A Month in the Country is the fifth novel by J. L. Carr, first published in 1980 and nominated for the Booker Prize. The book won the Guardian Fiction Prize in 1980.
A Month in the Country | |
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Author(s) | J.L. Carr |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Genre(s) | Fiction |
Publisher | Harvester Press |
Publication date | 1980 |
Media type | Print (Hardback) |
Pages | 111 |
ISBN | 978-0-85527-328-6 |
OCLC Number | 7168346 |
Dewey Decimal | 823/.914 19 |
LC Classification | PR6053.A694 M6 |
Preceded by | How Steeple Sinderby Wanderers Won the F.A. Cup |
Followed by | The Battle of Pollocks Crossing |
Contents |
The plot concerns Tom Birkin, a World War I veteran employed to uncover a mural in a village church that was thought to exist under coats of whitewash. At the same time another veteran is employed to look for a grave beyond the churchyard walls. Though Birkin is an atheist there is prevalent religious symbolism throughout the book, mainly dealing with judgment. The novel explores themes of England's loss of spirituality after the war, and of happiness, melancholy, and nostalgia as Birkin recalls the summer uncovering the mural, when he healed from his wartime experiences and a broken marriage. In an essay [1] for Open Letters Monthly, Ingrid Norton praised the novel's subtlety:
The happiness depicted in A Month in the Country is wise and wary, aware of its temporality. When he arrives in Oxgodby, Birkin knows very well life is not all ease and intimacy, long summer days with “winter always loitering around the corner.” He has experienced emotional cruelty in his failed marriage. As a soldier, he witnessed death: destruction and unending mud. But the edges are brighter for it. Birkin’s idyll in the country is brought into relief by what Birkin has gone through in the past and the disappointments that, it is implied, await him. Carr’s great art is to make it clear that joy is inseparable from the pain and oblivion which unmake it.
Many of the incidents in the novel are based on real events in Carr's own life, and some of the characters are modelled on his own Methodist family.
The jacket illustration shows Tintagel Parish Church whereas the story is set in Yorkshire. The grave outside the churchyard wall was suggested by Tintagel where a number of early graves were encountered at Trecarne Lands and excavated.
The novel is a set book as a part of some secondary school English courses.
With a screenplay by Simon Gray, the novel was made into a 1987 film, directed by Pat O'Connor and starring Colin Firth, Kenneth Branagh, Natasha Richardson and Patrick Malahide. Shortly before his death, Dave Sheasby completed a radio adaptation of the book, which was broadcast on the BBC Radio 4 Saturday Play in November 2010.[2]