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DORIS LESSING
If you were to ask most people what impression they
have of Doris Lessing, our only serious contender for
the Nobel Prize for Literature, they would probably
tell you she is the firebrand Communist author of The
Golden Notebook, one of the great feminist novels of
our times. Her novels – over 50 of them –
repeatedly attacked the behaviour of white people towards
black, challenged sexual stereotypes and, at the end
of the Golden Notebook, seemed to suggest that joining
the Labour Party was the solution to public and private
woes. Yet like Paul Johnson and numerous other former
luminaries of the Left she is now a Telegraph-reading
thorn in the side of New Labour.
“We do not have a Government that trusts the people,
the vox pop. This is the most Philistine Government
we’ve ever had,” she says. Having attacked
the Prime Minister at the Edinburgh Book Festival this
year as “a fantasist”, “a child of
the 60s who believes in magic” and “probably
not very bright”, she longs to get rid of the
current Labour Government. She was “appalled”
to see photographs of Gordon Brown kissing his baby
on the front cover of serious newspapers last month,
she says. “I’d even consider voting Tory,
though I probably won’t. We desperately need a
strong Opposition.”
It isn’t only Blair who has come in for withering
criticism. A recent novel, The Sweetest Dream, pours
contempt on a crypto-communist newspaper that is obviously
The Guardian, the Bible of the Left. In previous interviews
she has denied being a feminist, and expressed a compassion
for men that has been considered as shocking a recantation
of beliefs as Fay Weldon’s. True, she gave up
her “neurotic decision” to join Communist
Party membership back in the 1950s, before many other
intellectuals tumbled to the evils of Stalinism. She
has since described Commusnists as “murderers
with a clear conscience.” Fiercely intelligent,
wholly self-educated and an indisputably great, if uneven
writer, she has given the impression of being bolshy
in every sense of the word.
Yet the woman who lives in the heart of a nexus of West
Hampstead streets, all gloomily named after the heroes
of Greek tragedy, could not be more different. Her sun-filled
upstairs room could be that of any Bohemian with its
African carvings, its piles of books, its low damask
sofas and vases of multicoloured flowers. There are
birthday cards featuring the Madonna and Child, wooden
masks, a wonderful old stove and a messy desk with a
small fire extinguisher on it – perhaps to put
out the incendiary side of her work. There are neatly-folded
copies of The Telegraph and The Independent on the floor,
and National Gallery prints of Breughel and Uccello
paintings pinned to the walls. Yet the novels, and particularly
The Grandmothers (HarperCollins £15.99), her latest
collection of short stories do not by any means suggest
this neat, pretty grandmother of letters is going gentle
into the goodnight. Fierce, disturbing, gripping and
unexpectedly funny they display her uncanny prescience
for writing about topics that have only recently come
into debate: in the case of the first story, the sexual
passion that can exist between beautiful young boys
and middle-aged women.
“Astonishing, isn’t it?” Lessing
says. “There’s Germaine Greer with her book
on The Boy, and Zoe Heller with her novel – which
I thought rather good – and I write this. I was
told about the grandmothers by a young man who was a
friend of the two boys. He was sick with envy at their
luck at sleeping with each other’s mother. He
described it as 10 years of perfect bliss, but this
old sceptic doesn’t believe in that. I wrote what
I thought might happen, instead.”
Lessing is our greatest laureate of love – mystified
by it, by the reason why two people can be instantly
attracted to each other (“have you heard the theory
that we have hidden genes that match?”) and has
both suffered and described its pangs throughout an
immensely varied existence. “I can’t find
a pattern to the people I’ve been in love with,”
she says in frustration, adding that the capacity to
fall in love does not diminish with age. The subject
was originally addressed in Love, Again (1996), perhaps
her finest novel, and is returned to in The Grandmothers.
“The whole thing is a mystery. One doesn’t
now act on it, but it does go on happening. You see
someone and think, Yes, it’s still there.”
Her two volumes of autobiography, Under My Skin, and
Walking in the Shade describe a childhood in the former
Rhodesia where she left convent school at 13, but read
omnivorously. Married at 19, as was expected of her
generation, she had a son and daughter by her farmer
husband, Frank Wisdom before leaving him and their children
for Gottfried Lessing, a Communist. She had one son
by him, Peter, whom she took to England with her when
she outgrew that marriage, in turn. Arriving in London
in 1949, her first novel, The Grass is Singing, about
a woman who feels suffocated by small-town racism, was
an immediate success. It was followed by an increasingly
formidable body of autobiographical work, climaxing
in 1962 with The Golden Notebook which became a key-stone
in the burgeoning feminist movement of the 1950s. It’s
depiction of the life, loves and mental breakdown of
Anna Wulf, a “free woman”, remains a startling
piece of fiction, both in terms of its political content
and its modernist, diary-like form. Its women take responsibility
for their own lives and grapple independently with work,
sex, maternity and politics. Lessing was surprised at
the fuss it caused.
“When I wrote it I was not conscious of writing
anything particularly inflammatory. In all the political
movements I had been involved in, I had been listening
to women talking about women’s issues, and about
men. Suddenly when I wrote down their private conversations,
people were astounded. It was as though what women said
didn’t exist until it was written.”
On the vexed question of whether she is or is not a
feminist she is unequivocal.
“Of course I’m a feminist,” she says
at once. “I just think they’ve gone over
the edge. I don’t approve of the damage that has
been done to boys and young men. What I admire are the
times when feminists campaigned for things. We ought
to be campaigning for equal pay, and really good nursery
schools, but apart from a few letters and articles there’s
no concerted movement. If you think of the battle over
the Married Women’s Property Act [in the Victorian
era], where they got out and got the aid of the powerful,
they marched, they wrote letters to newspapers –
and got the law changed. Women now don’t do that,
and I find it very depressing. The 1960s movement just
fizzled out in talk.”
She points out that good state nursery care used to
exist as a matter of course, during the War and immediately
after, when women were needed to work in factories.
“My son Peter went to a state nursery for a year
or two when we first arrived, it was taken for granted.
Then it disappeared, because they didn’t want
women to work.”
She does, however, deny that feminism achieved much
by way of liberation.
“The freedom of women was achieved by two things:
1, the Pill and 2. Labour-saving devices like the washing-machine.
By science, not by feminism.”
If aspects of her work are strongly autobiographical,
the greater part clearly comes from her chameleon-like
capacity to make a strong personality invisible, to
listen with a unique attentiveness and focus. She has
a capacity for stillness that is unlike that of anyone
I have ever interviewed.
“You have to be a listener,” she says,
in her quiet, cultured voice. Doesn’t she get
accused, as many novelists are, of betraying real-life
people?
“My reply is, You shouldn’t trust an author,”
she says laughing; but adds that “people can tell
you a great deal about themselves in a very few words.”
Often she transposes the characters from one culture
to another, as in the second short story of the collection,
Victoria and the Stavenings, about a black girl impregnated
by the son of a white liberal family. The seeds of that
came from America, where the gulf between black and
white is of money: transposed to Britain, it became
as much about class as about racism. She knows liberals
who exclaim, like the Stavenings, “I’ve
always longed to have a black grandchild”, and
the power of the story is that she makes you see the
anguish of all concerned, from the black grandchild
yearning for a middle-class life, to the mother who
is losing her daughter. That, too, has become weirdly
topical because of Diane Abbot’s decision to educate
her son privately: Victoria has to choose between sending
her daughter to the violent, hopeless state school or
accepting that her black daughter will be educated privately
among middle-class white kids. A return to the themes
of her earliest work on racism, and also to her recent
novel, The Sweetest Dream, it is about people on the
edge of doom.
Yet she seems surprised when asked if her vision of
humanity is tragic. “If you look at the ends of
my stories you could say that, but The Grandmothers
have a wonderful time with each other’s sons.
You have a wonderful time, for a time – that’s
the best one could say of life.”
This does not strike one as a particularly optimistic
thing to say, but Lessing is a realist. She refuses
to complain about her old age, though the narrator of
another story, The Reason For It says, “I do sometimes
wonder why old people bother to keep alive, it is such
an effort.” She has a bad back, and osteoporosis
for which she takes a pill but otherwise her appetite
for work and life seems undiminished.
Unwilling to talk about politics at first (“oh,
don’t let’s – it’s so boring”)
she becomes more outspoken on this question of how tax-payers’
money is spent. A keen supporter of the theatre, Lessing
also belongs to the Book Trust, which works at trying
to reverse the effects of the kinds of culture Diane
Abbot was trying to protect her son from.
“What does Tony Blair read?” she says.
“Major and Thatcher both read books.”
Her despair at the embattled status of literature is
shot through with hope because of the effect of Harry
Potter, and admiration for Philip Pullman’s His
Dark Materials.
“Maybe what we’re going to have is an elite
who do read. That’s better than nothing. But then
it’s evident that those who don’t read are
handicapped, they’re going to notice that themselves.
I believe there will be a back-lash. But if there’s
one thing I’ve learnt, it’s not to give
advice. Really, parents should leave books lying around
marked “forbidden” if they want their children
to read.”
Of her own books, she thinks “the Golden Notebook
will survive, for historical reasons. It’s set
in school history classes, which pleases me very much.”
Her struggle to continue to write as a young single
mother in post-War London is awe-inspiring. She produced
9 novels in the fist decade of her son’s life,
not to mention plays performed at the Royal Court, essays,
poems and journalism. Raising her son single-handed
in an Earls Court flat is vividly described in her second
volume of autobiography, Walking in the Shade, which
also describes a roller-coaster love-life. After the
state nurseries stopped, she could only manage to write
when her son was at school, though by huge luck discovered
an intellectual Austrian Jewish family in Kent who took
in children, and would farm him out there for a couple
of weeks during the holidays. Her son had “the
most marvellous time” while she just worked and
worked.
Today Peter, now 54, is ill in bed with diabetes. Her
other son John, a coffee farmer, dies in 1992. It is
her daughter and grand-daughters – one an architect,
the other a lawyer in Cape Town, who are “clever,
brilliant women” who have clearly carried on the
Lessing tradition of intellectual achievement. (There
are, however, no great-grandchildren, though she says
“it would be nice.”) Having a small child
“saved” her, she says, “from being
sucked into the glamorous, hard-drinking world of Soho”
where so many other talented writers and artists of
1950s London drowned.
Perhaps it is this life of unremitting productivity
that has kept her so vital, so vigorous. Her motto is,
“Think wrongly, if you please, but in all cases
think for yourself.” By the time I leave her sun-filled
sitting-room, I do not feel that I have been in the
company of an elderly woman, waiting for the Nobel Prize
that should so clearly be hers. Rather, I feel that
she will continue to inspire, provoke, rebuke and above
all entertain her international audience for many decades
to come.
The Sunday Times, November 2003
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