Recommended by: A Life in Books, sort of, in that she said she loved anything by Sarah Waters and I randomly grabbed Night Watch when I went to the library.
I don’t know if it’s just because I love Britain in World War II or what, but I really, really loved Night Watch. It was swell. I so much didn’t want it to end that I put it down and left it alone for ages before returning to it today and finishing it all up in one gobble.
Basically it’s about four (Kay, Viv, Helen, Duncan – yes, four) people in London during and after World War II. I am really shocking rubbish at plot synopses, but there’s not a lot more to say on this one. It’s all about them, and it goes in three sections: one in 1947, one in 1944, and one in 1941, in that order. So you’re reading to find out how things came about, rather than to see where things are going. In a way I really like this – I love those films or episodes of TV shows where you see people carrying on doing things, where you see things that are clearly significant but you don’t know why, and then they flash back to a previous thing and you find out why it was so significant.
Which is why I loved this book to pieces all through the 1947 section and the 1944 section. It was just the 1941 section that I thought fell off a little bit. In a way, it felt really unnecessary – we find out how Kay and Helen met, how Viv and Reggie met, and what happened with Duncan and Alex. And it was a bad finish to the book, I thought. Not that I wasn’t interested to know all these things, but that it was a bad way to leave it, because we weren’t finding out anything that washed backward over the rest of the book and imbued it with new meaning, which I guess is what I was hoping for. The 1944 section did this gorgeously to the 1947 section, but the 1941 stuff? Neg. I was sad and let down and depressed.
Oh, but I really liked the book anyway. Okay, it didn’t end with a bang, but it was mighty interesting all the same. And I love the Brits during World War II. Finest hour, man. Sarah Waters draws these interactions with such nuance. I was in love with it. Actually it reminded me a lot of The Charioteer, and I swear it’s not just because they’re both gay-themed WWII books; it’s the delicacy of the relationships and conversations.
Yay for Sarah Waters. I checked out her other three books from the library, so I will let you know about those. I was sad to find there were only three. I know she’s only 42 and there’s no reason she should have dozens of books all written and if she did it might not suggest something flattering about the quality of her writing, but still, I liked Night Watch a lot and I wished there were lots more like it. I’d like to give her a Favored Authors tag but it seems premature.