For reasons that don’t need to concern you, I find myself, this week, with very little time to write a blog post. I realise that this may come as a shock. You have probably grown accustomed, over the last six-and-a-half years, to me sharing all sorts of intimate details with you. You may also have come to the not unreasonable conclusion that writing my blog post takes priority over any of the other, less important, activities I may have to devote my time to.
Well, not this week, I’m afraid. I currently have a very small window of opportunity, and a suitably slim topic to squeeze through it. So, expect neither linguistic pyrotechnics nor elegant witticisms, neither deep geo-political analysis nor an assorted bundle of ephemera. If I had to select an adjective to describe what I expect the next 600 words to turn out to be, I might well go with ‘prosaic’, which is, at least, I suppose, not inappropriate for 600 words of prose.
I want to recommend a book to you this week – a collection of American short stories. I am not, in the normal run of things, a great fan of short stories; I usually prefer feeling completely immersed in the deeper waters of an elaborate and leisurely novel. However, from time to time, a light buffet lunch appeals more than a formal, four-course sit-down, slap-up meal. This last couple of weeks has been such a time.
Incidentally, before we get to the book (and I can see that, despite my best intentions, this is indeed turning into an assorted bundle of ephemera), you are undoubtedly, like me, wondering about the origin of that phrase ‘a slap-up meal’. Brewer’s Dictionary of Phrase and Fable quotes Thackeray as stating, in his 1853 novel The Newcomes that “The more slap-up still have two shields painted on the panel with the coronet over”, with the meaning of ‘first-rate’ or ‘grand’. In 1864, Dickens, in Our Mutual Friend, describes the character Bella Wilfer receiving a surprise gift of £50 and treating her impoverished father to a complete makeover and a luxurious meal. She rolls up in a fancy carriage to surprise him – “…a slap-up gal in a bang-up chariot” and treats him to a “slap-up luncheon”.
Over the years, the adjective ‘slap-up’ became confined to descriptions of food. Why was that, and where did the phrase come from? The most plausible explanation (which, given the nature of etymology, is not necessarily the most likely one, but is certainly the most interesting) is that the phrase grew out of the earlier phrase ‘slap-bang’, which described a meal purchased in the kind of dining establishment where you walk in and slap down your money, and the waiter bangs down your meal immediately. This is, as you may have deduced, not exactly fine dining.
This kind of meal was also described as a ‘slap-down’ meal, and it seems plausible that the phrase ‘slap-up’ was originally coined, as a humorous opposite of ‘slap-down’, to describe a meal ordered and consumed in a much grander establishment.’
But I digress. Let us turn our attention to the short stories. This is a collection wittily entitled Uncommon Type – the wit will be revealed soon – and the quickest way to describe the stories, individually and as a whole, is to say that, if Tom Hanks were a short-story writer rather than an actor, then these are exactly the sort of short stories you would expect him to write. Many are wryly amusing; all are full of telling observational detail; the characters and settings are almost all wholesomely American and celebratory of American values of family, integrity, decency. Even the darker stories leave the central characters more mature and enriched, and the lighter ones are as comforting as warm apple pie.
Here I must confess that I have been misleading you. There is a good reason why they reminded me so much of the values Hanks portrays on screen; he is, in fact, the author of the stories, A Steve Martin quote on the back cover reads: “It turns out that Tom Hanks is also a wise and hilarious writer with an endlessly surprising mind. Damn it.” That just about sums it up.
Other than wholesomeness, the stories are notionally bound together by the odd fact that each contains a reference to a specific typewriter. In some stories the typewriter plays a key (apologies) role; in others, it is only mentioned in passing. However, each machine is carefully described, and if Hanks were not the wholesome character that he is, I would be tempted to suspect that he has a typewriter fetish.
You must imagine, between the last paragraph and this, a five-minute break, during which I followed a hunch, and Googled ‘Tom Hanks typewriters.’ And what do you know? He does have a typewriter fetish! Tom Hanks has a collection of over 250 typewriters, some genuine collectors’ items, but others humble workhorses. He explained his passion in an interview, in the following words:
“There’s something about – I don’t know, it’s a hex in my brain – there is something I find reassuring, comforting, dazzling in that here is a very specific apparatus that is meant to do one thing, and it does it perfectly. And that one thing is to translate the thoughts in your head down to paper. Now that means everything from a shopping list to James Joyce’s Ulysses. Short of carving words into stone with a hammer and chisel, not much is more permanent than a paragraph or a sentence or a love letter or a story typed on paper.”
I should emphasise that sharing Hanks’ passion is not a prerequisite for enjoying the stories. As he ranges widely in time and setting, Hanks offers a series of interesting and engaging characters. He has a lightness of literary touch that makes the stories very readable, but there is a lot here that deserves to be savoured more slowly. As we move inexorably into the languorous heat of an Israeli summer, this feels like the sort of read to be recommending.
If you find Hanks’ character portrayals on the screen a little cloying and syrupy, then you should probably stick with Dostoevsky. However, if you appreciate the warm glow he gives you, then I invite you to curl up with Uncommon Type (the cleverness of whose title you are now in a position to appreciate).
