Tag Archives: Rosamond Lehmann

The Weather in the Streets by Rosamond Lehmann

The Weather in the Streets – Rosamond Lehmann
Virago Modern Classics, 2006
Originally published 1936
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The Weather in the Streets picks up ten years after we first met Olivia in Invitation to the Waltz. In the meantime, she married, and separated, from a man called Igor. She now lives in London together with cousin Etty. Sadder and thinner, but I wouldn’t say pessimistic, she travels back to her parental house after receiving a phone call that her father is gravely ill. On the train she encounters Rollo Spencer by chance, the man with whom she shared a brief moment on the balcony in Invitation to the Waltz. They fall in love, despite the fact that Rollo, too, is married. This books traces their love affair from its first moments, to the whirlwind of clandestine meetings, and onto the rather harsh confrontation with the realities and hurt that come with the role of being “the other woman.”

I cannot quite decide if The Weather in the Streets is better than Invitation to the Waltz. It is definitely a lot more depressing and not as lightweight in its descriptions as the previous book about Olivia was in stages. I’m trying to come up with the proper words to describe how I experienced reading this book, but I find I fail to make any coherent story out of them. So please forgive me for that.

The first 150-or-so pages of The Weather in the Streets reminded me of Invitation to the Waltz a lot. It has a similar setting, pace, and the same, what I can only define as, Bridget Jones-like way of having Olivia act and reflect on her feelings, and the mistakes she makes. I know the latter comparison probably won’t go over well with many, but there’s something about Olivia, the way she isn’t easy on herself, but also remains a flicker of humour when she talks about her sufferings, that reminded me of Bridget Jones. Except that, of course, Olivia finds herself in much more serious circumstances, and this book has a more serious setting and tone overall.

Perhaps it is the fact that this novel is so much longer (around 380 pages) that made my attention wander a little. I couldn’t quite interest myself as much in the actual affair between Rollo and Olivia. Perhaps another reason can be found in the fact that I often struggle with adultery in novels. However, I will say that Olivia’s account of her affair for the first time made me feel more sympathy for “the other woman”, something I wouldn’t have thought possible to feel as much of.

What remains from Invitation to the Waltz and is, I think, developed much better, is the social commentary. Exactly because of the social difference between Rollo and Olivia, his rich family, and Olivia’s lesser circumstances with the disgrace of a failed marriage on top, Olivia is able to reflect on them. Moreover, her more arty friends provide a good contrast to Rollo’s family setting, while Olivia never really feels satisfied with both. Most of all though, this social commentary can be found in the small details, or even the small remarks or thoughts of Olivia. They are easy to miss, but also very entertaining to read.

What made me care in the middle of feeling my attention wander at times, was [spoilers, highlight to read] the description of Olivia’s pregnancy and abortion. Lehmann’s descriptions of Olivia’s feelings, her struggles with wanting to bear Rollo a child but knowing it wouldn’t make him happy, her realisation that “the other woman” was all she was ever going to be, and that therefore she had no right and no future to offer the child, and then the painfully detailed scenes of Olivia’s collapse and sickbed after having had an abortion. [/spoilers] Add to that the realisation that in 1936, I’m sure to write about such a subject, as a relatively normal and regular occurrence, wouldn’t have been completely socially acceptable. It were these personal tensions described, but also the political hiding behind, that made me appreciate Olivia’s story again, as I did during the first 150 pages.

The Weather in the Streets divided me a little. On the one hand, I feel it may be the more accomplished of the novels about Olivia. The prose feels the same, but is more emotionally moving at certain points. And in its description of a longer episode in Olivia’s life, I feel that I have received a more complete picture. On the other hand, from the very start you know the story is going to be more bleak. If Invitation to the Waltz has the dreamy atmosphere of a seventeen-year-old still on the threshold of many opportunities, The Weather in the Streets is a realistic, and sometimes pessimistic, realisation that life never is what you dream it would be. It has a more confrontational quality to it. This does not make it a work less worthy of attention, but it does make for a novel that is more difficult to pick up and read, at times.

After reading two novels of Rosamond Lehmann in the past month, I am eagerly awaiting to read some of her other novels. Luckily, I do own one other by her, The Echoing Grove, as well the autobiographically based The Swan in the Evening. I also have Selina Hasting’s biography of Lehmann sitting on my shelves. To be honest though, I am most curious about reading Dusty Answer, which seems to be a favourite of so many bloggers.

Rosamond Lehmann Reading WeekI read The Weather in the Streets for Miss Darcy’s Library’s Rosamond Lehmann Reading Week. It is not too late to join in! Click on over to her blog for much more on the author and her fiction.

Other Opinions: Verity’s Virago Venture, Yours?

* This is an affiliate link. If you buy a product through this link, I will receive a small percentage of the purchase price.

Invitation to the Waltz by Rosamond Lehmann

Invitation to the Waltz - Rosamond LehmannInvitation to the Waltz – Rosamond Lehmann
Virago Modern Classics, 2006
First published 1932
Buy: Amazon | Bookdepository *

I think Invitation to the Waltz was one of the first Virago Modern Classics I managed to find over here. Not that I claim to have a grand collection now (I may own approximately 15 titles at the moment), but I do remember finding this in a shop – relatively cheap – and simply feeling elated because these books come with a reputation of being wonderful. And so, in my head, they all are, and all immediately need to be bought.

Happily, I was not disappointed in this one, which is also my first book by Rosamond Lehmann.

The premise of the story told here is simple: For her seventeenth birthday Olivia Curtis receives a number of gifts, including a roll of flame-coloured silk for an evening dress. She is to wear this dress to her first dance. We follow her preparations, excitement, and nerves for this first dance, and watch the event unfold in all its splendour and uncertainty. How will shy and awkward Olivia do on this first grand social occasion?

The appeal of Invitation to the Waltz  is to be found in its depiction of the thoughts and anxieties of a seventeen-year-old at her first social event and the atmosphere Lehmann manages to evoke. As such, it is perhaps the part depicting the dance that was of the most immediate interest, but there are still quiet and appealing moment in the narrative preceding that one. What touched me most was how I was able to relate to Olivia’s inner world. Sometimes for the most basic things, such as her thoughts on getting out of bed, pronto:

Another five minutes, thought Olivia, and shut her eyes. Not to fall asleep again; but to go back as it were and do the thing gradually—detach oneself softly, float up serenely from the clinging delectable fringes. Oh, heavenly sleep! Why must one cast it from one, all unprepared, unwilling? Caught out again by Kate in the very act! You’re not trying, you could wake up if you wanted to: that was their attitude. And regularly one began the day convicted of inferiority, of a sluggish voluptuous nature, seriously lacking in will-power.

But even more so for the novel’s portrayal of hope and anxiety, of blinding insecurities and telling yourself to pull through it, when it comes to social events. Olivia’s doubts about her dress, which she dreamt would be perfect, but seems a little awkward when she puts it on, must be recognisable for most who have felt insecure about their wardrobe at times. But most of all, Olivia’s inevitable social awkwardness  at the ball; how many events have I not spent in this manner, albeit not grand social affairs like balls, but more likely high school parties:

Why go?  It was unthinkable.  Why suffer so much?  Wrenched from one’s foundations; neglected, ignored, curiously stared at; partnerless, watching Kate move serenely from partner to partner, pretending not to watch; pretending not to see one’s hostess wondering; must she do something about one again? – (but really one couldn’t go on and on introducing these people); pretending not to care; slipping off to the ladies’ cloakroom, fiddling with unnecessary pins and powder, ears strained for the music to stop; wandering forth again to stand by oneself against the wall, hope struggling with despair beneath a mask of smiling indifference…Back to the cloakroom, the pins, the cold scrutiny or (worse) the pitying small talk of the attendant maid.

It is hard not to feel a deep sympathy for Olivia. And Lehmann has done a stellar job in making a somewhat awkward heroine into someone the reader is happy to identify with. There’s something very appealing about Olivia’s inner world, right alongside moments at the beginning of the story that make you want to step in and tell her to please not make the mistake she’s about to make..

Yet, there are less than perfect moments in Invitation to the Waltz, most notably the fact that sometimes, suddenly, the narrative will swing between Olivia and her older sister Kate. While Kate’s story might have been interesting, I was not always sure how I was meant to place it alongside Olivia’s. Moreover, sometimes the change in perspectives startled me, and I had to stop and think before I realised that this was not Olivia, but someone else entirely.

Rosamond Lehmann Reading WeekOverall though, I am more than satisfied with my first experience of Rosamond Lehmann’s fiction, and I am a little impatient to read more. First on my list? The Weather in the Streets, which is the story of Olivia ten years later (to be reviewed later this week). After that I have a few other titles of Lehmann waiting on my shelves..

I read this book for Miss Darcy’s Library’s Rosamond Lehmann Reading Week. It’s not too late to join in! Click on over to her blog for much more on the author and her fiction.

Other Opinions: Verity’s Virago Venture, Shelf Love, Fleur Fisher, The Captive Reader, Heavenali.
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* This is an affiliate link. If you buy a product through this link, I will receive a small percentage of the purchase price.