The people I got to know best there were not the local Mallorquíns (culturally and historically Catalan), but other northern Europeans; a community of people leading interesting, at times distressing personal lives, who either lived on the island year round, or spent their summers there year after year, as my family did, and their children, many of them my age. My friends’ parents were self-employed professionals, artists, writers, or nonviolent sweet-natured criminals, mysteriously self-supporting or genteelly impoverished, occasionally sleeping with one another in a manner that disturbed no one. In unspoken ways, they recognized one another, and everything they did made perfect sense to them; they often arrived on the island as pariahs of the outside world, but were soothed and taken in by their tolerant and nonjudgmental friends and lovers on Mallorca.
Since I went to all-boys boarding schools in England, this is where I met girls, in a meaningful way, for the first time. They were mostly French: Véronique, Florence, Natalie, and Minka. Sitting on the harbor wall above the fishing boats, they taught me how to kiss. This must be one of the roots of my lifelong Franco—not Mallorco—philia, and my love of fishing harbours at night.
Every summer, this constellation of people changed subtly. We boys and girls grew older. We spent more time away from our parents, rode mopeds and motor scooters, went to boums at one another’s houses, hung out in the Mira Vista. I spent more time at the Sea Club, which was my entrée to the adult word, where I had my first beer—San Miguel—and caught a sense of the play of grownups cut loose from their normal lives for a week or two.
Then I grew up and went away.
Fifty years later, for various catalytic, mostly emotional reasons, memories of that time and place and all those people began flooding through me. Graham Greene wrote that forgetting is the compost of the imagination, and with a wish to go back in time and ‘play’ there again, I started writing a novel set in a Mallorca that resembled the one I’d known. Memory, we know, is fluid and dynamic, and alters throughout life; events change the longer we remember them. Green wrote too that at the end of his life the people he remembered best were the characters he’d invented. Though it’s fiction, and nobody is based on anyone I knew, everything I wrote in my novel, The Rocks, now seems more real to me than any of my hazy memories.
Thank you to Peter for these wonderfully atmospheric snapshots (words and pictures) of Mallorca. (Peter is seated far left in the photo!)
IN BRIEF: My View of The Rocks
This is a sophisticated and ambitious novel but I’m going to keep my verdict simple: it is one of the best books I’ve read in a long time. It tells the story of two families through three generations’ worth of intriguing and complicated relationships and is all the more compelling for being told backwards from a very dramatic opening/ending. This challenges both our expectations and the way we are programmed to read: there are some frustrations to knowing nothing can happen in a forward motion that you haven’t already witnessed, (and my view of one of the protagonists never recovered from one repellent incident early on) but you don’t need to be a writer to appreciate the skill it takes to achieve such a smooth narrative flow in reverse. I respect authors who give the reader some credit and the extra attention required to assemble the pieces of this mystery is amply rewarded, with satisfying echoes between sections. The setting, the engaging cast of characters and the changes in morals and society over the decades are vividly painted and fascinating. The Rocks has everything I look for in a work of fiction but rarely find between one set of covers.