This author has focused her fiction in the peri-WW I era in England,
and this book is no exception to that rule.
As anyone who has watched ‘Downton Abbey’ knows, WW I was a sea change
for England. The was not only a colossal
waste of life and resources. It
represented a shift in the importance of class in England, as well as the roles
of women in society. That is the
cultural and social backdrop against which the story takes place.
The book is entitled ‘Toby’s Room’ but it is really about
Toby’s sister, Elinor. They are siblings
who are unusually close throughout their lives.
They are so close that they have a taboo sexual relationship that was a
‘one off’ event for Toby, but Elinor is not so convinced about that. She wants that extended intimacy, which in
childhood meant one thing but in adulthood would certainly include sex. Which is why you are supposed to leave your
family of origin behind you and find intimacy with a partner—because sex with
you family of origin is really frowned upon.
The book does not focus on incest, but rather sees it as
part of the drive for Elinor’s obsession with Toby. When she has a premonition that he will not
come home from his military service in France and he is soon thereafter
reported ‘missing in action, presumed dead’. She becomes obsessed with what
happened to him. The subtext of that
obsession is that something triggered that premonition, and that she somehow
knew that not coming back is what he intended. She is desperate to find out what his state
of mind was those last few days on the battlefield, and somehow absolve herself
from the guilt she feels that she should have recognized the danger and done
something about it. She really wants to
be wrong, but she is equally sure that she is right. She drops all the social niceties in her
pursuit of her goal, which is wholly unladylike at the beginning of the 20th
century. Pursuing men who ignore you is
simply not done. She can’t let it go
because she can’t get on with her life without knowing. She is sleeping in Toby’s room and painting
Toby. So he is in her thoughts both day
and night. Moving forward with ordinary
tasks of life is simply impossible for her.
The backdrop of WW I, men with profound physical and psychological
damage, magnifies her obsession, but the truth is that the death of a parent, a
spouse, a child, or a sibling leads to tremendous and ongoing trauma in those
left behind, and post WW I in England it was almost impossible to have not lost
at least one of those. This is a serious
story well told.
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