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Idle Grounds by Krystelle Bamford review – wild trouble in a child's world
Idle Grounds by Krystelle Bamford review – wild trouble in a child's world

The Guardian

time10-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Guardian

Idle Grounds by Krystelle Bamford review – wild trouble in a child's world

This debut looks back at a summer birthday party in rural New England in the late 1980s. The narrator, never named, is perhaps seven years old at the time, and part of a group of 10 cousins, 'give or take', who are left to their own devices as the adults turn inwards, talking about family troubles and controversies centred on the life of the grandmother, Beezy. We are in 'horse country': 'split-rail fences and birch and pine woods and a few old houses landed like dice rolling way off the playing board into their own shaded grottos for ever'. The narrator recalls their part as the watchful child: the one who notices that adult conversation 'just rowed across the surface' under which lie the mysteries that might shape a child's life. From an upstairs window the children see a large creature, '15 per cent bigger than a big cat', moving rapidly from the treeline. While the kids are distracted, the youngest, Abi, who is three years old and has a broken arm in a cast, runs outside in pursuit and disappears. The eldest, Travis, who is 12 and Abi's brother, leads them out into the strange world beyond the house to search for her, with awful and lasting consequences. Bamford conjures, in vivid, amplified language, how children fluidly and unpredictably make sense of the world through the little that they know and the much that they see, unmoored from the rigidity of adult apprehension, so often trapped in convention and cliche. 'The shadows of the house were the black sails of sailboats, meaning that the side of the house was the ocean's surface and we were walking on the sky, maybe even along the horizon …' The child's vision, shadowed as in a Grimms' fairytale, comes through the adult narrator's voice, suggesting that the grownup has not entirely left childhood behind. Unguided and 'alone at sea', the children head into peril, where their mistakes begin to leave marks: 'we were filled with dread topped with a scummy layer of remorse'. They look for adult help, only to come up against a 'sturdy wall' of unnoticing. The children begin 'tugging, whispering, whining', but the grownups are 'transfixed on the bright star of past transgressions and nothing we could do seemed to unfix them'. The storytelling voice of the novel is not so much that of an unreliable narrator as an account of the unreliability, limits and instability of memory, of our versions of what happened and how we become who we are. In this way, Idle Grounds recalls not only the atmosphere of Robert Aickman's strange tales but his observation that 'Answers are almost always insufficient. They are almost always misleading.' It might be labelled for convenience as a gothic novel, and it has clear antecedents, not least in Shirley Jackson's We Have Always Lived in the Castle, but like all the best genre fiction it makes its own singular and potent space for the reader. The novel is unsettlingly, sharply funny at times, with carefully built-up layers of dis-ease delivered in a comic deadpan; demonstrating, as the narrator observes, that 'humour is braided with misfortune'. Bamford is clearly aware of what EF Benson knew, that the fear that takes hold in bright sunlight can be the deepest of all. Stories of divorce and the disappointments of maturity emerge, along with a hazy account of the family house the narrator's parents grew up in, in which all that went wrong with grandmother Beezy 'had travelled backwards to infect all the stuff that had happened before, all the way back to their births and before that even, and everything tasted a little bit like sadness'. Bamford shows that what we do and who we are as adults makes the world in which children act and grow – especially those stories in our childhoods from which we have not escaped. Idle Grounds by Krystelle Bamford is published by Hutchinson Heinemann (£16.99). To support the Guardian and the Observer buy a copy at Delivery charges may apply.

A missing child, family secrets – this debut novel is superb
A missing child, family secrets – this debut novel is superb

Telegraph

time07-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Telegraph

A missing child, family secrets – this debut novel is superb

In Idle Grounds, the debut novel by the well-regarded poet Krystelle Bamford, rabbit-holes bite at ankles. Flowers can sprout on the backs of hands; sunbeams can build a 'portico dressed in ivy'. We follow a group of cousins, the number of whom is never clearly determined, on a 'bright and clean' summer day in 1989. The family have gathered to celebrate a birthday at the secluded home of Aunt Frankie, who has inherited a plot of land ahead of her siblings. The house is one of a trio, alongside that of the cousins' parents' childhood home, and the childhood home of Beezy, their domineering late grandmother. Bamford, who was born in France, raised in America and now lives in Scotland, sketches this family briefly. There are few particulars. The narrative voice – unnamed – is, we assume, an adult, reflecting on this particular day from the future, perhaps our present. But the tone, and the associative leaps, are that of a child's: naive, unintentionally humorous, often frightening. The narrator insists, at least initially, that there was nothing notable about the gathering; but the environment suggests otherwise. Chickens hop around on 'hostile legs', while Frankie's handwriting looks like 'the trail of a plane in freefall'. And Bamford's story begins with a consideration of the Romanovs, whose photographs, we're told, give the appearance of 'happy mischief'. But among the cousins, like the Russian imperial family, there's no such joy. The prevailing mood is one of boredom, and beneath that, doom. Idle Grounds is a remarkable, preternatural study of a family reckoning with its own history. Bamford's preoccupation with how bizarre things happen, and seem to happen often in childhood, is startling. Such is the crucial incident, early in the novel: the children look out of the window at a 'thing moving so fast', 'zipping' out from the tree line, never clearly seen. Abi, a three-year-old, runs out after it, and the cousins watch helplessly as the house, impossibly, 'jumps and snuffs her out'. The incident is suffused with the sort of dread that one feels as a child all the time – something only emphasised as the adults react with indifference. Abi isn't even missing, according to the nonplussed parents. Yet the children set out to find her. Too many contemporary novels are written in a stylistically impersonal way, describing events with a deliberate, cold detachment. Not so, Idle Grounds. Objects and interludes are imbued with a near-psychedelic vibrancy. The gaggle searches the chicken coop, where another cousin finds two eggs like 'little skulls'. They move through the garden, into the barn, where horses 'dance and shake their rubbery faces'. There are 'intermezzos', which Bamford uses to tell the sorts of stories that become canonical within families: a slap on Thanksgiving, the long hike without food, and, slowly, the parallel tale of Beezy, and her death. It's rare to see children in fiction inhabited so fully. Bamford's are decisive and autonomous, and deeply weird. She's masterful at showing the preoccupations one has, briefly, in childhood. Seven-year-old Autumn, newly gifted a watch, 'had developed the habit of consulting it even if the question wasn't related to time'. Τravis, the undisputed leader, is an object of obsession for the rest of the group: though he's aged only 12, we have to trust him as the group does. It's odd, as a reader, to inhabit the precociousness of a child for so long, to become acclimated to their leaps of logic. Around the halfway mark, this surrealistic affect begins to feel faintly irritating. But that itchiness is appropriate, too – childhood does feel interminable; an afternoon really can feel longer than any other. Besides, as Idle Grounds reaches its grisly conclusion, that childish voice is, we realise, the only way to find sense. The frightening and inexplicable is always right there; age just allows us to ignore it. Bamford's arresting novel briefly unveils the strangeness once again.

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