Jo Walton's new alternate history novel Farthing manages the
incredible, heart-rending trick of being a quiet little story about
quiet, brave people while simultaneously conjuring the kind of haunting
dystopia that rips your guts out.
In the Farthing timeline, Britain made peace with Hitler, through the
intervention of a faction within the Tories called "the Farthing set,"
for the Farthing manor house on which they gather. Hitler has taken
Europe and is warring on Russia, while Britain barely tolerates the
Jewish refugees that have come to its shores.
The story opens with a weekend on the Farthing estate in 1949,
and Lucy, the sole surviving child of the family that owns the estate,
has come back to her girlhood home with her husband, David, a Jewish
banker who escaped Hitler's France. David is cordially loathed by all
present -- the Farthing set -- who nevertheless tolerate him with
hypocritical good cheer.
Then the architect of the peace with Hitler is found murdered
in his bed in Farthing manor, and all suspicion turns to David. Even
those who suspect that this is a setup nevertheless choose to believe
that it isn't, preferring to blame the interloping Jew to one of their
number.
The story proceeds in chapters told by Lucy and chapters told
by a likable, sharp Scotland Yard detective, but this is no detective
story. It's a thorough study on evil, a meditation of how people betray
that which is good for that which is expedient, or self-serving. It is
never cynical -- the world of Farthing has at least as many heroically
selfless angels as cheap sellouts, but where this book really goes on a
tear is in showing how even the good can be easily boxed into doing
ill.
Farthing is clearly a parable about Britain and America in the
wake of the 9/11 and 7/7 attacks, when commonsense, humanism, and a
commitment to liberty and justice has been easily set aside in a fury
of bloodlust and a dismal, shrugging apathy. Walton's deft touch is
like Orwell's, tender but unflinching, and it's easy to see why she won
the Campbell Award and the World Fantasy Award.
Once I hit the home stretch, the last hundred pages, I couldn't
put this down. Like the last act of 1984, Farthing's conclusion
inspires a simultaneous round of dread and hope that I couldn't walk
away from. Few books have moved me as much as Farthing, it's one of
those novels I'll be recommending to friends and returning to many,
many times.
Sukey's
rather like a cat in some ways, a slightly fussy cat like a Burmese or
a Siamese, and that stroking always reminds me of a cat stroking its
fur. She likes to have everything in its place, she likes her velvet
and bobbles, but she's a superb manager. She's absolutely devoted to
mummy, they're cousins, and they've been together since they were
girls, and while Sukey's title is "secretary-companion," the
"companion" added to show she's a lady and not a hireling, she actually
organizes a tremendous amount for Mummy, the house, and political
things as well. She keeps Mummy pointed in the right direction. Sukey
stays on top of evertyhing that's going on and kind of briefs Mummy so
Mummy can just sail through. They're like a swan: Mummy's the part on
top of the water gliding along effortlessly and Sukey's the part below
the water kicking frantically.
Link
Update: Zhan points out the parallels between the fictional Farthing Set and the real historical Cliveden Set.
[from http://www.boingboing.net/ ]
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