
First published in 1968, The Wild Cherry Tree is a late collection of ten tales including comic vignettes, a humorous celebration of the sensual life, and several explorations of love, loneliness, and problematic relationships.'The Wild Cherry Tree' sees the wife of a pig-farmer who dresses like a 'shabby, straddling scarecrow' as she tends her pigs by day, but, alone in the evenings, adorns herself in exotic clothes and jewels without leaving the house. That is until one day, when she has to deal with the consequences.'Same Time, Same Place' follows an impoverished spinster and a lonely bachelor who become friends, but when he drunkenly and clumsily proposes to her she avoids him, denying herself 'the possibility of friendship with a man who genuinely likes her.''The First Day of Christmas' observes a man with his lover on a festive evening out, surrounded by fellow drinkers and full of saucy dialogue, who is torn between asking her hand and burying his grief in drink.'The Black Magnolia' celebrates the sensual life in a farce involving two voluptuous and liberated women and a repressed, tee-total bachelor.The bonus story 'A Waddler' is Bates's first published story, and is a village sketch with colourful dialogue. It follows a man as he deals with the death of his overly critical wife, as he is conversely complimented by a fellow widow on carrying his grief so well.
This collection of ten short stories examines the intersection of mundane rural existence and the sudden, often disruptive, emergence of hidden desires. The protagonists, ranging from isolated spinsters to repressed bachelors, navigate the constraints of social expectation and personal loneliness. Bates utilizes a third-person narrative framework to observe these characters as they confront moments of absurdity, romantic longing, or grief. The stories are anchored in the physical realities of village life, where the environment often mirrors the internal emotional states of the individuals residing within it.
Discussion often centers on Bates's ability to capture the nuances of English village life with both wit and melancholy. Readers frequently highlight the balance between the humorous, lighthearted tone of the vignettes and the deeper, more somber explorations of human isolation. Critics often point to the author's descriptive prose, which effectively grounds the characters in their specific environments while allowing their internal conflicts to take center stage. The collection is noted for its variety, offering a mix of character studies that range from the farcical to the poignant. Many readers appreciate how the stories avoid overly sentimental resolutions, opting instead for realistic portrayals of human imperfection.
Page Count:
176
Publication Date:
1979-01-01
Publisher:
Penguin
ISBN-10:
0140033432
ISBN-13:
9780140033434
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