Backlisted - The Children of Men by P.D. James
Episode Date: April 8, 2024Novelist Andrew Hunter Murray and biographer Laura Thompson join us to discuss The Children of Men (1992), a dystopian thriller by the late P.D. James. The author is probably best remembered as one ...of Britain's greatest exponents of detective fiction, an heir to the Golden Age of female novelists such as Agatha Christie, Ngaio Marsh, Dorothy Sayers et al. In The Children of Men, however, James depicts a nightmare near-future in which the world is literally coming to an end. The book became a bestseller; in 2006, it was adapted for the big screen by the Mexican director Alfonso Cuarón. We look at the ways in which James explored issues that seem eerily contemporary: the societal impact of an uncontrolled virus, falling fertility rates, an ageing population, the rise of populism and accompanying exploitation of migrant labour. She also knew how to grip her readers to the very last page. Phyllis Dorothy James, Baroness James of Holland Park, lived a long and remarkable life and it was a pleasure for all of us to revisit her work and biography in this episode. *Tickets are now on sale for our LIVE show in London on Wednesday May 14th where we will be discussing The Good Soldier by Ford Maddox Ford, with guest Alex Michaelides. * 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 and join in with the book chat, listen without adverts, receive the show early and get extra bonus fortnightly episodes, become a Patreon at www.patreon.com/backlisted *You can sign up to our free monthly newsletter here Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to Backlisted, the podcast which gives new life to old books.
Today you find us in the ancient forest of Witchwood in northwest Oxfordshire.
In a clearing there stands a wooden shed, shadowed by a solitary silver birch.
A tall woman emerges, her tight black curls dusted with white.
She surveys the scene briefly before striding across towards a narrow tree-lined lane.
From inside the shed there is the sound of a baby crying.
I'm John Mitchinson, the publisher on Bound, where people crowdfund the books they really
want to read. And I'm Andy Miller, the author of The Year of Reading Dangerously.
And today we are joined by two guests, one new and one returning. Our new guest is Andrew Hunter
Murray. Hello, Andrew. Hello. Hi, Andrew.
Andrew is a writer and broadcaster.
He writes for Private Eye magazine, spent 14 years writing BBC Two's QI,
you get less for a murd, and co-hosts the podcast Page 94 and No Such Thing as a Fish.
His first novel, The Last Day, was a Sunday Times bestseller
and one of the top ten fiction debuts of 2020.
His second novel, The Sanctuary, was a Waterstones thriller of the month.
His third, A Beginner's Guide to Breaking and Entering, has just been published by Hutchinson Heinemann.
Andrew, you have made the transition from the physical realm into that of the print realm.
from the physical realm into that of the print realm.
What has been the most unexpected in a pleasant way,
because we like to keep this upbeat,
in a pleasant way about having your books published and seeing them in shops and things like that?
Oh, I didn't have any expectations going in.
I mean, I had a nice breaking in because, you know,
QI writes lots of books, obviously.
So you get very excited the first time you're in someone's acknowledgements.
I think the first acknowledgements I was ever in was a book by Mitch and colleague John Lloyd for The Book of the Dead, which we wrote so many years ago.
Sorry, which you wrote, Mitch and John, many years ago.
And then from then on, it's just been increasing excitement.
I think the thing no one tells you about writing a book is that people think publication day is going to be exciting and or very little happens actually on publication day unless you've made sure to
arrange a party you know you you wait for the world to turn on its axis right there's a new
murray in print everything is different and it is it's not really it's not quite like that
have you yet to see a member of the public reading one of your books
in, say, a branch of Greg's?
I did.
I ended up on the train opposite someone who was reading one of my books,
and she was giving me a look, and occasionally I would give her a look,
and we were both slightly aware that we knew who the other one was.
Hi, Mum.
Yeah.
And we had a little word about it, and that was unbelievably exciting.
That's the only time it's ever happened.
Oh, that's really nice though. That's good.
And we're also delighted to welcome back Laura Thompson,
our lovely friend, Laura Thompson. Hello, Laura.
Hello, Andy. Lovely to be here.
How nice to see you.
Laura won the Somerset Maugham Award with her first book, The Dogs.
She has written biographies of Agatha Christie and Nancy Mitford,
as well as the New York Times best-selling group biography of the Mitfords, The Six,
and has published two books of true crime, A Different Class of Murder, about Lord Lucan,
and Rex vs Edith Thompson, about the 1922 Thompson Bywaters case. She is also a proud
author of two books with Unbound, The Letters of Edith Thompson, published last year,
and The Last Landlady, a memoir of her publican grandmother,
her favourite of her books.
And, of course, Laura, you've also been on twice before this podcast,
including right back near the very beginning.
You are one of the founding fathers.
It's episode three, I think, wasn't it?
One of the council of Backlisted.
You were on at the beginning to talk about nancy mitford and then you came back to help us talk about frost in may by antonia white so
what i want to ask you is like your range as a backlisted guest obviously is considerable
but your range as a as a writer as well you work in several different genres is that what you
intended when you first started out? Or have
you just sort of followed your instinct as you've gone along?
It does sound very eclectic when you read it out. No, I intended to be a ballet dancer,
but that bit the dust. But when I...
Didn't we all, Laura? Didn't we all?
No, they're things I'm interested in.
They're things I'm passionate about.
That is an edited biog.
Anyway, you missed out the weekly column for the Racing Post.
Can I ask then?
Sorry, when you were writing your weekly column for the Racing Post,
did you do horses and dogs?
No, I did the flat season and then I had six months off or whatever.
And I was known as a controversial columnist because I didn't like drugs and drink at the race courses.
For the people or for the horses?
Good question, Andrew. Both. I think both would be the correct answer.
So in other words, they're all things i'm just keen on passionate about your biography
reminds me of my favorite quentin quist quote which you must know laura which from the his
brilliant book how to have a lifestyle it's no good running a pig farm badly for 30 years while
saying really what i was meant to be is a daddy dancer by then pigs will be your style i use that
all the time by now pigs are definitely my style I've never really wanted to be a ballet dancer.
Right.
The book we're here to discuss is The Children of Men by P.D. James,
first published in 1992 by Faber in the UK and Knopf in the USA.
It is a dystopian fantasy set in 2021.
A catastrophic fall in the male human sperm count means no children have
been born anywhere in the world for 25 years. Since the last election in 2006, England has
been governed by a council headed by the self-styled Warden of England, with Parliament
reduced to an advisory role, law and order enforced by the Grenadiers, a private army,
and the state security police.
The Isle of Man has become a self-sufficient penal colony run on Darwinian lines by the criminals themselves.
Mass drowning ceremonies for the elderly are becoming more popular, and a network of state-run pornography centres has been set up to encourage people's libidos.
In the absence of human children, kittens and puppies are given elaborate christening ceremonies
and are dressed in children's clothing and pushed around in prams.
The book's hero, whose name is Theo Farron, is an Oxford Don,
a cold and distant man who was responsible for the accidental death
of his own daughter while she was still a toddler.
He is also the cousin of the warden, which is just one of the reasons
he finds himself becoming involved
in a resistance organisation called the Five Fishes, more about whom later in this episode.
The Children of Men was P.D. James's 12th novel and was something of a departure from the detective
fiction with which she had made her name. It received overwhelmingly positive reviews,
including one from Alan Jacobs, which claimed that, quote, of all James's novels, the Children of Men is
probably the most pointed in its social criticism, certainly the deepest in its theological reflection.
And also another last year from the novelist Andrew Hunter Murray, who called it PD James' masterpiece in times, and a short, beautiful
shocker. Well, we will be interrogating Andrew on what he meant by that when we come back after
this short break. This is an advertisement from BetterHelp. Everyone knows therapy is great for
solving problems, but turns out therapy has some issues of its own. Finding the right therapist,
fitting into their schedule, and of course, the cost. BetterHelp can help solve these problems.
It's online, convenient, built around your schedule, and surprisingly affordable too.
Connect with a credentialed therapist by phone, video, or online chat.
Visit BetterHelp.com to learn more. That's BetterHelp.com.
Visit BetterHelp.com to learn more.
That's BetterH-E-L-P.com.
Make your nights unforgettable with American Express.
Unmissable show coming up?
Good news.
We've got access to pre-sale tickets so you don't miss it.
Meeting with friends before the show?
We can book your reservation.
And when you get to the main event,
skip to the good bit using the card member entrance.
Let's go seize the night.
That's the powerful backing of American Express.
Visit amex.ca slash yamex.
Benefits vary by card.
Other conditions apply.
And we're back.
And we're back to talk about The Children of Men by P.D. James. We also want to say we are backlisted.
We're very excited.
We've got a residency coming up in the West End of London.
So if you live in London or the South East and you want to come and see once a month a show being recorded,
you will have that opportunity to do so.
The first of them is taking place on the top floor of Foyles
in Charing Cross Road.
We will be discussing Ford Maddox Ford's novel,
The Good Soldier, with our guest Alex Michelades
and perhaps someone else, we're waiting to confirm.
And you can find a link to tickets, to purchase tickets,
in the show notes for this episode.
The date for your diary is Wednesday,
the 15th of May, 2024.
We start at 6.30pm
and we will actually be recording two shows on that night.
First of all, an episode of Locklisted
to go out on our Patreon.
And then secondly, the discussion of
Ford Maddox Ford's The Good Soldier.
And that's the first of a regular residency we will be recording
one show a month so we'd love love love it if um some of our loyal listeners feel like coming along
and joining us uh for that particular show and the shows that follow so let me start with the
question we ask all our guests let me begin with then with you, Andrew. Where were you? Who were you?
What were you doing
when you first read The Children of Men?
Well, I had a quick look in the spreadsheet
before the recording.
And it was December 2014
that I first read The Children of Men
and P.D. James herself died in November 2014.
So I can only assume that I saw the news and thought,
oh, well, I've seen the film.
I really must give that a go.
Because it was the first of her novels I read.
I'd never read any of her detective fiction before that.
I've read several since then.
But this was my introduction to P.D. James.
It's published in 92, isn't it?
So you got to it in 12...
No, no, no, no, sorry.
A mere 22 years late.
That sounds like I'm being rude.
I'm just doing the maths, the careful maths.
But you'd seen the film.
I had.
Children of Men.
Yeah, yeah.
I'd really enjoyed it,
but I've never gone back to watch it since.
And in fact, I find it quite hard going back to the book as well.
I mean, because I really love the book, but I find it so cold and I find it so sharp.
It's quite tough to get through it because of this awful, fragile, beautiful nastiness that she writes.
It's amazing.
Yes.
Well, we'll discuss whether this citric sharpness was what led you to call it a masterpiece in the times.
We'll see.
Stitch up.
Laura, when do you remember first reading one of which we call her phyllis or pd
let's say pd james for now and then we'll call her phyllis later on the episode when did you
first read a novel by pd james i can barely remember not knowing about her and almost not
having read all her books but i'm pretty sure the first one was a Cordelia Gray. I think
it was an unsuitable job for a woman. And I think I was probably about the same age as Cordelia when
I read it. And I was very compelled by this character. You know, the idea of this very
young woman with this intelligence and ability to solve crimes. And I imagine when she was first conceived in 72, quite a pioneering
figure. Well, the title, everyone says to her, this is an unsuitable job,
which one hopes they wouldn't say today. Yeah, I love that book. And I wish there were more
Cordelia Grays. There are only two. The Children of Men, I read, I was far too young to appreciate.
men I read I was far too young to appreciate I was um far too jolly it didn't it didn't bed in it didn't bed in at all but when I read it again for this it it absolutely did bed in wow
particularly the first half of it to me it almost reads like a state of the nation novel
which is a bit of a downer i suppose but it does almost
read like that and i agree yeah we'll come on to how relevant it is to to the times that we live in
i'm sure what i was thinking when i was reading that first half not the second half so much was
if i didn't know that pd james had written this would would i think that she had? And although it has her rigour and her kind of conscientious style,
as it were, I don't know that I would think it was her.
It's a whole other aspect to her writing for me.
Yeah.
Andrew, if you didn't know this novel was by P.D. James,
do you have any ideas about who you think
you would think it was you think it was very distinctive wouldn't you but you'd be
i i find it terribly hard to put my finger on if not pd james then who will it combine it because
it combines the the brilliant dystopian style with what james brought to the crime novels which is this
very literary element i think the only book i've read that really reminded me of it tonally was um
doris lessing's the memoirs of a survivor which is again it's it's a bit more high concept as in
doris lessing doesn't go into detail about what is happening but there's a kind of foreboding sense about it and again a little bit jg ballard as well
although not quite because it feels like pd james is really trying to make this world real you know
and with ballard when you know when the entire jungle is turning to diamonds
you're not worried that this is real but there is a similar sense of this creeping horror
i'm very excited at the thought that perhaps J.G. Ballard
and P.D. James were the same person.
Just even if P.D. James and Ballard were kind of at dinner together.
Yeah, yeah.
I bet they were.
She's more or less had dinner with everybody,
as you find out from her autobiography.
Any advance on J.G. Ballard and Doris Leighton?
A touch of the Le Carre carre is just a little maybe a
little bit of yeah i'm lobbing eric ambler in and walking away my pockets whistling maybe jeffrey
household let's just throw that in yeah absolutely nice just for us, just put P.D. James in the lineage of British crime
writers for us? Well, she was only born 30 years after Agatha Christie. So to her first novel,
which is Cover Her Face, which is 1962, when she's relatively mature because of course as i'm sure
we'll talk about she had a life before she became a writer um and it's incredibly christian there's
there's no doubt about it the the the it's it's the christy template but then um i think of both
pd james and Ruth Rendell in a sense
as the end of the Golden Age, the end of that particular template.
Right, and the writers of the Golden Age,
we've never done an episode on Christie,
but we have done an episode on Dorothy L. Sayers
and we have done an episode on…
Josephine Tay.
Tay? Is Tay Golden Age?
Yeah.
I'll say so.
Yeah.
Allingham, Nioh Marsh.
Yes.
Okay, so it's Allingham, Nioh Marsh, Christie,
and you would say P.D. James and Ruth Rendell slash Barbara Vine
are the end of that line.
Ruth Rendell would have been not pleased to hear me say that
because she really did not like Agatha Christie.
You know, that ridiculous place at Merrymead and that frightful woman Marple and all this kind of thing.
But I do think of Ruth Rendell almost as Christie turned inside out with the workings and the, you know, the dodgy synapses of the criminal on show rather than hidden.
I do think of her like that.
You know, it's one of those disgusts, really.
It's a huge question, as is the fact that they're mostly women,
which is amazing, really.
Thank you so much.
That is establishing what I want to do, which is that this,
we might to some extent now see the Children of Men as part of the scenery, not least because of the success of the film.
And people know what the story of the Children of Men is because it's become quite well known separate from P.D. James' work.
But I remember this book being, I was a bookseller when this book was published in 1992, and I can remember this being a big deal.
John, did you read it then?
No, I didn't.
I didn't read it then, but I did read, I was a regular P.D. James reader.
I think I didn't read it because, you know, I like Dalgleish.
This felt to me a little bit like it was a unwelcome departure did it oh and even even
more astonishingly for me i'd never put together that the film was based on it because i had only
the vaguest notion of the plot uh so it's been quite interesting fusing all those things together
and i have to say hugely pleased to have the chance to read it yeah from a distance i well for my part i
read the first i did what all good booksellers do which is i read the first 50 pages and then
based my opinion on that um in 1992 and stuck to that rigidly for the next 32 years but so i'd
never read this andrew i'd never want to say to you i'd never read this all the way through until
you suggested we read it so i want to say to you, I'd never read this all the way through until you suggested we read it.
So I want to say to you, Andrew,
thank you so much for giving us the opportunity to actually read it.
Hear, hear.
I really found it incredibly both enjoyable and stimulating
and flawed at the same time.
I think I want to talk a bit about that later on.
Yeah.
But the thing that really strikes me, guys,
about The Children of Men is it is such a weird novel.
It's so odd.
For somebody who was orthodox in many ways, this is a very peculiar, personal, encrypted novel.
It's a mixture of dystopian fable, social critique, Christian allegory,
old-fashioned whodunit, and famous five novel.
Now, there's a group in this novel called the Five Fishes, Andrew.
I don't know whether this had struck you.
Five Fishes Go Wild.
Yeah, yeah.
So they're like the famous five of Insurrection, right?
And they're called Julian, Rolf, Luke, Miriam and Gaskell.
Oh my God, there's a Julian.
Right?
Julian.
Also, but Julian is a girl, like George is a girl in the famous five, right?
Miriam is Anne and presumably Rolf is Timmy the dog.
What a strange book.
Thank you so much.
Oh, wow. It doesn't seem strange to me because it's the first of pd james's books that i read so i sort of thought of this as the norm and then i i heard
oh she's written a lot of crime novels as well interesting so i only see the crime novels through
the lens of the crime elements of the children of men if you like or that's how i started out
but it is very weird it's it's extremely odd i i and again i grew up a lot of things like john wyndham and this feels again to be borrowing
from that tradition as much as it does that's who it's like that's very good wyndham is good
wyndham is very good yeah yeah yeah all the elements of the golden age of crime are there
but pd james the difference is you really see the splinters of bone and you see you know faces that
have been smashed to jelly and there are such upsattering visceral images all the way through that certainly you know Wyndham
never went to this territory and neither did Christie or Tay or Sayles or anyone like that
you know so there's a kind of this is a more degraded age that we're living in that
James was expressing anxieties about I think saying, saying this kind of... I agree. She liked to describe in forensic detail dead bodies.
She said she would never do torture, but she said it's very, very important,
the first reaction that people have to finding a corpse.
And I think those connections with the crime genre in this book,
the more you go back and look at Children of Men,
the more you see that she is co-opting quite a lot of her her kind of crime chops into the the storytelling huh yeah
let's hear a clip from 2015 of pd james's great friend val mcdermott our former guest val mcdermott
recalling for matthew paris on great lives how feels P.D. James will be remembered and what she was like.
I think Phyllis, I wouldn't have described her as having a bleak outlook.
I think she had an unsentimental outlook.
And she also had a very strong sense of privacy.
She talked eloquently and at great length about her life as a writer.
But when it came to talking about the lives of others whose lives touched hers, she was very reticent.
And would you say that being a woman, as she believed,
gave her a particular eye for the sort of thing
a crime writer needs to know?
I think there is something about the social conditioning
of growing up as a woman that teaches you
you don't get what you want by direct confrontation.
You have to develop what the Buddhists call subtle means, come at things by a circuitous route. And as you grow up learning
to behave in this way, I think it gives you the kind of mindset that works very well for the
detective novel that has at its heart puzzles, clues, complicated motivations. And so, yeah,
I think there is some truth in that. I think men tend to write slightly more linear novels.
And so, yeah, I think there is some truth in that. I think men tend to write slightly more linear novels.
I'm not going to disagree with Val there. I would not be so presumptuous.
But Laura, you were talking about the, you know, Val offers a theory there as to why the Golden Age and Ruth Rendell and P.D. James, why women are the so-called queens of crime.
I met P.D. James.
I think I'm not the only one of us who did.
I met her to talk about Agatha Christie, in fact,
and she was absolutely marvellous, as you would expect. But her own theory was along the lines of it's a way for women
to contain what they most fear within the genre,
a way for women to resolve what they most fear within the genre, a way for women to resolve and contain, you know, the fear of violence, which obviously men have as well.
But she was a great believer in the genre, wasn't she?
I had an interview where she said, I've never felt the need to prove myself better than detective fiction.
I almost got the impression that if she could have done
The Children of Men as a crime novel, she would have done.
Because my feeling about it was, wow, what might this woman have done
if she hadn't been confined to the genre?
But she saw it the other way around.
So there's some sort of consolation in being within the genre
that presumably is appealing to women.
But that's a very vague answer.
I'm very aware of that.
We must theorise.
Well, quite.
It's a huge question.
She compared the form towards the end of her life quite explicitly
in a really interesting interview she gave in St. Paul's Cathedral.
She was a very committed Anglican, and she talked about parables and the power of parables,
this idea that the apparent simplicity of the story and the clarity of the language
enabled people to bring comfort, almost the simplicity of the form.
Because I think she was being questioned is,
once you've read a detective story, surely you don't want to read it again.
And she was saying, well, it's a little bit like a parable.
These things have got kind of hidden depths.
So, I mean, I think that doesn't really connect back to the being a woman bit
that you were talking about, Andy.
But I think it does connect to this idea that she didn't feel
that the form was somehow, you know, second rate.
I mean, some writers and some readers, Andrew, it strikes me,
enjoy the constraints.
Constraints is the wrong word.
I don't want to say limitations but you know what i mean
the rules of genre because you get to both bend them and break them and one's expectation and
familiarity with the genre be it crime fiction or country music is built around what you do with
those chords that steel guitar you know that that it seems to me that's the pleasure.
And even within what we would call literary terms, the foundation of a movement like Ulipo is about setting a number of apparently random parameters around which you then create and react with your writing and i wonder whether you found in your work that such stuff as you
borrow from genre you find stimulating oh what a question i think i do i mean the the first two
books i wrote were the first one drew a lot from children of men the last day it drew a great deal
from that and i think what i admired and this is something that applies
to the crime fiction as well is a convention that james breaks because at the end of a lot of
detective stories and i'm talking really classic you know real golden age ones you christies and
so on and your tase as well there is order chaos breaks out order is restored by the end by the detective you know that we are led
once more back into the safety of a safe world and i don't think i get to the end of many of
james's novels and feel like order has been entirely restored i think there is a little
survival of chaos whether it's whether it's in the plot or whether it's in the
the nature of the resolution or whether it's in the character of the detective.
Because James' protagonists are often strangers to fulfilled, happy lives.
You know, they have not made it to harbour, if you like,
in their own lives.
They're kind of outcasts.
I think that's the case in Children of Men,
it's the case with Dalglelish who's not yeah easy with himself
um and so those are the conventions that i do like to draw on but also muck around with a bit
yeah that's fascinating and it's also very true of the children of men we're going to talk later
on about the ending of the children of men um and don't worry listeners when we get to that point
there will be a massive uh red flag wave to ensure that you can listen or not listen as you see fit we have a clip here of pd james or phyllis as she
was known if you met her when laura met her um you you met her didn't you john i met her uh many
times i would say that she represents for me a kind of, when people talk about the literary establishment in a slightly disdainful way, I always think, P.D. James, that she is the literary establishment.
Absolutely interested.
I think morally kind of unimpeachable.
She was the president of the Society of Authors.
She was governor of the BBC.
She's so conscientious
i always found her her energy was was incredibly compelling and interesting she had a moral
authority and a kindness which is not always the case in the nasty back-boaty world of literature
i don't know what you're talking about i don't know what you're talking about. I don't know what you're talking about, you little bitch.
Thank you, friend.
Yes, dear colleague.
Dear colleague.
I met her at a do in the 90s, and I was carrying, I come from work,
and I was carrying a copy of Whiz for Atoms by Searle and Willans.
Yeah.
A Molesworth novel. She was at school.
Did she tell you the story?
And she did.
She said to me,
what's that you're reading?
And I said, oh, it's Wiz for Atoms.
And she said, oh, I'm terribly glad
people are still reading Atoms.
She saw me as a representative
of the young generation then
who were mad about Molesworth,
which I hope she...
I wouldn't want to disabuse her of that idea.
Before we hear the clip, Andrew, did you ever meet Phyllis?
No, and can I say, I can't believe that I'm the only person here
who didn't get to meet her and I'm gutted.
The closest I've got is I went to Southwold to a beach hut because she had a hut
on the beach at Southwold
and she wrote a lot of her books there
and there's this great scene in The Children of Men.
I call it a great scene.
It's a horrible mass drowning of the elderly,
but that is set on the front at Southwold.
Southwold.
Who else but P.D. James would do that?
I know, exactly.
I think she might have liked you, Andrew, but I don't know.
I don't know.
I can't presume.
I wouldn't presume, no.
She would have loved you, Andrew.
I can tell you that she really would have done.
Well, look, here's a clip of her talking about the relationship
between her crime novels and the then newly published novel
Children of Men.
I hate to think of it as science fiction
but if one were sort of ascribing it to a genre that is undoubtedly the genre that one would
choose. It's very different from the other books. I can see the influence of the crime novels there.
When I had that idea which I got from reading a scientific article which pointed out how the
human race is now much less fertile than it was.
I realised that there was a wonderful plot there, a story to be told, but it really wasn't very
suitable to twist it to make it into a detective story. So I wrote it as a straightforward novel.
Phyllis had one of the most blessed pods, not in her early life, but to publication, didn't she?
Yes, she did. Amazingly, I just went to this exhibition of the history of crime writing at
Cambridge University Library, and they had the letters between her and Faber about the publication
of Cover Her Face, which were marvellous to read. But it did read in a very serendipitous way. You
know, they asked her to make some cuts and she made the cuts and then they said, great, we'll
publish it. She wrote this very characteristic letter of thanks saying, oh, thank you. And I
hope you don't lose any money on it. You know, very sort of Phyllis. Your analysis of her, John,
I think is so beautiful. She really was one of the
great and good in a very meaningful way, wasn't she? So that was the beginning. And yes, she was
published quickly and immediately, quite rightly. I think it's fascinating Faber are seeking
a younger woman novelist to continue what they see as a profitable line of publishing literally to fill
the gap you know they i think jeffrey hare who had done legal thrillers nobody now reads had died and
they they needed to plug the gap this is the advice one should give young writers now just
see who's died on a publisher's list she writes she in her Time to Eonis,
she writes that
the fact that Charles Monteith,
the great editor at Faber,
you know,
who published,
amongst others,
Golding,
and, you know,
we've talked about him,
but he just liked it,
read it,
took it on.
She says that her daughters,
I think this success
produced some unease
among my daughters
who had read that
any writer of real talent
could paper his or her walls
with rejection slips they tactfully pointed this out anxious to army against future disappointment
i retorted with some tartness that children with no faith in mummy's talent would not get new
bicycles out of the proceeds a couple of extremely good bicycles as well as other small treats
constituted for me financial success oh you know when we come back after the break um we're
gonna see how faber dealt with the challenge of presenting this um strange novel to phyllis's
adoring public back in the 90s but first here's a word from our sponsors
and we're back and um And as promised before the break,
The Children Men is a very unusual novel.
It's quite hard to place in the bookshops.
If you go in and buy a copy today, you'll find it in the crime section.
But that's just because that's where all the other P.D. James novels are.
You won't find it in sci-fi.
You won't find it in fiction.
You won't find it in pop science.
That would be great.
But I've got the
blurb, the original blurb here, and I would ask Laura and Andrew, would you pick up this book,
friends, if you read this blurb?
In this astonishing novel, an entirely new departure in her writing,
In this astonishing novel, an entirely new departure in her writing, P.D. James imagines a future England where human infertility has spread like a plague. By the year 2021,
no babies have been born for a quarter of a century, not since year Omega, anywhere in the
inhabited world. The very old are being driven to despair and suicide and the final generation of the young
are beautiful but violent and cruel the middle-aged are trying to sustain normality
and can i just say this is what life is like though isn't it that is why that's what the old
that's what the old the young and the middle-aged are doing now this just sounds like yeah 2024
the middle-aged are trying to sustain normality under the absolute rule of Zan Lippiat,
the charismatic dictator and warden of England.
Theo Farren is an Oxford historian and cousin of the warden,
living a solitary, self-regarding life in this ominous atmosphere.
By chance at Evensong in Magdalen, he meets a young woman,
one of a small group who seek to challenge the power
of the warden's regime. Theo's life is dramatically changed and he is drawn into almost
unimaginable horrors. P.D. James brings the unrivaled qualities of her acclaimed detective
novels to bear upon this frightening yet plausible scene. The conviction and sheer excitement with which she resolves the story are overwhelming
the children of men is an unforgettable experience andrew sold half yeah yeah you see why i didn't
read it right you can see why i didn't read it well it's it's such a longer blurb than you get
these days it's it's nearly american in its length you know they they run to they often go to the second page of their blurbs you know and i weirdly i've got because i've got
a much more recent copy of one i bought about 10 years ago it retains a lot of the same elements
but does it much more crisply because this one starts the year is 2021 no child has been born
for 25 years the human race fears extinction you know and that's uh but it maintains lots of like
it has the older despairing
and the young cruel.
I mean, this version is sort of, is a stripped-back version
of the original.
This is one of the things that happens over 30 years.
The original blurb gets winnowed away.
What did you think, Laura?
I would have been possibly a bit unnerved by that, you know.
But I love detective fiction.
Yeah, yeah.
And that's why there's that
that that very eager last paragraph saying listen don't run away it's exciting it's exciting yeah
it's special pleading and actually i think there's a lot about it that is is very like a crime novel
well let's let's come on to that john i've got a quiz for you. I know you like a quiz. On the inside front jacket, there are quotes from three critics or writers.
Would you care to hazard a guess at those three critics or writers?
Marcel Berlins, Ruth Rendell, and then a third writer who says this.
She is an addictive writer whose own acquisitive attitudes are passed on to the reader.
It seems to me that she has gained authority.
The quality of intelligence was always there.
But now, in addition, we have a genuine curiosity about character
and an ability to describe the density of little known lives.
Above all, there is that sense of place.
P.D. James takes her place in the long line of those moralists
who tell a story as satisfying
as it is complete.
Who do you think wrote that?
Ooh.
Ian McEwan.
Close.
It was, of course,
Dr. Anita Bruckner.
Ah!
Wow!
The Bruckner trap was lying in front of me.
It was there all along.
Yeah.
We've talked a lot about the genre elements.
We've talked a lot about positioning.
We've talked a lot about Phyllis and what have you.
Andrew, we haven't actually heard anything from the novel yet.
I wonder if you would be kind enough to read us a sample extract.
Yes, all right.
I've got to, I promise it's one paragraph it'll seem
longer when i'm reading it but it's it's from the opening pages of the book and it's about
this is from theo farren the narrator's point of view it's spring when he's writing this he says
i can still find pleasure more intellectual than sensual in the effulgence of an oxford spring
the blossoms in bellbroughton road which seem lovelier every year, sunlight
moving on stone walls, horse chestnut trees in full bloom tossing in the wind, the smell of a
bean field in flower, the first snowdrops, the fragile compactness of a tulip. Pleasure need
not be less keen because there will be centuries of springs to come, their blossom unseen by human eyes. The walls will crumble,
the trees die and rot, the gardens revert to weeds and grass, because all beauty will outlive the
human intelligence which records, enjoys, and celebrates it. I tell myself this, but do I
believe it when the pleasure now comes so rarely, and when it does, is so indistinguishable from
pain? I can understand how the aristocrats and
great landowners, with no hope of posterity, leave their estates untended. We can experience
nothing but the present moment, live in no other second of time, and to understand this is as close
as we can get to eternal life. But our minds reach back through centuries for the reassurance of our ancestry, and, without the hope of posterity, for our race if not for ourselves, without the assurance that we being dead yet live, all the pleasures of the mind and senses sometimes seem to me no more than pathetic and crumbling defences shored up against our ruin.
fences shored up against our ruin i'm gonna ask what an almost partridge-esque but now why is that so good
i think i picked it and i think i think it's so good because it combines
so much of what this book is
which is about
beauty
mixed with the pain of
mortality and that's
the element of the sci-fi
which touches the real
which touches our world because we
know that we are going to die, we know that we are
not going to see endless springs to come
and I think she's kind of that we are going to die we know that we are not going to see endless springs to come and
i think she's kind of dealing with and grappling with that understanding and pain and what makes
things beautiful and what makes them painful and very perceptive i think yeah i i i had that
hadn't occurred to me but yes i think you're right right. Laura, you said, and I agree with you, so this isn't a trap,
you said you thought the first half of this book is better
than the second half, and that's indeed what I feel.
So let's talk about what's so good about the first half.
Why is she so good at setting the dystopian scene?
First of all, can I say how wonderful I think what Andrew just said
was? I hadn't really taken that turn and seen that identification with it that you bring out there,
Andrew. I'd seen it almost more literally as not an exercise exactly, but a very, very brilliant rendering of what it would be to live, not just without the belief in a future, but to live without hope.
How would you live?
Yeah.
And that I just find so brilliant, almost intellectually brilliant, that I hadn't taken that final turn like Andrew just brought out for me.
So thank you for that because I do think it's a deeply religious book really
and that really is what connects it for me with the rest of her books.
It has a lot in common in a sense of a taste for death, devices and desires.
It has themes in common with those books.
But the brilliance of the first half,
I was sort of gasping at the completeness of her vision. It seems to me she does the male voice
very well. I don't know whether you guys can agree with me about that, but it seems to me
that Theo is a very convincing- Completely. I agree this kind of taught horrific aridity of the first half which is so sustained
and enlivened with these brilliant tableau like the the quietus the thing you referred to at
south world which I think is as good writing as I've encountered in a long while the way she
describes that yes I almost don't feel that the turn of the second half the more plotty
second half i i almost wish she'd had the courage of her convictions and and carried on in the same
vein oh my god i i couldn't agree any more vehemently you are lovely statement
oh no it's true it's true so i when I started reading the book, I thought, oh, the prose is so,
I felt my shoulders go down because I thought, oh,
here's someone who can turn a beautiful sentence,
one beautiful sentence after another, intelligent but easy to read,
sort of articulate, not trying to show off.
It's so, that bit you read andrew is so perfect any writer would be delighted
to be able to turn a paragraph that neatly and and um evocatively and i agree with you laura
as the book went on when we got into the second half and we got into the what I felt was a rather mechanical dispatching of bodies.
I kind of thought, oh, no, here's the plot now.
Oh, there's no space now to do the world building or the rumination.
The plot is beginning to overwhelm the qualities of the of the prose and i will come back to you on
that because i would like to get your take on that john is that how you how did you feel about it as
you read through it yes i felt i i really really enjoyed the book and i i didn't feel i didn't feel
maybe quite as offended as you were by the to me me, it's fairly obvious that she's going to
have to sort some stuff out plot-wise to end the novel in any kind of, you know, she's not writing
an existentialist track, but what she is writing, self-professed Christian fable that she's writing.
And I do think there's an ambiguity at the ending, which I really like, which I don't, which perhaps we will talk about a bit more. There's something that you can do in
a crime novel that's harder to do in a more literary novel, which is, you know, she needs,
without any spoilers here, she needs Julian, the woman, and Theo, the protagonist, to fall in love.
She needs that to happen for the book to work.
There isn't, to my mind, any real evidence of how or why that happens
other than her telling you that it has happened,
which is the kind of thing you can get away with in a crime novel,
but I think is harder.
I admire P.D. James hugely,
and she would be the first to say, you know,
that she's not comparing herself with Flaubert either.
You have to take it on trust a little bit
that this relationship is a real relationship.
Having said all that, you know, by the end,
it is kind of touching.
I just didn't quite buy it.
I'm laughing, John, because I can hear Phyllis saying
you think I'm not like Flaubert
I'm not so sure
I think she'd cross you on that anyway
yes I think that's fair
we have a clip now funnily enough
you mention
the motivation of the characters
and the need for them to fall
in love.
Here's a clip of P.D. James talking about those very things.
I don't think you can be a good novelist
unless you are able to look at the whole of humanity
and enter into people's thoughts.
So that, you know, to write a book when you feel
the only possible permissible form of love
would be between a husband and wife, between mother and child.
It's not only contrary
to all one's experience of life. Love is a most fascinating thing because it can lead to such
happiness, to such great deeds, and also, of course, to horrific deeds. I think in one of my books,
Dalgrish remembers the advice that was given to him by um the sergeant he was working for
about motive and he said you can sum up motive in with the letter l love lust loathing and lucre
and people will tell you that the most dangerous is loathing but it isn't boy the most dangerous
is love isn't that brilliant?
Andrew, how do you feel about us
hoity-toity literary
types?
Stamping all over a good plot.
I understand it.
I think they are very
different halves.
I feel, this is not true, but I feel like
all the dialogue happens in the second half.
You know what I mean?
I think if the book was just the first half, it probably wouldn't have sold, probably wouldn't have been adapted.
If it was just the second half, it wouldn't be one of the greats.
You know, it's excellent.
The only one of her books not to earn out its advance, which she's rather pissed off about in her autobiography.
Yeah, yeah.
So I haven't been able to find out what it did or didn't that's not true it would have now sold out but in i think it's fascinating in i think it was 20 years ago which
huh yeah so i take it all back sorry i just i just want to clarify for civilians listening
that when we say a book doesn't earn out its advance a writer
is often paid a sum of money by the publisher ahead of publication and then the book has to
sell enough copies to pay the publisher back for that advance on royalties before it then in turn
starts making money so you know in then, for the children of men,
may still remain in the red, but I find it hard to believe.
Unlikely. I mean, she wrote that in 1999,
when Time to Be in Earnest was written in 1999.
So it was seven years after the book had been published,
which is still, for her, a long time.
But I want to go back to Andrew's point,
because I don't think this novel, if it were only in one mode, would have resonated as it clearly did at the time and continues to do so now.
When I was reading it, I don't remember feeling the first half was slow, though, because the quality of the writing is so good and the picture of the world is so finely drawn.
drawn and you're seeing a and we should just say that the two halves just gorgeously the first half is called omega it's the end of everything the second half is called alpha something begins
anew and that is so beautifully done it's so simple the vision of the world is what keeps
you going for the first half and it's about and it again the character of theo you know he's
the book is about him thawing out. And again, that's something I completely have nicked.
I think everything I've written so far involves the central character
in some way reconnecting, in some ways reserved and withdrawn.
And he is so reserved and withdrawn for really good reasons, you know.
You, in your review that we mentioned earlier,
you talk about the sliver of ice in the heart,
the great Graham Greene line,
and you say he's got a whole cube of ice in his heart.
And the thawing of Theo, I think, is kind of, I think,
for me, the challenge with the book is that he is the most realised
character in the book.
And when Andy is goofing around with Famous Five,
there is a little bit of the other characters.
Goofing around?
How dare you?
That's literary Christian.
Goofing around?
I think she is massively interested in Theo's transformation,
to some extent, the rest of the characters.
The other character i think
that is brilliantly drawn and i think that is why this book is for me much much more satisfying than
the film is that the that character of the warden of england and the fact that there is a actual
she really takes some time remember she was a tory peer she's Tory peer. She's a small C conservative, probably more of the
one nation persuasion. But she really gives the authoritarian angle due weight. I mean,
she doesn't just say, oh, they're a bunch of fascists. We hate them. It's really interesting.
Laura, one of the things I found slightly eerie reading this novel, in the knowledge it was written in 1992, is although there are things she couldn't know, so that this is a world without the internet, but on the other hand, the way she depicts a kind of complex of populism, the effects of a virus, and immigration felt really, really perceptive.
Did you find something similar?
Oh, God, so much, Andy.
I mean, as a prophet, she was pretty good.
Yeah.
You know, the ageing population, you know, in the 90s, none of us had kids or I didn't.
And it was a choice.
And then you sort of think, oh, gosh, maybe that wasn't the right.
I don't mean in a personal sense, but for the world, for society, this sense of the
young as having nothing to lose and no stake in society.
And therefore, why shouldn't they be violent and terrorizing
the tremulous nature of democracy?
Though what you said, John, about it's a fascist state effectively, but it's portrayed in a
very reasonable way.
Parliament meets once a year.
There's a king, but he's very ineffectual. And how you live in those circumstances.
You know, Theo in the first half with his, he says, I have my consolations.
I have that brilliant passage that Andrew read about trying to find the consolations of nature
and then saying, oh, shall we lay down some wine at the college?
And oh, is it worth it?
Well, yeah, it's kind of worth it.
And you just are so aware all the time of, is it worth it?
How do you live?
And what you said about the immigrant labor, yeah, the sojourners and how they deal with
crime.
They send people to the Isle of Man, for God's sake.
I found it almost terrifying sometimes, yeah.
Yes, yeah, yeah.
I tell you what, John, you mentioned the film adaptation.
I saw the film when it came out and I watched it again before we did this
and I felt, I'm sorry I'm going to break some hearts,
but that film has not stood the test of time as well as her book has, in fact.
And one of the things that's particularly egregious about it is
when it was filmed and michael cain is cast as a hippie pensioner in a performance great every bit
as good as muppets christmas carol that's genius the director was imagining a world back then 20
years ago where pensioners would do something as incredible
as listen to Neil Young and smoke dope.
Well, we now know that future did come true.
They do smoke dope and listen to King Crimson.
And stylistically, there's lots to enjoy in the film,
but there's a coarsening of the vision that Phyllis presents
in the first half of the novel.
To go back to Andy's defensive plot,
the plotting in the film is, I mean, lame, right?
I mean, it really is.
It's not good, is it?
I mean, all the subtlety of what she manages to achieve
and the tension.
Just a little bit of defence of the second half of the book,
by the way.
I really thought, you know, it becomes a page turner and you think this is, you know,
you keep having to pinch yourself that you're, you know,
the prose is so good all the way through, but you're, you know,
she does the plot, she does keep you guessing,
she keeps the plot turning forwards.
But, I mean, I think the movie is, you know,
the fact that they get rid of the warden as a character.
They flip the, you know, it's women who are infertile, you know, not men.
I mean, Cuaron, Alfonso Cuaron.
That's a weird move.
That's a really weird move.
It's a weird move.
It doesn't make really any difference to the future that we're facing.
You know, it was an odd choice.
You've now really got me stuck on
the idea of a muppet children of men where clive owen remains the same and everyone else is played
by a muppet andrew which muppet for warden of england oh i think gonzo the great is he's got
he's got the title so don't you gotta be gonzo it's brilliant pd james is in the film you know
she makes a little cameo no No, didn't know that.
So there's a scene right at the beginning where Theo is in a coffee shop.
He gets his coffee, he leaves, and a few seconds later,
a sort of pipe bomb blows it up and he's narrowly avoided being killed.
She's the old lady queuing up in the cafe.
Is she?
I didn't know that.
I couldn't find anywhere where she said anything other than, you know,
it was fine.
And to be honest, she's very, very, if you read her autobiography,
there are lists of how to adapt things for television, you know,
a seven-point plan for how to do it properly.
So it's not like she didn't have opinions.
She had, you know, well, interesting.
Laura, you will have chosen a section of the book for us to read.
Did you choose from the first or second half of the novel?
Well, I think you probably can guess that it's from the first.
Which part are we going to hit?
Well, the reason I picked this is because I think it's,
I don't mean for the first half to sound too much like
an intellectual dissertation on how do you live
when there's no future. It's so enlivened by these little tableaux, which usually have a
religious context. So it's just that. It's just a tiny little vignette that I felt was just
written unimprovably, really. So he is Theo. He reached the chapel just as the service was about to begin.
They go in for christenings. There's always this religious yearning, but they christen kittens.
Pets.
Yeah. Okay. He reached the chapel just as the service was about to begin.
The choir of eight men and eight women filed in,
bringing with them a memory of earlier choirs, boy choristers,
entering grave-faced with that almost imperceptible childish swagger.
Theo banished the image, wondering why it was so persistent
when he had never even cared for children.
Now he fixed his eyes on the chaplain,
remembering the incident some months previously when he had arrived early for Evensong. Somehow
a young deer from the Maudlin Meadow had made its way into the chapel and was standing peaceably
beside the altar as if this were its natural habitat. The chaplain, harshly shouting, had rushed at it, seizing and hurling prayer books, thumping its silken sides.
The animal, puzzled, docile, had for a moment endured the assault and then, delicate-footed, had pranced its way out of the chapel.
The chaplain had turned to Theo, tears streaming down his face.
Christ, why can't they wait? Bloody animals.
They'll have it all soon enough. Why can't they wait?
That's it. But I just think that is a perfect...
It's great.
Perfect.
Yes, yes, you're right. I agree with you.
Yes, Laura.
The idea that those tableaux are the things that keep it moving along
and that each tableau, like all good dystopias,
each tableau deepens and enriches the next one
as you build up this patchwork of a broken world.
It's very, very powerful that, I think.
And just showing you...
Sorry, sorry.
We're just showing you little bits of it as well.
She is very explicit.
You know, page one,
the last person born on Earth has just died.
I mean, she couldn't technically be making things clearer,
but what she chooses to see...
I'm sure you remember the scene in the first few pages.
There's a woman walking along the street with a pram.
Pram, yeah, yeah.
And you lean in,
and she's got one of these very realistic ceramic dolls.
And it's a kind of shuddery moment.
Yes, yeah.
And then another woman reaches into the pram
as if to admire the doll.
Oh, yes.
And then smashes it against the pavement.
And the woman who's had the pram is driven out of her wit.
She screams.
It's this awful scream she gives.
And again, tiny tableau, just like Laura says,
but so telling and so rich.
Yeah.
Everything turned up.
The hysteria and the ennui and the disaffection,
all kind of turned up a notch.
Like being kettled.
It's like the whole of society is being kettled.
There's no way, there's no exit.
So we have to wind up soon.
Before we do, I would like to read from the second half of the novel,
deep into the second half, in fact, the very end of the novel.
And so listeners, if you've yet to read The Children of Men
or you're planning to after listening to this,
please fast forward, use the fast forward button on your devices
to skip the next few minutes because we are going to hear the ending
and we are going to discuss the ending.
So join us again after that in about five minutes' time, all right?
So to those of you still remaining
i'm just going to read one paragraph and then leap ahead to the final paragraph and i'm going
to assume that most people listening will um at this point be familiar with with what's happening
but to say a baby has just been born to julian theo has shot through the head or heart, I think, his cousin, the
Warden of England, and has removed from Zan's finger the Ring of Power, which does sound
a bit like the Lord of the Rings, doesn't it? But it isn't. So this is a heavily symbolic
moment, and this is the very, very end of the book. Theo thought it begins again
with jealousy, with treachery, with violence, with murder, with this ring on my finger.
He looked down at the great sapphire in its glitter of diamonds, at the ruby cross twisting
the ring aware of its weight. Placing it on his hand had been instinctive and
yet deliberate, a gesture to assert authority and ensure protection. He had known that the
grenadiers would come armed, and the sight of that shining symbol on his figure would at least
make them pause, give him time to speak. Did he need to wear it now? He had all Zan's power within his grasp, that and more.
With Karl dying, the council was leaderless. For a time at least, he must take Zan's place.
There were evils to be remedied, but they must take their turn. He couldn't do everything at
once, there had to be priorities. Was that what Zan had found? And was this sudden intoxication
of power what Zan had known every day of his life,
the sense that everything was possible to him, that what he wanted would be done,
that what he hated would be abolished, that the world could be fashioned according to his will?
He drew the ring from his finger, then paused and pushed it back. There would be time later to decide whether, and for how long, he needed it.
The towel between Julian's legs was heavily stained. He removed it without revulsion,
almost without thought, and folding another, put it in place. There was very little water left in
the bottle, but he hardly needed it. His tears were falling now over the child's forehead.
His tears were falling now over the child's forehead.
From some far childhood memory, he recalled the rite.
The water had to flow.
There were words which had to be said.
It was with a thumb wet with his own tears and stained with her blood
that he made on the child's forehead the sign of the cross.
That's pretty good.
Laura, time for that mic drop.
John, what does that ending mean?
Well, it is a moment of hope.
She thought of it as a moment of hope, but it's heavily tempered by the,
the realization that Theo slightly against the,
the better judgment of Julian,
who's just given birth to that hope.
The new child has put on the ring of power.
Andrew mentioned earlier that moral ambiguity,
she doesn't really do happy endings
in the way that uh a golden age crime writer would do okay you you filled the time brilliantly and i
would like to thank you for that john it's ambiguous andy there it does there's no no
simple meaning no simple meaning right i'll go to you next, Andrew.
What do you get from that ending?
The same moment of, you know,
it should be the crowning moment of the novel,
some pun intended.
Very good.
That slipped out easily.
Please.
But instead, there's a sense of disquiet,
and you can feel the corruption beginning within Theo's heart,
which has only just been rescued from the pit of ice,
and it's extraordinary.
As I think you said, the idea that the protagonists are not left
in a world where resolution is achieved,
but are set on a new path of a different kind of existential crisis.
Laura, what's about the Christian element to that ending?
You said you found the novel very Christian, as did I, in fact.
What do you make of the ending in those terms? Well, in the first half, this death of hope,
the sin of despair, if you like, inevitably, but you're feeling the need for hope, the urge toward
hope all the time. And then in the second half, that becomes explicit. And the birth of the child is
explicitly Christian. Where it happens, how it happens, it's the equivalent of the stable,
et cetera. That religious sensibility that she had, that hinterland that's steeped in the
King James Bible, all that. I just think more and more how much solidity and weight
that does give to all her books.
Because it's unusual today, isn't it?
We're living in a world of secular art.
They are written with a moral code and, to some extent,
an orthodox moral code, aren't they?
Yes, and even more than that, I think, she's not moralistic.
She's an adult. She's not judgmental in an easy way. But I just feel that religious backdrop,
which is unusual. It's unusual in a 20th century novelist, I think. And I just feel,
because her novels do have this weight and
density and everything, and solidity and consolation, even when they are morally
ambivalent, et cetera. And I just keep thinking how key that is.
I wanted to say one thing just because I'd hate for it not to be the astonishing suffering that she lived through.
Her husband died in his early 40s.
He was in a mental institution.
Her mother had been in a mental institution.
A lot of the deep kind of moral faith in Phyllis's work comes from a place of incredible pain and suffering.
this work comes from a place of incredible pain and suffering.
And I think that is what, in the end, distinguishes this book and her work in general from your average thriller.
It's a very, very powerful novel.
I'll give you my gloss on that ending very quickly,
which is I was nonplussed by it when I first read it.
And while I was reading it again there,
I think what I take from that ending is the ending actually recasts
everything you've just read, including the trustworthiness
of the first-person narrative in the diary.
And I think you're perhaps supposed to realise
that Theo himself is a wrong-un all along.
That you are, wait a minute, you're seeing someone
who thinks they haven't been corrupted by their proximity to power,
but what you're actually seeing is not the ice melting,
but the ice hardening.
You're actually seeing somebody being corrupted,
even in the face of a moment of beginning again.
Because he's there because of nepotism.
He is an unpleasant man.
He is an elitist.
He is accidentally responsible for a death.
So his hands are bloody already through, if not malice, neglect.
And I think part of the ending is to say to you, you know,
not just don't don the ring of power, but, you know,
anyone who seeks to wear the ring of power is, of course,
totally unsuited to seek to do so.
Donald Trump isn't in this book, but I'm saying, you know, kind of, sorry.
Sorry, Republican listeners to this show.
Now, it's time for us to leave.
Oh, smooth.
Smooth as always.
Now it's time for us to leave, Theo and Julian, and the testing moral universe of
Phyllis James. Huge thanks to Andrew and to Laura for giving us the chance to explore it,
and to Luke Eldridge for turning our journey into an actual podcast.
If you want show notes with clips, links, and suggestions for further reading for this show
and the 207 that we've already recorded, please visit our website at batlisted.fm.
If you want to purchase the books discussed on
this or any of our other shows visit our shop at bookshop.org and choose backlisted as your bookshop
and we're still keen to hear from you on twitter facebook instagram blue sky uh um
i don't know stone tablets you know you know. Stone tablets, yes.
Yes, if you're listening, please chisel away and get in touch with us.
If you want to hear Backlisted early and ad-free,
subscribe to our Patreon, www.patreon.com forward slash backlisted.
Your subscription brings other benefits.
If you subscribe at the lock listener level for a monthly fee
that's about the same as a paperback novel,
you'll get not one but two extra podcasts every month.
It features the three of us talking, recommending the books,
films and music we've enjoyed in the previous fortnight.
And for those of you who enjoyed our What Have You Been Reading slot,
that's where you'll now find it.
It's an hour of tunes, musings and superior book chat.
Plus, a lot of listeners get their names read out,
accompanied by lashings of praise like this.
Susan Dillon, thank you. Lucy Harold, like this. Susan Dillon, thank you.
Lucy Harold, thank you.
Mike Slee, thank you.
Muriel, thank you.
Martin von Mirbach, thank you.
Diane Aston, thank you.
Nick O'Pray, thank you.
David Proud, thank you so much.
Rebecca Jacob, thank you.
Liz Moran, thank you.
Before we wind up completely, I would like to ask, first, Laura.
Laura, is there anything else you would like to add on the subject of P.D. James or the children of men?
I'm really glad John said that little bit at the end about her life.
An incredible woman she was.
Incredible woman. the end about the um her life an incredible woman she was incredible woman and also um i just put in a quick mention of a book we haven't uh alluded to which is her other non as it were detective
fiction book um innocent blood which i also think is a bit of a masterpiece and would highly
recommend thank you very much uh andrew is there anything else
we didn't touch on that you would like to bring to our attention just to echo what everyone said
about the cordelia gray books because i think you're so right it's so sad there are only two
you read the first one an unsuitable job for a woman you think right i'm set i can't wait to read
the next half dozen of these and then you find there's one more um but they are both jewels
they're both absolutely worth reading even if um even if there
are no more well i find it hard to believe that that phyllis is 10 years gone john yeah it's
astonishing 1999 just check this out soon we shall get to the stage where a bestseller will be written
by a computer with all the necessary ingredients of sex and violence fed into the machine.
The publisher will then find a young man or woman with a fashionable face,
appropriate body measurements and a sensational emotional and sexual life and place his or her name on the title page.
I suppose the book could then be sold on the internet and would no doubt cause a literary sensation.
Yeah, AI. Phyllis got there first.
Andrew, rename yourself AI James and get on to the publishers.
Listen, thanks very much, guys.
Thank you so much for giving up your time to talk to us.
I loved reading and thinking about this book so much.
And I know listeners will do the same.
It's a treat.
We'll see you again in a fortnight, everybody.
Thanks, Laura.
Thanks, Andrew.
See you soon.
See you soon, mate.
Bye-bye. thanks Laura thanks Andrew see you soon bye bye