Backlisted - Maiden Voyage by Denton Welch
Episode Date: July 11, 2016Richard King, author of 'How Soon Is Now' and 'Original Rockers', visits Backlisted to talk about Maiden Voyage, an extraordinarily vivid memoir by Denton Welch of his early life in England and China.... Timings: (may differ due to adverts)8'08 - Tristomania - Jay Griffiths16'25 Moonstone: The Boy Who Never Was by Sjon24'02 Maiden Voyage by Denton Welch* To purchase any of the books mentioned in this episode please visit our bookshop at uk.bookshop.org/shop/backlisted where all profits help to sustain this podcast and UK independent bookshops.* For information about everything mentioned in this episode visit www.backlisted.fm*If you'd like to support the show, listen without adverts, receive the show early and with extra bonus fortnightly episodes, become a Patreon at www.patreon.com/backlisted* To purchase any of the books mentioned in this episode please visit our bookshop at uk.bookshop.org/shop/backlisted where all profits help to sustain this podcast and UK independent bookshops.* For information about everything mentioned in this episode visit www.backlisted.fm*If you'd like to support the show, listen without adverts, receive the show early and with extra bonus fortnightly episodes, become a Patreon at www.patreon.com/backlisted Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
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Benefits vary by card. Other conditions apply. I've got to leave this podcast
and go and get a train up to Cheshire
to do the Alderley Edge walk
tomorrow morning
and Peter Hook
no it's the other two isn't it that live near Alderley Edge tomorrow morning. And Peter Hook. And Peter Hook.
No, it's the other two, isn't it, that live in the elderly edge?
No.
No, they live in Macclesfield.
Outside Macclesfield.
So I've been to there, and they do have
tanks and light
armoury vehicles
on the premises.
What, Gillian and Stephen?
No, Stephen's got a collection
of attack vehicles.
It's better than being passive-aggressive, isn't it?
Just aggressive.
Just by attack.
Aggressive, aggressive.
Is he interested in World War II or something,
or just armored vehicles?
Well, Geordie doesn't have quite the kind of...
They had a hint of that, didn't they?
...contentious relationship with the...
So, at the weekend at the whitstable
biennale or biennial both of which were used by one person when describing it a nice event to be
fair it was very nice one of the events there was i went to a really good really interesting
talk by philip hall and i went to another one with Olivia Lang.
That was really fascinating.
And I also participated in the all-day public reading
of All the Devils Are Here by David Seabrook.
How did it go?
Oh, God, it was such a strange but great event,
as you would expect.
Was anyone listening?
So what happened was
it was in the it was at the Whitstable Museum in the courtyard behind the museum
and the day started at 11am with a panel of people who'd known David Seabrook at different
times in his life the filmmaker Paul Tickell the writer Ian Ian Sinclair, and a friend of his from university.
And what became very clear very quickly is that Seabrook was every bit as idiosyncratic
as you might expect, and that Sinclair said he'd met him in the 80s when Sinclair had
a bookstore very near where we're talking now in the old
market which isn't really there anymore up at Angel. The Angel Passage. Yeah so he had a bookstore
there and Seabrook would come seek him out and press pamphlets on him that he Seabrook had written
and then more or less recite them to Ian Sinclair.
And Sinclair said that all the devils are here.
He said bits of all the devils are here.
He can remember David Seabrook shouting at him in the 1980s.
I imagine that David Seabrook wasn't big on personal space either.
No, indeed, as you would expect.
Like we said, he gives you an ear bashing,
gives the reader an ear bashing they'll never forget.
But saying there must have been,
all the devil's here is made up of other bits and pieces that he wrote.
Where those might be now, nobody seems to know.
Where the manuscript of his third book might be, nobody seems to know.
And the other thing that's worth saying, I won't go into detail here,
but that his friend from university, you just had to say to him i really like david's work and he
would laugh it clearly clearly you know what the more i find out about the more fascinated i am by
him anyway the reading itself over the course of the day was just really really good people came
and went.
Some bits were incredibly engaging, other bits weren't.
But I don't know if anyone listening to this
has read All the Devils Are Here since we talked about it.
The thing that kept happening while people were reading
is you would drift in and out of listening to it,
and then suddenly there'd be some little sentence or fact
or rant that would pull you right back into the present right back into the
book again exactly that thing we talked about of having somebody buttonholing you in the corner of
a pub really really good and it lasted about eight hours this reading was it a way of praising the
book in terms of being able to tell what as it was being read out this
is a weak passage this is a good passage this is holding people's attention this isn't yes uh although
if i were being scrupulously honest i would also say it was a very good control over the varying
reading abilities of those people involved right if you were given as was, a bit of a court report to read and you've never seen it before, which was the case in this,
the plucky member of the public who volunteered to come and do that
clearly struggled with it,
and so maybe the text didn't survive that too well.
But then once you got show-offs,
as such, with myself...
Which bit did you read?
Andrew Mayall was there and Jason Haisley
was there and he read chapter 1
chapter 2
chapter 3 and chapter 4
I read the beginning
of the Broadstairs chapter
and then a little bit later on
something else
because somebody had dropped out
so I didn't make it to Deal
I didn't make it to Charles Hawtree.
But I did get to do the Lord Haw-Haw bit,
which I was very pleased about.
It's just remarkable.
What a great thing to have done.
I'm really pleased they did it as well.
I mean, it's a weird thing to do, isn't it?
It's an odd book, I would have thought, for a read-through
because it's so strangely personal.
I always think
of it like a one of those sort of 60s nouvelle valve documentaries which is the jump cuts lots
of jump cuts and and non sequiturs and sort of strange it's it's i mean but in general i thought
it stood up really really well to being publicly declaimed yeah and the other thing the other thing
was that there was a slight element of because as I say people, the audience came and went, as is the nature
of these things, there was a slight element
of if a tree falls in a forest and no one
is there to see it
at various points. It's a temptation not just to start
embroidering, just to kind of
start making up, just to see
if everybody was paying attention
Which poor person got the final
chapter? I don't know
I was longer
I enjoyed it, don't get me wrong
As Steve would say
As Steve would say, it was time for me to go
It was time for me to move on
Hello and welcome to another edition of Backlisted
The podcast which seeks to give new life to old books
As ever, we're seated in
the offices of Unbound, the website which brings readers and writers together to make great books.
I'm John Mitchinson, the publisher of Unbound and I'm Andy Miller, the author of the year of
reading dangerously and we're joined today as ever by the writer and iconoclast Matthew Clayton.
Good afternoon. We don't say that.
Iconoclast, Matthew Clayton.
Good afternoon.
Oh, we don't say that.
Folk of Nancy, as he's known to some.
And we're also joined by the author and thinker, Richard King,
author of a wonderful book that came out last year called Original Rockers,
which has just come out in paperback.
Hello, Richard.
Hello.
Do you know, if you call someone an iconoclast,
I always think of Captain Haddock.
That's your zoops.
Exactly. I think it of Captain Haddock. That's it. Exactly.
I think it's a real compliment.
Because he was iconoclastic?
His vocabulary, I think, needs
to be reintroducted to the national
curriculum.
He had an obituary
in the Times, didn't he, famously?
Captain Haddock. No, no, no.
I think he was Captain Birdside.
No, that's not it.
So, yes, we're joined by Richard Kim Richards,
and Richards has chosen a book for us to read,
which we're going to be talking about in a while,
called Maiden Voyage by Denton Welch.
Yes.
Denton Welch and Tintin may have had something in common,
if I think about it.
Yeah, that's quite a nice little unexpected segue.
John, qu'est-ce que c'est que tu as lu pendant cette semaine?
I've been reading a remarkable book by a remarkable writer, Jay Griffiths,
called Tristomania, A Diary of Manic Depression,
which may sound like a bit of a downer,
and indeed there are some very, very harrowing passages in this book
but I guess most people who know Jay Griffith's work
will probably know her for her remarkable book
Wild about really our relationship with the natural world
which I think is a kind of ur-text
for what we might call the new nature writing
Yes, I think it's a book that's for what we might call the new nature writing. Yes.
I think it's a book that's started a vogue for putting the writer in between the landscape and the reader,
something Richard Mabey did as well.
And I'd say that this vogue has now possibly reached,
possibly verged on the unfashionable now.
I think too much nature writing
is memoir and autobiography and a nice long walk.
Yeah.
Well, indeed, all of those things do take place in this book,
although I would say, like in any genre,
there are people who do it well
and there are people who do it less well and i like the cut of jay griffith's uh jib a lot because i think as a
kind of you know i think she sort of started it in a way richard maybe with nature cure a book
that i like less than i like tristamania although there are very much uh we'll get depressed after
there are connections well i mean you get depressed after. There are connections.
Well, I mean, you know, in the book,
there's sort of the background, I suppose.
She puts her kind of cards on the table fairly early on,
saying, you know, hypermania.
There's a difference between depression and manic depression.
She likes to call it manic depression rather than bipolar.
I mean, she's alive to words.
Tristomania, which is the title of the book,
was coined by an 18th century American psychiatrist
called Benjamin Rush.
And she says it works perfectly,
she says, for the tristesse, the distress coupled with mania,
which a mixed-stake bipolar episode provides.
And the book is an account of a a major episode in her life she
was finishing uh the the the book kith which is about children another remarkable book um she was
in a kind of a heightened state anybody's ever written a book and has worked through the proofs
and the index and the the stress of getting into publication knows that you're probably in a
in a fairly vulnerable state something very unpleasant
happened to her which kick-started a a manic depressive episode but being a kind of a writer
i guess the point of this book is to explore she writes at one point a rather beautiful way she
said it depression is like an octave played below reality mania is an octave played above and she writes in a way the book
is more about the mania than it is about the depression which i think it's if you were going
to get kind of artsy-fartsy about it if if uh you know the noonday demon by andrew solomon which i
think is probably the the great modern text you know our version of the anatomy of melancholy
about depression if that's like a
sort of 19th century symphony, this is definitely, this book is definitely a kind of a chamber piece,
a late Beethoven quartet. She gets very, very sick, and she heals herself by walking the Camino
to Santiago. And in its baldest kind of way way that is the journey that she takes but the brilliant thing
is that she writes I think more accurately about that sense of the connection between trying to
take the most complex psychological states that you find yourself in she writes with such precision
that's her language doesn't ever kind of get sort of soppy or saggy. And even if you haven't been through this, she's also a scholar.
She doesn't just give you the here is my sad, unhappy episode,
make of it what you will.
She kind of burrows down into it.
So one of the things I liked, just read a little tiny bit here,
was about the word woad,
which woad was the old English word for mad, meaning frenzied.
And it was replaced in the end by mad.
Mad denotes the crazy state, but it connotes little.
Woad, though, carries connotations and etymological links
which give insight of a whole other order
into the madness of manic depression.
The Indo-European root is wet, to blow, inspire, and spiritually arouse.
Wet is the source of the Latin vates, meaning seer or poet,
and also the source of the Old Irish word faith, or fate, meaning poet. Woad is linked to Old
English woath, meaning sound, melody, and song, and cognate with the Old Norse odir, meaning mad,
frantic, furious, violent. As a noun, odir means mind, wit, soul, sense, song, and poetry. Woad is
linked to Odin, too to god of war and wisdom
shamanism and poetry the roman historian tacitus considered that mercury was the chief god of the
germanic tribes almost certainly because he saw in odin the qualities of mercury odin like mercury
was a guide of souls and was said to have brought poetry to humankind anyway just a kind of a little bit of the journey that the book takes you on if you have
ever had to uh uh deal with anyone if you've ever been depressed or you've ever had to deal with
anybody being depressed i mean i would recommend that this book is a as a brilliant it would sit
alongside andrew solomon or the very great book the unquiet mind kate redfield jameson as a really
it i, without being
in any way insulting to Matt Haig, who also wrote a very good book, this is a very different order
of book to Matt Haig's book. It's deep, it's deep and elusive. There's a wonderful passage
where she's talking about plea bargaining. Mercury is the god of mania. She's plea bargaining with
Mercury. And it's just a tiny little bit more, just to give you a sense.
Because one of the amazing things about the book is it ends up in poetry.
So she says, I was bargaining hard with Mercury.
Give me metaphor and I'll let you run wild in my mind.
But if you continue to make me lose my mind,
and your job in myth was to find Psyche, not to lose her,
I will drag you down to earth with drugs.
So behave a little bit better, Mercury. just a bit, or be damned with drugs,
for I have to find a softer landing to plinlimmon,
powis, happiest country in Britain, of which I am not a shining example.
Then Mercury offered truce terms to psychiatry in turn.
Now he was plea bargaining.
Keep the doses low and I'll give you poems.
Deal.
A game of forfeit played for poems
now there's maybe an archness
to this but actually
the wonderful thing
at the end of the book she puts the poems that she wrote
and they're wonderful
it's the first time I've read
Jay Griffith's poetry and it kind of works
so the book for me was
there are a lot of books about depression out there, there are a lot of books about depression out there.
There are a lot of books that are there to help people.
This is not, you know,
I'm not suggesting that this should be sort of issued
to everybody who's in that condition.
But if you're a thoughtful person
and you're interested in the relationship
between language and the mind anyway,
this is an extraordinary book.
I like books, I have to say,
increasingly that show
a sort of iron discipline
over particularly unruly subjects,
which this clearly does,
while managing to retain some of the energy...
She's got that sort of forensic skill.
She just writes with such fluency and such honesty.
And, I mean, there's also, as you could get a little bit in there,
there is a sense of humour. I mean, she's a a little bit in there there is a sense of humor she I mean she's a very serious writer but
there is a sense of humor in there then the madness that kind of antic and I
was like also I was lucky enough to see her read from it at Hay on why I'd never
heard her read before she's it was pretty mesmeric it's anyway so I huge
hugely recommend it it was also it's a it's a I think a really genuinely
important addition
to the canon on literature.
You know, William Styron, that kind of...
Follow that.
Yeah.
But to more cheerier clients, let's go to...
Not necessarily, but I'll give it a go.
Let's go to Iceland.
Okay.
Andy, what have you been reading?
Yeah, so I've been reading a book, a new novel by the Icelandic writer Sjón, S-J-O-N, called Moonstone,
to which has been appended in the English translation a subtitle that I'm not actually going to repeat
because on reflection it's a spoiler for the whole book it's better if
you don't know what the subtitle is i'm looking over your shoulder now to see what it is myself
all right okay you see what i mean yeah you know yeah that's the that's the twist i'm looking at
i'm wondering what that adds do you think um novels should have subtitles? Sure, why not?
Sometimes, maybe.
There's a lot of shrugging, nodding, shaking of heads going on around people.
I hate it when it says, I've always hated a novel.
A novel, yes.
I think in contemporary art,
pieces of work that are called untitled
rather than just without a title.
And non-fiction that has a subtitle
that often is made of two clauses
are both real...
I think they both undermine the work itself
and they're definitely barriers to entry.
That would be a good thought.
But they also bring
the whole process of the back end
of how things are hung on a gallery
wall or how things are published
into the reader or viewer's
mind and they don't need to be there
Unnecessary handrails, it's a huge problem
in our culture, it's sort of
art sort of lacks
such confidence that you know
Take the stabilisers off.
Yeah.
Well, we're talking of stabilisers.
Shut up!
Right, so this book by Searn called Moonstone.
I, as a long-term listener will remember,
went to Iceland a few months ago
and was recommended before I went several books about Iceland,
including a short and brilliant novel by Cian called The Blue Fox.
This was published in Iceland,
Moonstone was published in Iceland about three or four years ago,
and similar to The Blue Fox is a very short novel.
I hesitate to say novella because...
A ugly word.
Yeah.
But also his books, I now realise,
are like incredibly condensed epics
that they manage to deal with
a real historical sweep of events
and also a brilliant shifting of perspective
as the book goes on.
He does that in The Blue Fox
and he does it in moonstone
where you suddenly are wrong-footed as the reader by trying to work out whose version of events you
are reading and whose version of events you have been reading which is why i don't want to mention
what this subtitle is um because it spoils one of the very brilliant and rather psychedelic shifts of tone towards the end of the book.
This is set in Reykjavik in 1918-19.
It's based around the early days of Icelandic cinema,
and it's also based around the arrival of Spanish flu in Iceland.
It sounds like you just pick three random subjects.
I know, but therein lies the genius of it.
To have woven those things together,
all of which would provide other writers with epic novels
on one relentlessly flat plane.
You know, here he manages to weave in and out of these big stories.
I'm just going to read this very, very short bit.
This is after the arrival of Spanish flu.
Reykjavik has undergone a transformation.
An ominous hush lies over the busiest, most bustling part of town. No hoofbeats,
no rattling of cartwheels or rumble of automobiles, no roar of motorcycles or ringing of bicycle
bells, no rasp of soaring from the carpenter's workshops or clanging from the forges or slamming
of warehouse doors, no gossiping voices of washerwomen on their way to the hot springs, no shouts of
dock workers unloading the ships or cries of newspaper hawkers on the main street, no smell
of fresh bread from the bakeries or waft of roasting meat from the restaurants. The doors
of the shops neither open nor close. No one goes in, no one comes out, no one hurries home from work
or goes to work at all. No one says good morning, no one hurries home from work or goes to work at all.
No one says good morning, no one says good night.
You know, like, it's like a brilliantly, deliberately,
postcard-like evocation of something that isn't there at all.
How unlike the home life of our own dear Queen.
And so I found with both of the novels by cn that i've read they are you can read them in a matter of two or three hours but then they just lodge in your head for days and i found this one
particularly really you know we were talking about a few episodes ago about barbara cummings
this has a similar kind of and
in fact maiden voyage to bring it around but we're going to talk about today it has a similar domestic
nightmare element that you feel you know where you are and then something literally and metaphorically
feverish grips you the reader and takes you somewhere you don't want to go and at the end of this book there is the most fantastic um uh
twist in that narrative thing that i'm talking about which is like something that john fowles
would have done in the 60s very heavily and laboriously in the space of two sentences
it's so exquisitely, carefully done.
And it seems to me that with Shem,
the whole idea of his books is all about restraint and balance.
They wouldn't work if you had one or two sentences too heavy.
You would tip the thing over.
I really, really...
I can't recommend them highly enough.
And I also feel he's a writer like all great writers,
like Denton Welch, like B.S. Johnson, as we've said before,
where the more of their work you read,
the more brilliant their work becomes.
Because you begin to understand the territory
that they've mapped out for themselves.
And they're all essentially the same book.
That too.
Is there much more in English translated into English?
Yeah, there are four or five, but there are more in Icelandic.
And if you're listening to this, Sjön...
Is he extant, Sjön?
Yeah, he followed us on Twitter.
We love you.
Well, I love you. I can't speak for the others.
No, as always, that's a remarkably alluring
bit of book.
That thing about novella,
you say, nobody
refers to As I Lay Dying as a novella,
do they? Or The Great Gatsby.
Or The Great Gatsby.
45,000 words, The Great Gatsby.
I apologise
to listeners. We're drifting
into the publishing world chatter,
but what is a novella?
I mean, is it a long, short story?
I think that it doesn't really, those terms are not really made up, isn't it?
Fiction.
We'll pick this up again after some marvelously witty and interesting adverts.
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So, we have
it's a bit all fiction.
But that's appropriate to make a voice.
Well, actually it's very, very appropriate to make a voice
because it's quite odd
that this book isn't.
That's the first thing that struck me is that you pick it up and it's quite odd that this book isn't. That's the first thing that struck me,
is that you pick it up and it so feels like a novel to begin with
that it's quite difficult to take it as a memoir.
But maybe that's a way of opening up Denton Welch, who he, what this book...
Richard, do you want to say a little bit about Maiden Voyage?
Yes, Maiden Voyage is...
John's point about how or why you'd need to categorise it
is very germane because I think some people have read it
thinking it's a straightforward autobiography.
Some people have read it as a piece of fiction.
I think it...
Not only does the subject, but the way in which it's written map its own world and fall through lots of cracks, deliberately so.
We've all read lots of books where we're aware that there's something uncanny happening between the author and the world around him.
There's a very lovely looking copy of The Rings of Saturn on the shelf behind John.
Most of the books I've read in that idiom tend to have been written by people who have lived
and lived quite heavy lives.
The Rings of Saturn, of course, starts off in a hospital bed.
This is a book which has that sense to it but is written by a young person
and there is something rather overwhelming at the surface and then being submerged again
throughout this book where the youth overwhelms the author but he also appears to be so old beyond his years
and there's a self-consciousness
throughout it
that borders on the confessional
and there's always this sense
that we're actually going to have
the reveal of what's actually going on
and it never quite arrives
I think I should
just do what we do
on Backlisted
and read
I've got an old
lovely
old Penguin edition
of this
the blurb on the back
is actually a
biographical note
about Denton Wells
the blurb
here is on the
inside cover
so I'm going to
read the blurb
it says
and I have to say
I'm going to say
this in advance
i read this earlier and thought i wish blurbs were like this now okay here we go in her forward to
maiden voyage dr edith sitwell describes denton welch as quote a born writer and it was by the
publication of this his first book that he achieved his place in English letters. The opening
chapter has given account of his last term to public school and of his running away on the day
he was to return there. After that his father who was at that time in China wrote suggesting that
his son should go out to join him and so it was that he went to a country whose atmosphere could
not have been more suitable for his inquiring and unusual mind.
He observed everything, missed nothing,
and deliberately involved himself in every variety of experience.
And he records it all here,
the events, impressions and sensations of his maiden voyage
with amazing frankness and simplicity.
That's pretty good.
That's pretty good, isn't it?
I have an extract here from his final days at public school.
Shall I read that?
Yeah, do do, please.
To give a sense of his tone and indeed his self-consciousness,
we mentioned.
This is chapter 9, the beginning of chapter 9.
One cold morning, the whole school stood on the field
where the monks had once had their tile kiln.
We were waiting to be marched off in companies to Willington.
We were going to have a field day.
I looked to see what my rations were.
I found an apple, a pork pie and a bar of chocolate.
The shouted commands rang out excitedly in the clear, biting air, and I felt suddenly
thrilled, as if our pretense at soldiering were serious and heroic. There was nothing serious
about our railway journey. Some people expressed themselves by ordering coffee with two lumps of
sugar wrapped in paper, just as if they were independent citizens and not schoolboys.
just as if they were independent citizens and not schoolboys.
But others seemed to want more scope.
One unfortunate in my carriage had his trousers taken off and chewing gum rubbed in his pubic hair.
He screamed a lot, but I think he really enjoyed the publicity.
I'm going to just very quickly add to that.
There's a wonderful bit when
he leaves his school for the last time
with his brother
I think this is legitimate because
what we need to say about this book
is that it has, being able to tell you
what the plot is, it's almost impossible
to tell you what the plot is
but the style
in which it's written is everything
and there's a part here I just want to draw attention to specific words
that made me occasionally laugh because I thought they were so perfectly chosen.
So they're on a train moving away from the school.
We ate our breakfast flippantly,
knowing that we would have our real meal on the train.
My brother with four others had chartered the ancient Rolls Royce to take us to the station.
It swayed rakishly like an enormous perambulator.
I looked out from its dark felt and leather interior and said goodbye to everything at once to the houses the trees the hills the boys the masters to the lovely church
and the sore red gymnasium as we rocked past the village cross we saw with amazement that the ball
had been broken off the top it lay at the foot of the steps amongst thick white pieces of broken
crockery someone had evidently tried to crown the cross with a chamber and the
top had broken off. We gave mock groans to show what a dreary old joke we thought it was.
I secretly thought it very daring but was furious that the ball had been broken off the cross.
I was glad to know afterwards that it had fallen on the toes of the vandal and it crushed them
black and blue. It was thrilling to be in your own clothes again,
to feel the softness of the collar,
and to be hatless.
I mean, I...
John, did you enjoy reading this?
Yeah, I've got another...
I'll read it in a minute, just because...
I can't remember...
Page by page, I think it's just a remarkable...
You know that thing about a great work sort of makes its own genre?
Because what is this?
Exactly, yes.
And I think what I think now is that I'll read things
that will remind me of Denton Welch.
Quite.
And if you've not read it, it's quite difficult to explain precisely what the, but the beginning of this book is one of the most, it's just one of the most remarkable
sort of almost, it almost has that sort of Dickensian, slightly, slightly kind of trippy
where he goes, he decides he's got five pounds in his pocket and he goes to Salisbury and then
to Exeter and then walks to Budleigh Salterton
He acts, first of all
the character within the book
it seems to me, acts almost exclusively
on impulse. He does. But then he's
recalling with brilliant clarity
the emotional process
that has caused that behaviour
Which reminded me of sort of
almost like a sort of modern Copperfield
There is that but all those Dickensian characters come from which reminded me of sort of almost almost like a sort of modern copperfield or i mean it's there
is that but all those dick engine characters come from you know they don't come from this position
of privilege and wealth and it's his self-awareness at where he's coming from and his desire to go and
look at cathedrals yes it's sort of precocious and 16 year old yes and so it's really benefited
him this education this position he's in in society,
but he really reacts against it with every footstep away from the school
and every wander around the cathedral.
And he's so aware of his own sense of uniqueness or his own perceived sense of uniqueness.
And he goes back to the blacking factory and it turns out to be actually fine.
You know, you're dreading him going back to school.
It's fine.
But actually, you know...
He's a bit of a hero.
Yeah.
And everybody treats him quite nicely.
Yeah.
It's a very, very peculiar and strange
and addictive book, I think.
I absolutely loved it. you richard yeah for
making us read it i absolutely loved it and the book it it reminded me of several books it but
they're all books that it strikes me that are not necessarily easy to read but which once they are
in there sit in your head for months and years afterwards
I read last year
Stevie Smith's novel
on yellow paper, it really reminded me
of novel on yellow paper
it has that same kind of
I am writing with almost insolent
selfishness about the things I
want to write about
and there's an investigation of sexuality in both
but it also has that really um uh huisman's like compulsion to meticulously catalog everything
to pick up every precious object be it an antique or a thought or a feeling and describe it accurately to find it and then set it down
again without breaking it it's so careful so it made me think that chatwin must have been
yes absolutely yes well i first heard of dental welsh through reading modern nature by derek
jarman which i think is is think is the ure nature book
that doesn't get mentioned in all these litany of...
Brilliant, yeah.
One of the best books about landscape
and written by someone who could actually do some gardening
and lived in the middle of nowhere.
So this extract from Modern Nature.
Finished my breakfast on the sofa,
covered by my grandmother's old travelling rug.
I read Denton Welsh's memoirs,
crystalline descriptions and acute observations.
I wish writing came naturally to me.
Now, there are a couple of things going on here.
One, talking about grandmother's old travelling rug
is pure Denton welsh this
this fetishization of the object in the heirloom and and having a sense of the sort of um
hinterland of where the object came from secondly i don't know if you've seen the films jarman made
for marion faith or broken english uh black and white films, not really videos. So when are we talking about? That's the early 80s, isn't it?
Very end of the 70s, early 80s.
But they are figures wearing amulets and helmets and Greek masks,
and they're all caught in the sunlight.
I don't know quite what it has to do with Broken English,
but as usual, it's an incredible piece of dream cinema.
And this idea of light reflecting off objects
and objects having a value beyond their material value
seems to me Welch sort of drifts through life
needing to find these objects as a kind of map through his own life.
And he did collect them, didn't he?
He collected little silver...
Silverware China.
I mean, there's one line,
I don't want to misquote it towards the end of the book,
where he goes to an antique sale with his friend
who says, oh, they've got some quite nice pieces there.
And he says something like,
oh, I love looking for bits of China when I'm in China that aren't from China
he really likes
other people not knowing as much as him
or getting built by
other
antique dealers doesn't he?
he likes seeing
people waste their
money on fakes and he
at the end of the book, without spoiling anything,
he tries to kind of rinse his father of the heirlooms
that his mother would have given him.
Can I read a talk just on objects
and the psychological value of objects
and the way that he's able to...
and how objects stand for...
You know, like in the Harry Potter parlance,
a kind of horcrux, you know,
with lots of emotions kind of vested in these things.
He's remembering an occasion with his aunt,
who he has a complex relationship with.
At last something happened which shook our confidence in each other.
We were on board ship and my aunt had come to see us off.
As we waited for the siren to blow,
I asked my aunt if she would let me play with her ring.
It was a strange scarab, most fascinating.
I think I really imagined that it was alive.
She took it off, gave it to me,
and went on talking to my mother.
Leaning out of the cabin window to get more light,
I held the ring above my head and gazed at it.
Then something happened. The next moment I heard the ring rattling down the and gazed at it. Then something happened.
The next moment I heard the ring rattling down the slit into which the window frame fitted.
Too horrified to speak, I just looked at my aunt.
I saw the realisation of what had happened dawn on her face.
The whole partition would have to be taken down before the ring could be found.
My aunt picked up the box of little wooden toys she had given me.
Each one was a perfect little teapot, coffee pot or cup and saucer. I loved them. She held them by her
shoulder for a moment. Then she threw them far out into the sea. I saw them sailing lightly on
the water. I cried out for someone to save them. And when no one moved, I started to scream
uncontrollably. I knew that my aunt was the wickedest woman in the world
I must I just there's a brilliant quote from um the galley beggar publisher of published
ebook editions of these books and each one has a new introduction made in voyage the introduction
by Susie Fay but the introduction to Welsh Welch's second book in Youth is Pleasure is by Steve Fimbo.
And Steve Fimbo wrote this, which is very relevant, John, to the bit you've just read.
He said, Welch's characters are always a little grotesque, somewhat ill,
and verging on the insane, but only in the way that we all are.
That's genius.
I read the journals before.
Ah!
Ah!
Dealing with the journals.
Wah, wah.
Listeners to Batlisters will know that journals occupy a special place.
In fact, the only Doton Welch that I had read before Maiden Voyage
were the journals.
Very unusual for me.
And I'd read them on our guest's recommendation,
who, understanding how my
brain works brilliantly
had said to me have you read
the journals? I went
no
and you said? I said
something along the lines of
they are as if
a Stanley Spencer painting could come to life
I received a copy for
Christmas immediately.
They're wonderful.
I have just a couple of very short sentences by Welsh standards
here from the journal that I think really evoke that.
This is from 1943.
A woman on a chestnut horse has just ridden by,
looking romantic against the background of steel blue
shallow hills and bleached cornfields. The sky is thickly clouded, heavy with rain that won't fall.
I've eaten chocolate and cherries and read two stupid short stories by Somerset Maugham.
I would like to build a tower here on the top top of this hill, with three storeys, a kitchen and living room on the first,
a bedroom and bathroom on the second,
and a gazebo and workroom on the third.
Perhaps on top of that, pillars holding up a lintel, but no roof.
I would like to lie in the tower, quietly, forever.
That's great.
Just one more thing to say about the fact
that was written in 1943 and he was a young
man crippled
and who wasn't
couldn't partake in the war obviously
and lived in Kent
if you think of war
novels, war literature
wartime literature so
Hangover Square was 41
Nigel Bolchers, the one we did
recently was 41 as well
the green novels, Brighton Rock
leading up to the war and you know Brighton's
not that far from Kent
they're all full of
I don't want to say
spivs but you know what I mean, they're down at
heel people, they're people who
are living fairly sordid lives.
And it's rare... It's not rare,
but it's wonderful to see the country and the countryside,
especially, described by a young man during that time
with such wide eyes.
And the cynicism of war is lacking entirely through these journals.
Can you tell us a bit about Denton himself?
Well, I was just going to... Andy's going to do that. I was going to do that. Andy, can you tell us a bit about Denton himself? Well, I was just going to... Andy's
going to do that. I was going to do that. Andy, can you tell us
a bit about Denton himself? Yeah.
So I'm just going to read this biographical note.
You're sitting constantly, children. Here we go.
So Denton Welch was born in Shanghai
in 1915, the youngest of four boys,
to a wealthy British-American
family. After leaving his English boarding
school, Repton, Welch
decided to follow his dream of
becoming a painter and studied art at Goldsmiths in London. The physical injuries sustained in a
cycling accident in 1935 however saw him increasingly turn towards a hitherto secondary
interest, writing. When Welsh's debut Maiden Voyage was published in 1942 it was an instant literary
sensation. Quote, I have been told that it reeks of homosexuality,
wrote Winston Churchill's secretary.
I think I must get it.
This was followed by In Youth Is Pleasure in 1945,
and after his premature death from spinal tuberculosis in 1948,
the publication of his unfinished masterpiece a voice through a cloud
quote if any writer has been neglected it is denton wrote william burrows in 1985 but well
she's also a writer who has attracted a firm coterie of admirers ranging from orden to alan
bennett edith sitwell to john waters and then there's a quote here by edmund white that i would
like to um also draw your attention to. When I was reading this,
I said it reminded me of, said it reminded me of Stevie Smith. It reminded me of somebody else,
and I couldn't put my finger on who it was. I knew that I really liked it. What is this? I can't
quite. Anyway, and then I found this quote from Edmund White. Denton Welch is one of those mysterious writers who are always interesting.
The more his world is reduced to a hospital room and a handful of human contacts, the more
fascinating he becomes. It is the precision of his observations, the fierce but gentle strangeness
of his personality, or his love of nature that captivates the reader. Like Jean Rees,
Welch has the power to generate interest
out of even the most meagre materials.
He had this gift from the beginning,
but suffering and illness refined it into a white-hot flame.
And the thing about Welch, which...
I mean, I just want to read everything by Denzel Welch now,
is that as his career goes on,
which I mean I just want to read everything by Denzel Welch now is that as his career
goes on
his horizons
literally become more
and more limited that he can
first of all he can't leave the house
very often then he can't write much
he can write two or three sentences a day
so to be able to summon
up the energy
not exactly to write
but to recall with such precision as mentioned
by ben white and i think that sense of isolation that was precipitated by his illness and and that
sense of being confined allowed and and to only have his own source material his own life as source
material to to dwell on allowed him to write about his sexuality in a way that I think at the time
definitely caused ripples, but also there's a wonderful uncertainty about it. I mean, obviously
he's, in the way that Spencer admired men's bodies in the paintings of Crookham and loved flesh,
that was, for Spencer, that was an act of faith and born of religion. But in Welch, it's similar,
but coming from somewhere very different,
and is very rarely resolved.
The sort of homosexual almost encounters
in Maiden Voyage are extraordinary.
They really are.
Oh, no, they are amazing.
And the fact that they're used in a kind of...
There's an ebb and flow of them,
which actually, within the novel... You know, the thing that's're used in a kind of, there's an ebb and flow of them, which actually within the novel,
and we could, you know,
the thing that's so interesting about this book
is that you've talked about,
John and Richard,
you've both talked about the extent
to which this has some relationship to nature writing,
that it has, you know,
there's the idea of going out and looking at things,
being part of the countryside,
but it also has a very contemporary auto-fiction thing going on,
where you use fiction and you barely change the names or events,
but you use fiction to tell the story you want to tell.
Which, of course, you could say you could do in a memoir,
and yet this doesn't feel like a memoir, does it?
It feels like a novel.
It feels like a book written by Dental World mean that's the absolute truth i mean that's what i i
it's because we say i mean it's it's a you kind of it meanders you don't know where it's going
it sort of stops it's it's not i like there's a great quote by alan bennett i'm just trying to
one of the things i love is the idea that you go from Edmund White and Burroughs
and Brian Geisen, who also really liked his work,
but then Alan Bennett says that reading the journals,
he says it's a script for a documentary by Humphrey Jennings
or notes for a film by Michael Powell.
That's sort of true.
And you think you have got that Jennings, Michael Powell, you've got that kind of
Stanley Spence, you've got that incredibly
English. Dream vision.
And Jarman, which I think,
but then you've also got this kind of American
sort of sensibility as well,
which sort of goes into beats
and into boroughs.
I've got a tenuous link for once.
I'm going to ask you,
you assembled experts, which influential figure on the punk rock
scene said the following of denton welch denton welch is not many of them red so
okay exactly wait till i give you not so vicious denton welch is like a British baby Proust
in his astounding grasp of his own usually mundane experience.
Nothing much happens in his books but the most wonderful writing.
Can I say John Savage?
It's not John Savage.
It's definitely not Tony Parsons.
I'll give you a clue.
It's an influential American figure.
Richard Hare. It is Richard clue. It's an influential American figure. Richard Hell.
It is Richard Hell.
That's brilliant.
Well, actually, that makes sense.
But that's that Burroughs sort of Warholian kind of...
And Richard Hell ran away from his boarding school.
Did he?
Yes.
Where's Tom Verlaine?
And Verlaine, I was just about to say, Verlaine and Rambo,
that's all part of the same stew.
There's a lovely... And Verlaine, I was just about to say, Verlaine and Rambo, that's all part of the same stew.
There's a lovely, I did find one lovely John Waters quote also about the Germans, which is,
so precious, so beyond gay, so deliciously subversive,
it's enough to make illiteracy a worse social crime than hunger.
Like John Waters.
Oh, thank you.
For me, it really, it reminded me of what I was like as a teenager,
that feeling of you're on kind of tenterhooks constantly.
And being convinced that everyone is laughing.
Can I just say, if you've ever heard...
That's really true.
Just on pure writing, this is Victoria Station in the evening,
but listen to this.
Victoria seemed like a dark, cloudy aquarium where great black eels
wriggle swiftly into swallow-up
mouthfuls of small, eddying fishes.
From the crowd, faces glanced
up, pale and floating, like spirit
pictures. Just incredible.
Incredible, isn't it?
And don't you think, John, it's
as you say at the start of the
book, he goes on this, he
is trying to leave himself and leave everything.
And The Maiden Voyage is the journey back from that first point of departure.
And the fact he's run away and has had to come back,
he's almost seeing everything through a runaway's eyes.
Yeah, for the first time.
It's border on surrealism.
And it was that thing of
I think Alan Bennett talks about him
being, you know, against drabness in all
its forms and his kind of
feel for colour as well.
It's an extraordinary chapter where he drags up
as well.
He's always going away from places
because he can't bear it.
And when he's in China
he decides the thing to do
in quite a hostile territory
is to borrow his friend's
dress and make-up
and see if he can get away with walking around
and then
gets in a panic.
Where, don't forget, the Chinese are at that time.
There's a big nationalistic
movement going on about the
effete, corrupt westerners
but to see what will happen yes yes but it is it you know a lot of literature has these moments
of rupture and these moments of violence interspersed with the mundane but they're often
if you think of i don't know something like kathy acker or a lot of those
80s sort of semiotics authors um there's a kind of punkish violence to it all but in this it's
all they tend to they're over freighted with significance whereas the the thing about den
welsh the disorienting thing is that doesn't really feel you don't really feel like you're
in the in the grip of you know i have some things that I want to tell you
and I'm going to dress them up in a story.
It's like he's me...
I mean, there is order there.
He doesn't kind of have the usual horror response.
I mean, he responds horrifically.
This is the only time listeners will ever hear me
reading from some journals.
But I must just read this.
I thought this was so wonderful.
This is 19th of September, 1944.
Yesterday, Eric, who was his lover,
yesterday, Eric and I went to the dentist in Seven Oaks.
And while I was sitting in the waiting room with him,
I idly turned the pages of Vogue
and suddenly came on my own face there in the March issue.
Then I went out and bought hair stuff and when I
came back Eric was waiting with his tooth
pulled out and looking a little strained.
We sat in the public
gardens, Eric spitting blood
a little into the flowerbed.
Then we walked up to
Applin's and Eric had only green salad
whilst I had Welsh rarebit
and tomatoes and cake with
imitation cream and coffee.
I thought again of our snug place in the leaves under the fallen tree,
looking out onto the rising hill with the smoky curtain of rain
falling into the stiff, still green bracken,
and the curious high squeaking of some solitary wood pigeons
and then their gurgling coo.
An eternal moment, always dissolving,
which will yet reoccur a thousand thousand times to a thousand
thousand other people when we are dead who will look out in the same way through the windows in
their heads and see the falling rain the bracken the pattern of the oak bark and wonder and go on wandering for years. God, what a...
First of all, what a gear change from one paragraph to the next,
but both so elegantly and wittily and compassionately done.
Brilliant.
There's no sense through all of it, however sort of...
Whatever the sense of high jinx at times,
I think that passage you've just read
proves that it's never really contrived no it's not it's not played for laughs and it's not it's
not camp uh it's no and it's not um he has no self-pity no there's never any self-pity even
in the bits but that was the thing that's so remarkable at the start of Maiden Voyage
you're expecting him to
I think that Richard Hale description
that baby British priest
that is very good actually
I think that's accurate
I don't think I've read a book
that's had so many sentences
starting with the first person singular
I, I, I, I, I, I I, I, I, I, I, I I, I, I, I, I, I sentences starting with the first person singular though i i i i i well that's how you
do you have any link however tenuous to this discussion i've got a tenuous link of course
i've got a tenuous link so my tenuous link is what and ask this to to you Andy what is the tenuous link between me, the editor Matthew Clayton
and this book
Maiden Voyage
has it a guess
you went to Repton
did you do a book on Herbie Hancock
no
the editor Matthew Clayton, is that a clue
no no it's not a clue
Denton Welch was in an early line-up of Fairport Convention
that you saw as a child.
No, so what it is...
So there's a wonderful bit in it where he goes and stays at his uncle's house.
And his uncle's house is in Sussex, I think it is.
And in his uncle's house he has copies of the Sussex County magazine.
And I read that with complete joy because I absolutely adore the Sussex County magazine.
To be fair, Matthew, quite hard to guess.
So the Sussex County magazine was published between 1927 and 1956, and it had articles on things like Sussex Turnpike anecdotes
or queer things about Sussex windmills.
And bizarrely, last night,
I gave a talk about a Sussex County magazine columnist,
Barclay Wills, who wrote about Sussex Shepherds.
And I gave a talk
at Michael Smith,
right at Michael Smith, now lives in Hastings
and has a wonderful shop there called
Borough Beer,
Wine, Beer and Books.
What's it called, Matthew? It's called Borough
Wine, Beer
and Books. And he does a fantastic
night there called Weird Shit.
And I went and did a talk about
Barkley Wills with my owner
and a great guy called Gareth E. Rees.
Yes.
He was fantastic. He was absolutely fantastic.
Have you got a turnpike handgun
that you can maybe tell is off the top of your head?
I do
actually, but you don't want to go there.
There's a turnpike right at the end of my road
which is used by the local burger van as a storage place.
So they kind of keep it open,
and I sometimes sneak in there to have a look at it.
It has all the turnpike prices outside, but I think they're made up.
What did Buckley Wills do?
Oh, he wrote terrible books about Sussex Shepherds,
and he was obsessed by the sound.
He was a nature writer.
He was a nature writer.
Anthology. Put him by the sound. He was a nature writer. He was a nature writer. Anthology.
Put him with the others.
He did shepherd walks.
Grabbing up the sheep.
He ran a fruit and veg shop in Worthing.
He moved to London to be closer to the South Downs.
He was really obsessed by shepherds.
He spent his time walking on the South Downs
befriending shepherds.
He collected a large amount of
shepherding paraphernalia
horn lamps, falcon crooks
that kind of stuff, amazing umbrellas
I have to, thank you
that was tenuous
it was rich in colour
I have to mention
we've noticed on Backlisted
that people like to
be able to buy the books that we talk about cheap and why not and why not and indeed we are able
thanks to brilliant galley beggar press um they have told us that if you email them through their website or on info at galleybeggar.co.uk
go and get a pen
and a piece of paper
info at galleybeggar.co.uk
and you put back
listed in the subject
of subject line
of that email
you can buy the e-book of
Maiden Voyage from them
and one other
they will then give you one other Denton Welch book for free.
Wow. Brilliant.
So email them, put Backlisted in the subject line.
I think we all strongly recommend this book.
I know we love all the books we cover, of course,
but I have to say I felt, as I do occasionally when we do Backlisted,
that this is one of those things where I feel very grateful to have the opportunity to go forward and read everything by this author
i think that's exactly right remarkable i mean those just the little glimpses of the journals
that have come out today make me want to go grab them and wrestle them to the ground
dental would like that he would probably enjoy thated in oil Anyway, I think that's probably all we've got time to
Thank you for listening to Backlisted
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Thank you to our guest Richard
As ever to Matthew
Thank you Matthew
And thank you to all of you as ever to Matthew and thank you to
all of you for listening
see you next time, thanks ever so much
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