Unexplained Laughter

by Alice Thomas Ellis

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Behaving badly made Lydia feel better. She hoped she wasn't turning into one of those maniacs who murder people in order to establish their superiority over their fellows who say Please and Thank you and conform to the basic customs of society. Recovering from a love affair gone wrong, Lydia retreats to the Welsh countryside, leaving behind her sophisticated friends, but accidentally inviting Betty, "the human equivalent of sackcloth and ashes," as her companion. There they encounter Hywel, show more a dour farmer, Elizabeth, his nervous wife, the aspiring priest Beuno, Hywel's brother, and randy Doctor Wyn. Meanwhile Hywel's strange sister Angharad roams the land, observing all, while Lydia is increasingly unnerved by the unexplained laughter that comes down from the hills. show less

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4 reviews
She was determined there would be no reconciliation, and even though she had found that the sound of his voice reminded her vividly and immediately that she had loved him and could do so again she lay smiling with pleasure at the sheer satisfaction of unforgiveness. It was, she decided, much sweeter than love: a sensation for the connoisseur of emotion. That it was also wicked did not greatly perturb her. It was a sin different in kind from mischief-making, and could, in Lydia's estimation, be excused on the grounds that it was the sexual misbehavior of another to which she was responding.

Lydia felt strongly that the author of the universe probably thought much as she did about sexual matters. She really did have a long way to go, and
show more she had not yet learned to recognize the precise lineaments, the demeanor and the shape of the shadow of Stan.

Alice Thomas Ellis seems incapable of producing other than psychologically astute, gem-like prose. Inn at the Edge of the World is better (as is Birds of the Air), but this would serve as a good introduction to Ellisian themes. Some thoughts:

1. Poison-brewing, manipulative, but explicitly religious female protagonists -- Lydia here, Rose in The Sin Eater. These characters, I increasingly believe, represent Ellis' view of her own worst instincts. Their sins are her sins.
2. Largely irrelevant men. I am fond of the following Ellis fragment:

Men love women
Women love children
Children love hamsters

If I had my way, all boys would be forced to read Ellis. It's often a vision of the world where men are not important, or have importance only in the minds of foolish, trivial people. The main action is either in the home, or in subtle human interactions that men are too block-headed to perceive. Perhaps the cruelty with which Ellis imbues this observation derives from her giving her dark side its head. But the observation is solid as oak.

3. Plots that never quite go anywhere. The most conclusive Ellis I have ever read was the Sin Eater. In all others, we just sort of drift off. Perhaps because she regards any final sewing up of a plot as pointless as any earthly resolution. True Human resolution consists only in the last things: death, judgment, heaven, and hell.
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Behaving badly made Lydia feel better. She hoped she wasn't turning into one of those maniacs who murder people in order to establish their superiority over their fellows who say Please and Thank you and conform to the basic customs of society. She thought it unlikely. Murder seemed to her too intimate, too similar to giving birth. She thought she would never care enough about anyone to give birth to them or to kill them.

This is the third or fourth of Alice Thomas Ellis's offbeat and quirky novels that I have read and it's the second time I have read "Unexplained Laughter". It's a short but very enjoyable book, with an unforgettable heroine in the witty and amusing Lydia.

Freelance journalist Lydia, who has just broken up with her show more cheating boyfriend, goes to stay at her cottage in the Welsh countryside for a few weeks, and her friend (well, sort of friend) Betty goes along to keep her company. Since she has never liked Betty very much, and resents being stuck with her, Lydia makes an effort for the first time to get to know some of her neighbours.

All the way through the book, I was wondering when it was set, and how old Lydia and Betty are. The other characters describe them as girls, which would imply that they are in their twenties, but they speak and act as if they are older than that. When the BBC did a version of it in the late eighties they cast 50-year-old Diana Rigg as Lydia, but I can't believe that Lydia is meant to be anything like that old. The book was published in the mid-eighties, but the names Lydia and Betty just aren’t right for that date. Elizabeths would have nearly all shortened their name to Liz or Lizzy, possibly Beth, but definitely not Betty, which was really old-fashioned by then. So maybe it is set earlier - Lydia's comments about class would fit with an earlier date, too.
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½
A reading friend once told be this was his favorite book in the entire world, so I bought a copy— in 2005. Tried to read it before he came for a visit, but it wasn’t the right book for the time. Picked it up this weekend, and not only am I enjoying it, but I found a little prezzie from a previous reader, to a performance I went to, but in the balcony! Still makes a good bookmark. #books #bookstory #reading #readingtreasures #foundinabook #unexplainedlaughter #favoritebooks #alicethomasellis #bookcrossing #usedbooks #ticket #spoletofestival #1990 #marthagraham #marthagrahamdancecompany #gaillardauditorium #thatsalotofhashtags

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31+ Works 2,020 Members
Alice Thomas Ellis (also writes as Anna Margaret Haycraft), is a novelist and columnist. She was born in Liverpool, England in 1932. She attended Bangor Grammar School and the Liverpool School of Art. Ellis wrote a weekly column for the Spectator from 1985 to 1989 and for the Catholic Herald from 1990 to 1996. She co-wrote two books on juvenile show more delinquency with psychiatrist Tom Pitt-Atkins. Ellis also wrote A Welsh Childhood, a book recounting the history of Wales and featuring the photographs of Patrick Sutherland. Ellis has written several novels beginning with The Sin Eater in 1977. The novel won the Welsh Arts Council Award. Other novels include Unexplained Laughter which won the Yorkshire Post Novel of the Year in 1985 and The Inn at the End of the World which was the winner of the Writer's Guild Award for Best Fiction in 1991. Another novel, The 27th Kingdom, received a Booker Prize Nomination in 1982. She was also a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature from 1999 until her death in 2005, due to lung cancer. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Unexplained Laughter
First words
I think I am dead.
Quotations
"There is an old saying that every time an owl hoots a woman has been unfaithful,' she added, lifting the candlestick and looking round.
'There are hundreds of them hooting all night,' protested Betty.
'Yes, well...... (show all)' said Lydia. page 9
Blurbers
Hepburn,Neil; Brien, Alan; Wordsworth, Christopher

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction
DDC/MDS
823.914Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1900-1901-19991945-1999
LCC
PR6055 .L4856 .U5Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish Literature1961-2000
BISAC

Statistics

Members
145
Popularity
223,117
Reviews
3
Rating
½ (3.52)
Languages
English, French
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
13
ASINs
2