“Caroline Rose is plagued by the tapping of typewriter keys and the strange, detached narration of her every thought and action. Caroline has an unusual problem - she realizes she is in a novel. Her fellow characters also seem Laurence, her former lover, finds diamonds in a loaf of bread - has his elderly grandmother hidden them there? And Baron Stock, her bookseller friend, believes he is on the trail of England's leading Satanist.”
I will grant you, based on my many previous books that I’ve read, this is very different from my usual reading material, but thoroughly enjoyable. It’s an interesting first novel from Sparks (see below) but she writes with a deft hand and The Comforters abound with sly, witty humor that British are still famous for. And it’s fun to see Caroline recognizing that everything happening is just a bit too weird and so she begins to suspect that they are all characters in a book, and that she, somehow, is hearing the author at work. A lot of its charm is that Sparks blends a bunch of genres in what amounts a social comedy. Something rare in books released in the time period.
So, yes, as one character notes towards the end (in a meta-fiction way, long before the word was coined) maybe the book is “straight old-fashioned story, no modern mystifications. End with the death of the villain and the marriage of the heroine", but the book is an often funny and fascinating look into fate and the untold.
The Comforters was Muriel Spark’s first novel, though she is mainly remembered for her 1961 novel The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, which was adapted into a Tony Award winning play in 1968 and the successful film adaptation in 1969 that scored the late Dame Maggie Smith an Oscar for Best Actress.
She drew on experiences as a recent convert to Catholicism and having suffered hallucinations due to using Dexedrine, an amphetamine then available over the counter for dieting. The idea for the plot came to Spark after a serious mental breakdown, during which she believed that there were secret word game style codes in the poems of TS Eliot. She became so convinced by this that she would spend night after night encoding. She finally became better as a result of improved nutrition (she had been chronically malnourished) and a rest cure funded by a number of writers, including Graham Greene. TS Eliot was also moved to write her a letter, reassuring her that there were no such codes in his work.




