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A Diversity of Creatures (Twentieth Century Classics)
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Buddy Reads > A Diversity of Creatures by Rudyard Kipling (August 2022)

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message 1: by Roman Clodia (last edited Jun 14, 2022 03:59AM) (new)

Roman Clodia | 11824 comments Mod
A Diversity of Creatures by Rudyard Kipling This is our thread for a buddy read of A Diversity of Creatures by Rudyard Kipling, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1907, which the Nobel Committee cited to be 'in consideration of the power of observation, originality of imagination, virility of ideas and remarkable talent for narration which characterize the creations of this world-famous author.'

For us, Kipling's reputation tends to be overshadowed by his self-identification with British colonial imperialists and he has become a largely 'unfashionable' author.

That said, he has been claimed by such opposing figures as Billy Bragg and Margaret Thatcher - the former in trying to establish a left-wing English nationalism, the latter in her warnings of European encroachment on British sovereignty.

He has also been described as 'poetry's Dickens' and, more negatively, if ambivalently, by George Orwell as a 'jingo imperialist... morally insensitive and aesthetically disgusting' while admitting that 'every enlightened person has despised him... nine-tenths of those enlightened persons are forgotten and Kipling is in some sense still there' (1942).

So, a complicated author - and a chance to make up our own minds. Sounds like this will be an interesting discussion - all welcome - starting August.

A free Gutenberg edition is available here: www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/13085


Susan | 14139 comments Mod
This collection was published in 1917 during WWI. His only son, John, died in 1915 aged only 18.

The Kipling Society has links to all of the poems/stories in the collection (just scross down the page to 1917 and you will find it) which provides good background.

https://www.kiplingsociety.co.uk/book...


message 3: by Sid (new) - rated it 4 stars

Sid Nuncius | 596 comments Thanks, Susan.


Susan | 14139 comments Mod
Henry James, an author I know we both struggled with, said "Kipling strikes me personally as the most complete man of genius, as distinct from fine intelligence, that I have ever known." That's an interesting quote - I was looking for something a bit more positive and I think it is easy to forget his enormous popularity and what a good storyteller he was.

Orwell was wonderfully sniffy about him: 'Rudyard Kipling was the only popular English writer of this century who was not at the same time a thoroughly bad writer. His popularity was, of course, essentially middle-class.' Ouch! Book snob!

https://www.orwellfoundation.com/the-...


message 5: by Sid (new) - rated it 4 stars

Sid Nuncius | 596 comments Yes, Orwell was very sniffy about Kipling - he also described him as a good bad poet, for example, in his essay on Kipling (which is brilliant, of course, even though I disagree with a lot of it). https://orwell.ru/library/reviews/kip...

I'm convinced that a good deal of his contempt was due to the appropriation (and, in my view, often misinterpretation and distortion) of Kipling by those to whom Orwell was politically opposed.

I admire Orwell's writing very much, but we don't agree on everything.


Jill (dogbotsmum) | 802 comments I've read the first 4 so far. The first I felt a bit at a loss, the others I suppose, are more like a world I am used to.


Susan | 14139 comments Mod
I have also started this now and the first story totally confused me too, Jill. I suspect he wrote other stories about the Aerial Board of Control, so maybe that was part of a series, or an add on? I was nonplussed too.

There have been a couple of stories about playing pranks, which is interesting. It all seems quite juvenile now but reminds me of the Bright Young Things and their treasure hunting parties, etc. and parties where they dressed up. That kind of quite childish stuff.


message 8: by Sid (last edited Aug 24, 2022 10:46PM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Sid Nuncius | 596 comments Is anyone else reading this at all? (It's still available for free download on Amazon: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Diversity-Cr... )

I found it more mixed than I remembered, but the prose is absolutely magnificent throughout. (BTW, I thought the opening story, As Easy As A.B.C., was the least successful of all, so if you're unsure, I'd skip that one.)

I'd be very interested in anyone else's views - especially of Mary Postgate and The Village That Voted The Earth Was Flat. My spoiler-free review is here, if interested:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


Susan | 14139 comments Mod
I would agree that the first story is the least interesting. However, it also seemed to be part of a series, so I thought that perhaps I just hadn't kept up somehow or was missing something? To those more familiar with Kipling's work, I am sure it would have made perfect sense.

I feel he is a little like W. Somerset Maugham, in that readers forget how huge and influential he was at the time.

There was also a lot about playing pranks, which probably seemed a bit odd now, but you can see those stories paving the way for all the treasure hunts of the Bright Young Things.


message 10: by Sid (new) - rated it 4 stars

Sid Nuncius | 596 comments Yes - but Kipling's pranks are either vengeful or aimed at "correcting" someone's behaviour. It's a big theme in Kipling (Stalky & Co is almost entirely composed of such stories), probably due at least in part to the cruel treatment he experienced as a child when his parents were in India and left him in "The House Of Desolation" with "the Woman", as he invariably refers to them in his autobiography. For example:
"It was an establishment run with the full vigour of the Evangelical as revealed to the Woman. I had never heard of Hell, so I was introduced to it in all its terrors—I and whatever luckless little slavey might be in the house, whom severe rationing had led to steal food. Once I saw the Woman beat such a girl who picked up the kitchen poker and threatened retaliation. Myself I was regularly beaten. The Woman had an only son of twelve or thirteen as religious as she. I was a real joy to him, for when his mother had finished with me for the day he (we slept in the same room) took me on and roasted the other side."

It's hardy surprising that injustice rectified and cruelty revenged figured large in his later writing. There is often a satisfying sense of justice in the stories, but they do occasionally spill over into the unpleasantly cruel, I think.

If A.B.C. is part of a series, I'm unaware of it - and I've read quite a lot of Kipling in my time. I could well be wrong, though. Like all the best science fiction, it's a story which makes a lot of important, occasionally subtle, social and political points; for me it just didn't work all that well as a story, though.


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