks.livejournal.com 2014-08-16 12:45 am (UTC)(link)
'whereas Peter can force himself to go along cliffs or enter diving competitions, Patrick can't make himself go to a house to see a friend in case he has to meet anyone else.'

But isn't that rather more mature of Patrick than Peter? (And I am assuredly not a Patrick - or indeed Peter - fan.) Maybe it's to do with Patrick not having hordes of siblings to tease/bully him if he doesn't want to do anything, so being able to be confident in what he wants and doesn't want to do. I personally, while an outwardly Confident Type, am very upfront about my shortcomings in being social around large groups (although I hope I am never rude...).

I do agree that Patrick's social anxiety (he is certainly not *shy*, I think, by the lordly way he talks to Nicola when they first meet) is his phobia just as Peter's is heights. But he is maybe less crippled in the sense of 'internal critic' by his phobia than Peter.

I love your insight into Ginty being impressed by Nicola here. While Ginty is obviously seeing her family in a kinder light now as she's Trying Her Best, I've always found this section quite sweet in the Ginty and Nicola bonding. I read FL, PR and MATT after all the school books and think Ginty comes out rather well in several chapters here compared to the school books, and MATT especially.

(Also, very much enjoyed your 'Ginty in Ireland' chapters, especially as I'm from N Ireland - looking forward to more.)
Edited 2014-08-16 00:48 (UTC)

[identity profile] mudkickerkicks.livejournal.com 2014-08-16 12:59 am (UTC)(link)
Indeed! I love Sprog and think it's appalling that Patrick decides to just dump him and it's not seen as a bad thing in the authorial eye. Obviously Patrick is still upset about Jon, I am reading this through modern eyes and hawks aren't exactly pets, but it's really rather shabby.

Re: Greek chorus

[identity profile] mudkickerkicks.livejournal.com 2014-08-16 01:19 am (UTC)(link)
Hmm. As a woman reader, writer and feminist I think you make a very timely point about men's experimental-in-dialogue fiction being treated much more favourably than women's, and about adult books treated differently than YA. And I shudder to think of the reaction if a woman had published A Clockwork Orange! But - while I love AF - Thuggery is generally accepted as her weakest work, and the dialogue just doesn't work. It feels forced and is dated. A Clockwork Orange is in a very different class, genre and readership - I so agree about sexism in literature, but think these are two very different books.

Re: *I* shall be all right...

[identity profile] mudkickerkicks.livejournal.com 2014-08-16 01:29 am (UTC)(link)
Me too. I liked Ann here, and it did make one more sympathetic for her heated rush to Trennels to look for Ginty.

I wonder if Sally Hayward (sp?) in Spring Term referenced that particularly? Nicola, Esther and (I think) Miranda, say '*I* haven't read any letters. Have you read any letters, [Esther]?... *I* haven't read any letters. Have you read any letters, [Miranda]?' etc. I do like Spring Term. But this is o/t, so...
Edited 2014-08-16 01:32 (UTC)

Re: *I* shall be all right...

[identity profile] sprog-63.livejournal.com 2014-08-16 05:44 am (UTC)(link)
Yes, it is good for me to remember that there is more to Ann than Nicola sees.

(I wondered that about Spring Term too! And the way that Esther joins in, which parallels the way Ann does here. In fact one of the things I like about that book is the way Ann is developed as a character.)

Lawrie / Ginty parallels

[identity profile] sprog-63.livejournal.com 2014-08-16 07:14 am (UTC)(link)
After Lawrie changes her mind about participating in the events, I laughed out loud this little insight into her warmish behavior. “She had spent a good deal of time proving to herself, without complete success, that it had been perfectly all right to go back on that impulsive offer. She'd only made it because she'd thought she wouldn't be there. So when she did know—. But all the same, it wasn't absolutely satisfactory. And it was very low of Nicola to keep reminding her.”

Ginty has a similar moment when she bumps into Ann she "didn't want to be conscience-stricken" ... but for precisely seven words she does feel a bit abashed at Ann's concern taking her on a long, hot, unnecessary walk. By the next sentence, however, she is comfortably mentally blaming Ann for "haring round, being so busy" and absolving herself of any responsibility whatsoever, whilst simultaneously being righteously indignant at Ann other for making her feel bad (just as Lawrie is indignant at Nicola).

I am reminded too of Lois' thoughts in Autumn Term justifying why there is no need to do anything about the Court of Honour, especially the brush with self knowledge that actually they (Lawrie, Lois) are deceiving themselves, which they quickly skirt around? In each case they know they have behaved badly, but cannot tolerate this. (I guess we come back to this in EOT.)

However, for Ginty, is this the start of her retreat from following Unity? Though as we are not given her thoughts while she is watching the family come up from the beach, it is hard to be sure what form this shift actually takes: is it fuelled by her moment of empathy for Ann / conscience or solely by her wanting her family's approval more than Unity's or by a true realisation that pretending to feel things you don't has real impacts on other's lives or something else I am missing altogether? (I wish we did have her inner thoughts here - like Peter's on the cliff's ... I suspect I am not sympathetic enough to Ginty to write this, but I'd love to read it!)
Edited 2014-08-16 07:17 (UTC)

Re: Greek chorus

[identity profile] mudkickerkicks.livejournal.com 2014-08-16 12:29 pm (UTC)(link)
I wonder if it's also because Forest is seen as a 'children's writer' and therefore not to be taken seriously? But I'm not sure people overestimate Burgess - A Clockwork Orange is an innovative book and I think deserves its success.

I agree about Forest experimenting more in the home books. I think though that the main reason I'm not too fussed on Thuggery is [spoiler] the plot - barmy as you point out, but also the only Marlow book where I dislike the main characters for most of the story. The language grates rather, but as you say, it's a linguistic experiment so I find it easy to skim over. But I should save specifics for when we get to Thuggery...(thanks for organising these readthroughs btw, I've been lurking avidly).

*skips off to read the link*

Re: *I* shall be all right...

[identity profile] mudkickerkicks.livejournal.com 2014-08-16 12:34 pm (UTC)(link)
Yes, I noticed and liked the way Esther joins in there, and when I read FL recently thought of it when I got to that part. There's something quite heartwarming about seeing a character normally 'on the edge' be part of the 'inner circle', even if Esther is on the edge because of her own shyness and insecurity rather than being disliked.

I liked how Ann was developed in Spring Term too. Although after recently - finally - getting to read MATT, I am more sympathetic to Ginty than I previously was having only read the 'term' books!

Re: *I* shall be all right...

[identity profile] mrs-redboots.livejournal.com 2014-08-16 02:55 pm (UTC)(link)
But Esther does join in occasionally - as we shall see when we re-read END OF TERM in a week or so; the occasion when Miranda and Tim are having a fight about Nick and Lawrie, and Miranda says something like "Lawrie is spoilt, isn't she?" and Esther firmly says yes..

She may be very shy, but she will stand up for herself when she has to, even if she is a bit feeble at times.

Lawrie is an ass

[identity profile] sprog-63.livejournal.com 2014-08-17 05:32 am (UTC)(link)
Somewhere I have read a short but delightful stream of (Esther's) consciousness fic for this passage ... but I can't find it on Ao3 or here.

Hopefully someone can link to it? Send me a message with a link and I will? I'll go on looking anyway ...


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