Rereading an illustrious writer.
As part of Oxford University Press’ My Reading series, award-winning novelist, poet, memoirist, and playwright Roberts offers intimate reflections about her connection to Colette (1873-1954) by considering four texts that had particular significance for her: My Mother’s House, a prismatic memoir of linked stories; Break of Day, an autobiographical novel; Chéri, Colette’s famous tale of a seductive gigolo and his aging mistress; and The Rainy Moon, a novella that Roberts first read during a particularly dark time when she was in her 30s. Raised in the “grip of Catholic morality” by a strict, undemonstrative mother, sent to a convent school that instilled a sense of “self-hatred as a woman,” the young Roberts discovered in Colette “an enticing landscape distinguished by its straightforwardly amoral celebration of sensuality.” My Mother’s House, in which Colette’s mother, Sido, “appears as a figure of powerful, overarching mythic status,” helped Roberts to rethink her relationship with her own overpowering mother and to find her way back “to that unsentimental, strong, practical French woman.” Colette showed her a new way to think about femininity as well, not as self-abnegation or inferiority to men, but “as a performance or a disguise or a fancy-dress costume.” For Colette, Roberts asserts, writing was aggressive, in keeping with her celebration of her “robust, healthy body” and voracious appetites. Besides highlighting themes of women’s independence and agency, Roberts reveals ways that Colette shaped her as a writer: teaching her, for example, that there was “a wealth of ways to use autobiographical material”; presenting prodigious examples of “supple and muscular” prose, skillfully shaped characters and dialogue, and writing replete with sensuous textures and sharply observed details.
Insightful close readings inform a fervent homage.