...and other stories, mostly written after The Plumed Serpent but prior to Lady Chatterley, and he'd apparently got most of the thrusting and scowling out of his system, which is nice. I tend to regard Lawrence's greatest strength as his ability to capture the soul of the moment, achieving in text an equivalent psychological effect to the work of the more tumultuous symbolist painters of the time, give or take a decade. However, there's an unfortunately fine balance to be struck and he was never the best judge of his own work, meaning he occasionally borders on unreadable, invariably because a cloying syrup of mood, interpretation, and even premonition brings everything grinding to a standstill so that it can feel as though you're trying to read a ten minute widdly-widdly guitar solo from the early seventies.
There are a couple of blanks in this collection for sure - tales which may or may not actually do something which proved difficult to identify or even to apply one's concentration - but the good stuff is arguably among the best he ever wrote. By this point Dave was well aware of his time having become limited, so maybe reconciliation to his own mortality had blown away a few of the cobwebs. Glad Ghosts and The Woman Who Rode Away in particular benefit from a clarity and a paring down of sentiment to just the implication which seems more or less unprecedented in Lawrence's fiction. He was, I assume, expanding his palette, and so four of these are generally credited with supernatural themes, most of which seemed symbolically layered rather than actually supernatural to me; although None of That might almost qualify as weird fiction by virtue of its arbitrary narrative swerves and surreal mood.
The Woman Who Rode Away is an odd one. It features a woman somewhat resembling Mabel Luhan who, fixating on the exotically indigenous, rides into the mountains of wild Mexico in search of an idealised native culture. Unfortunately she encounters the same and is ultimately sacrificed by its representatives. It's difficult to avoid the probability of the tale being Lawrence's revenge on Luhan, his former landlady at Taos, here brutalised by the reality of her own affectations in a distinctly unsavoury and arguably misogynist narrative, as I'm sure Lawrence was aware; and yet there's much more to the story than just this, which is what saves it from itself.
Regardless of a few duds, of the collections I've read, this may well be his greatest on the strength of where it succeeds.



