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Book review: Live a Little By Howard Jacobson

This novel about relationships between mothers and sons is fast and clever

July 3, 2019 14:11
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Live a Little By Howard Jacobson

Jonathan Cape Vintage, £18.99

One of Howard Jacobson’s best novels, perhaps his most underrated, is Shylock is My Name, which was published three years ago. Dark and acerbic, it was a brilliant homage to Shakespeare’s creation of a great Jewish character. His latest, Live a Little, also has a Shakespearean feel, but that of a comedy this time, Much Ado perhaps. Fast and clever, it is about relations between men and women, and between mothers and sons — rather than fathers and daughters.

The two central characters are old, living off the Finchley Road. Beryl Dusinberry, known as “the Princess” (not because she really is a princess, it’s “just a bit of fun she’s having with herself”), is in a permanent state of war with her two unlikely live-in carers — one African, one East European — and her  sons. “You never permitted gaiety to enter our lives,” one reminds her,  reproachfully. “You are the least playful mother who ever lived.”
The Princess is unrepentant. Approaching the end of her life, she has bigger fish to fry. Her hearing is deteriorating. But worse, much worse, “the Princess fears slippage”. Words and names are slipping away. “Names have been going for years… After people, things. What’s that biscuit called? What was that place? Remembering Tangiers delighted her. But what was it a memory of?” But names, she needs: “Names are the key to her past, and therefore to her continuance. Names root her. No names and there’s just her spinning in space.”