Beth The Vampire's Reviews > The Doll: Short Stories
The Doll: Short Stories
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by

*OVERALL RATING 4 Stars*
East Wind � 4 Stars
This was such a well written little piece that really gave the initial sense of isolation on the island, of the lost souls among it, and then the jubilation at having visitors from the outside world that brought them drink and showed them how to dance. The women discovered themselves, were tempted by things unknown to them, consumed by passion. But this comes at a cost, in this case with an axe to the head. Underneath all the jubilation, there was an approaching darkness, and undercurrent of evil that was brought in with the tide. The east wind changed everything for the islanders, and then sooner had it come, it was gone. The visitors not unlike the wind itself, leaving destruction in its wake.
The Doll � 5 Stars
Daphne Du Maurier was 20 when she wrote this story. It is so dark, and also before it’s time. The female is able to have sexual desire without the need of a man, which at the time it was written would have been unheard of. No wonder it was never published after she wrote it. The style was also interesting, with the narrative being from a notebook, which was found on a beach by another man who felt the writings were too important to be ignored. They tell the story of a man who falls in love with a musician by the name of Rebecca, but she toys with him, plays with his affection to the point that he is almost driven to insanity. Rebecca one night introduces her to Julio, a man sized doll who she seems to have a strange affinity with, and immediately the man knows there is something wrong and that Rebecca is out of his reach.
‘Is it possible to love someone so much, that it gives one a pleasure, an unaccountable pleasure to hurt them?�
It is such a fantastic story, so well written, and it all seems so immediate. I cannot help but think what became of the man and why he left his notebook to find. Meanwhile Rebecca seems to carry on, alone, but not needing anyone else to sustain her, to love her. There are likenesses between this Rebecca and the character by the same name in her later novel Rebecca, to the point where you can almost see the idea start to bud.
And Now to God the Father � 3 Stars
The story of Reverend James Hollaway did not strike me as much as the other stories in this collection so far, but that is not to say that it was not enjoyable. It seems the good Reverend is only interested in his looks and his status in society, to the point where he ignores the plight of a young and vulnerable girl taken advantage of by a high society boy. Not very Christian at all. Maybe that was the point of the story. When the girl turns up dead after speaking to the Reverend, he appears unconcerned, instead feeling perhaps relief that a situation he was tasked to deal with has been resolved. He returns to his sermons, his social life, and his high status, without one care for this loss of life, completely undervaluing the girl and her feelings and even her position in society. Powerful men make the rules, and God seems to bend to their will, with religion nothing more than a tool used to control by those tasked to wield it.
A Difference in Temperament � 4 Stars
I absolutely loved this. Funny, it reminded me of my husband and myself in a way. The thoughts of both the man and the woman seemed so real, and I swear I have had something akin to that argument before. It was so fantastically written that the narrative switched from the husband to the wife so easily and almost without detection, yet each had their own voice.
‘In the universe they were two stars, she far higher, burning with a steady light, but he flickering unsteadily, always a little ahead � and in the end falling to earth, and momentary streak in the sky.�
Sometimes a relationship can envelope you so completely you are lost without the other person, yet you want something for yourself, which feels like a betrayal to the other, who seems to only want you. Your thoughts play tricks as you try to justify yourself, and in the end you end up concocting the most extreme situation where you lose everything as if your subconscious is trying to teach you a lesson for being so selfish. This story was so human, so real and relatable.
Frustration � 3.5 Stars
I think this was Daphne’s take on comedy as it was considerably lighter than the stories before it. A couple finally decide to get married, and after seven long years can finally be alone together. But after their wedding a comedy of errors ensues where their camping honeymoon is a disaster, their car and belongings get stolen, the wife loses her wedding ring down a drain, they are not allowed to stay in the same room together (and when the husband does try and get to his locks himself in his own room), and then ultimately get jobs where one works during the day and the other at night.
There was a definite change in tone with the story, with no dark undercurrent that ultimately signalled doom, although perhaps this couple were just not meant to be.
Piccadilly � 3 Stars
The majority of this story is told through Mazie’s eyes, as she related to a young newspaper boy what happened to her early in life and how she came to be, what I’m guessing is, a prostitute. She recalls the man who turned her to a life of crime, time she spent in prison, and then trying to find her way after she is released. She is a whimsical girl, taking her decisions from the signs around her, and her narrative is written so strongly.
I did like the often sad tale of Mazie’s youth, but it just didn’t catch me like other stories in this collection. The end passage, when she is going down into the train tunnels and sees her boyfriend heading up the stairs the other way with another girl, was really symbolic and troubling, a sign of the lost girl and the man she protected who now has everything. But it was the last line that did to for me, it was so striking that I ended up reading it about three or four times.
‘What was the sign?� she said. ‘Why, it came straight from God written big above my head, in letters of fire at the end of the platform � “Follow The Red Light For Piccadilly�.�
Tame Cat � 4 Stars
Poor Baby, she is so naïve. I really felt for this protagonist, even though I could tell exactly where the story was going. Baby is coming back home from being at the ‘pension� and she is all grown up, wishing to partake in the social activities of the city and have fun with her mother. Alas, as soon as the mother sees her beautiful daughter she is different towards her, cold and distant. Baby just wants to go and have some fun, which she finds with her Uncle John, who same call the tame cat. She recalls how often the Uncle is around, but doesn’t actually realise until right at the end that they have been lovers for years. Now Baby is around, Uncle John’s attentions start to shift towards Baby, and while she believes he is being a gentleman, she is entering into an affair that will drive a wedge between her and the mother.
It is a story about growing up, realising that things are changing and the real world is different to what she had imagined it. This story had that dark undertone that I love in Daphne’s work. While Baby was so innocent and young spirited, there was around her a dark presence that seemed to haunt her despite her trying to deny its presence. Even at the end there was no relief for Baby, and her statement:
'So being grown up was this: a sordid tissue of intimate relationships, complicated and vile.'
Mazie � 3 Stars
This featured the same character from the Picadilly short story, but focused more on Mazie’s life as a prostitute. Again, the voice of the character in the narrative was really strong, but the story just didn’t resonate with me. To be honest, I can’t really remember too much of it now I look back. Mazie seemed to be going through her life, relishing in her dreams when she could, but with no real mind towards the future and what she could become as she ages and her dreams become further and further away.
Nothing Hurts for Long � 4 Stars
This was a lovely detailed little piece about a woman waiting for her husband to return after three months in Berlin. She plans every part of the evening down to the food, flowers, and fire, and she sings as she dresses and positions everything just right. But things do not work out as she planned, and everything that was once beautiful has turned to ash in her eyes. Her friend May calls distressed, stating that her husband has left her after he returned from America and he was different. But yet, this could not happen to her, not when the love her and the husband have are so strong.
That at such a young age Daphne could write such a tale that would likely ring true to a number of women, is truly amazing. She seems to get right to the crux of what it feels like, how everything turns so suddenly, how the need to please and love can be dashed and you try in vain to get some semblance of that back. It is also a testament to the changing nature of people, that our experiences change us. In some ways the woman is as trapped as the canary in a cage, singing alone in her house, soaking in the sun, never changing. There was a finality to the story as she contemplated that ‘nothing hurts for long,� as even now she is preparing for the heartbreak that is likely to follow.
Week-End � 3.5 Stars
Another more comedic story as a loved up couple go away for a weekend, and then at the end realise that they cannot stand each other and end up leaving in different directions. It spoke to the never ending changes that love brings, but also to the naivety of youth. The fact that the couple ended up giving each other cute little nicknames and ended up sick and blaming each other for their predicament was so sudden but seemed to natural. You could see the narrative slowly start to change, as even little things seemed to be given the spotlight. Daphne has such an eye for detail, and knows the smallest thing can change the feel of the story, and this one was done quite well.
The Happy Valley � 4 Stars
Do I sense a bit of the supernatural here? This was the first story in this collection that gave the impression of something paranormal occurring, as the woman seemingly saw into her own future. This whole story was so well written, from the beauty of the Valley, to the harshness of the city. The woman’s link to the valley and the cottage located within was so sweetly explored, with a great attention to detail.
'Her dreaming mind, lost to the world and intensely alive in its own dream planet, would quieten and relax, would murmur in solitude, ‘I’m here, I’m happy, I’m home again.�
It was a momentary state beyond heaven and earth, suspended in time between two strokes of a clock, and so would be vanished again, and she waking to the familiarity of her own bedroom and the beginning of another day.'
This has to be one of my favourite pieces in this collection; it travelled so well and then had that slight twist at the end that really caught my surprise.
And His Letters Grew Colder � 3 Stars
Written in the form of letters from a man, known as X, to his love, referred to as A, and how over the passage of time they grew different, more detached, colder. The transition was quite well done, as I was waiting for a slow deterioration, but yet it came on quite suddenly. That a man could actively seek out a woman, and then over time treat her so poorly was very telling, and while he made some notice of her actions when she is around him, I couldn’t help but feel these were likely warranted. So many times X would apologise for hurting A or treating her poorly, and she would forgive him, but then it seemed that once the novelty wore out he was on to bigger and better things, and then just to leave as suddenly as he did.
Daphne has explore love in most of her stories, and focused on the changing nature of relationships, speaking to an experience that she could not have had at such as young age when she wrote the majority of these stories. But yet, she seems to grasp these feelings so well and explore them in an adult and sophisticated way (which I guess was a sign of her time). Perhaps it was the form of the story in letters that this one did not connect me as much to the characters or the story, or perhaps it was the one sided nature of them, but this one didn’t stick me as much as the others.
The Limpet � 4 Stars
This was the longest story in the whole collection, and focused around Dilly reflecting on her past and the people that have come and gone from her life.
'I seem to see faces around me, Father, Mother, Aunt Madge, Kenneth, Edwards, even poor Vermon Miles, and their expressions aren’t kind at all but somehow hunted. It’s as if they want to be rid of me. They can’t bear to be shadows. They’d like to get out of my memory and my life. Or is it that I want to be rid of them? I really don’t know. It’s too much of a muddle.'
Dilly is a manipulator. She has conned and twisted everyone who has come into her life, from her own parents and making them question their decisions, to her husband and constantly making him stand up for himself when he didn’t want to, and her lover as she tries to convince him to attain more power. Everyone in her life leaves her, and it is kind of easy to see why. Then at the end she has the audacity to claim that she was never given everything; she was, but she just squandered it. Dilly is such a well-built character though, and this story needed this length in order to really explore the person that she is. The story flowed so well and was so easy to read, and even the base characters were so well developed. Daphne can work so well both in short-short story as well as the longer short story, and she can shape her writing seemingly however she wants. She had such a skill with the written word.
East Wind � 4 Stars
This was such a well written little piece that really gave the initial sense of isolation on the island, of the lost souls among it, and then the jubilation at having visitors from the outside world that brought them drink and showed them how to dance. The women discovered themselves, were tempted by things unknown to them, consumed by passion. But this comes at a cost, in this case with an axe to the head. Underneath all the jubilation, there was an approaching darkness, and undercurrent of evil that was brought in with the tide. The east wind changed everything for the islanders, and then sooner had it come, it was gone. The visitors not unlike the wind itself, leaving destruction in its wake.
The Doll � 5 Stars
Daphne Du Maurier was 20 when she wrote this story. It is so dark, and also before it’s time. The female is able to have sexual desire without the need of a man, which at the time it was written would have been unheard of. No wonder it was never published after she wrote it. The style was also interesting, with the narrative being from a notebook, which was found on a beach by another man who felt the writings were too important to be ignored. They tell the story of a man who falls in love with a musician by the name of Rebecca, but she toys with him, plays with his affection to the point that he is almost driven to insanity. Rebecca one night introduces her to Julio, a man sized doll who she seems to have a strange affinity with, and immediately the man knows there is something wrong and that Rebecca is out of his reach.
‘Is it possible to love someone so much, that it gives one a pleasure, an unaccountable pleasure to hurt them?�
It is such a fantastic story, so well written, and it all seems so immediate. I cannot help but think what became of the man and why he left his notebook to find. Meanwhile Rebecca seems to carry on, alone, but not needing anyone else to sustain her, to love her. There are likenesses between this Rebecca and the character by the same name in her later novel Rebecca, to the point where you can almost see the idea start to bud.
And Now to God the Father � 3 Stars
The story of Reverend James Hollaway did not strike me as much as the other stories in this collection so far, but that is not to say that it was not enjoyable. It seems the good Reverend is only interested in his looks and his status in society, to the point where he ignores the plight of a young and vulnerable girl taken advantage of by a high society boy. Not very Christian at all. Maybe that was the point of the story. When the girl turns up dead after speaking to the Reverend, he appears unconcerned, instead feeling perhaps relief that a situation he was tasked to deal with has been resolved. He returns to his sermons, his social life, and his high status, without one care for this loss of life, completely undervaluing the girl and her feelings and even her position in society. Powerful men make the rules, and God seems to bend to their will, with religion nothing more than a tool used to control by those tasked to wield it.
A Difference in Temperament � 4 Stars
I absolutely loved this. Funny, it reminded me of my husband and myself in a way. The thoughts of both the man and the woman seemed so real, and I swear I have had something akin to that argument before. It was so fantastically written that the narrative switched from the husband to the wife so easily and almost without detection, yet each had their own voice.
‘In the universe they were two stars, she far higher, burning with a steady light, but he flickering unsteadily, always a little ahead � and in the end falling to earth, and momentary streak in the sky.�
Sometimes a relationship can envelope you so completely you are lost without the other person, yet you want something for yourself, which feels like a betrayal to the other, who seems to only want you. Your thoughts play tricks as you try to justify yourself, and in the end you end up concocting the most extreme situation where you lose everything as if your subconscious is trying to teach you a lesson for being so selfish. This story was so human, so real and relatable.
Frustration � 3.5 Stars
I think this was Daphne’s take on comedy as it was considerably lighter than the stories before it. A couple finally decide to get married, and after seven long years can finally be alone together. But after their wedding a comedy of errors ensues where their camping honeymoon is a disaster, their car and belongings get stolen, the wife loses her wedding ring down a drain, they are not allowed to stay in the same room together (and when the husband does try and get to his locks himself in his own room), and then ultimately get jobs where one works during the day and the other at night.
There was a definite change in tone with the story, with no dark undercurrent that ultimately signalled doom, although perhaps this couple were just not meant to be.
Piccadilly � 3 Stars
The majority of this story is told through Mazie’s eyes, as she related to a young newspaper boy what happened to her early in life and how she came to be, what I’m guessing is, a prostitute. She recalls the man who turned her to a life of crime, time she spent in prison, and then trying to find her way after she is released. She is a whimsical girl, taking her decisions from the signs around her, and her narrative is written so strongly.
I did like the often sad tale of Mazie’s youth, but it just didn’t catch me like other stories in this collection. The end passage, when she is going down into the train tunnels and sees her boyfriend heading up the stairs the other way with another girl, was really symbolic and troubling, a sign of the lost girl and the man she protected who now has everything. But it was the last line that did to for me, it was so striking that I ended up reading it about three or four times.
‘What was the sign?� she said. ‘Why, it came straight from God written big above my head, in letters of fire at the end of the platform � “Follow The Red Light For Piccadilly�.�
Tame Cat � 4 Stars
Poor Baby, she is so naïve. I really felt for this protagonist, even though I could tell exactly where the story was going. Baby is coming back home from being at the ‘pension� and she is all grown up, wishing to partake in the social activities of the city and have fun with her mother. Alas, as soon as the mother sees her beautiful daughter she is different towards her, cold and distant. Baby just wants to go and have some fun, which she finds with her Uncle John, who same call the tame cat. She recalls how often the Uncle is around, but doesn’t actually realise until right at the end that they have been lovers for years. Now Baby is around, Uncle John’s attentions start to shift towards Baby, and while she believes he is being a gentleman, she is entering into an affair that will drive a wedge between her and the mother.
It is a story about growing up, realising that things are changing and the real world is different to what she had imagined it. This story had that dark undertone that I love in Daphne’s work. While Baby was so innocent and young spirited, there was around her a dark presence that seemed to haunt her despite her trying to deny its presence. Even at the end there was no relief for Baby, and her statement:
'So being grown up was this: a sordid tissue of intimate relationships, complicated and vile.'
Mazie � 3 Stars
This featured the same character from the Picadilly short story, but focused more on Mazie’s life as a prostitute. Again, the voice of the character in the narrative was really strong, but the story just didn’t resonate with me. To be honest, I can’t really remember too much of it now I look back. Mazie seemed to be going through her life, relishing in her dreams when she could, but with no real mind towards the future and what she could become as she ages and her dreams become further and further away.
Nothing Hurts for Long � 4 Stars
This was a lovely detailed little piece about a woman waiting for her husband to return after three months in Berlin. She plans every part of the evening down to the food, flowers, and fire, and she sings as she dresses and positions everything just right. But things do not work out as she planned, and everything that was once beautiful has turned to ash in her eyes. Her friend May calls distressed, stating that her husband has left her after he returned from America and he was different. But yet, this could not happen to her, not when the love her and the husband have are so strong.
That at such a young age Daphne could write such a tale that would likely ring true to a number of women, is truly amazing. She seems to get right to the crux of what it feels like, how everything turns so suddenly, how the need to please and love can be dashed and you try in vain to get some semblance of that back. It is also a testament to the changing nature of people, that our experiences change us. In some ways the woman is as trapped as the canary in a cage, singing alone in her house, soaking in the sun, never changing. There was a finality to the story as she contemplated that ‘nothing hurts for long,� as even now she is preparing for the heartbreak that is likely to follow.
Week-End � 3.5 Stars
Another more comedic story as a loved up couple go away for a weekend, and then at the end realise that they cannot stand each other and end up leaving in different directions. It spoke to the never ending changes that love brings, but also to the naivety of youth. The fact that the couple ended up giving each other cute little nicknames and ended up sick and blaming each other for their predicament was so sudden but seemed to natural. You could see the narrative slowly start to change, as even little things seemed to be given the spotlight. Daphne has such an eye for detail, and knows the smallest thing can change the feel of the story, and this one was done quite well.
The Happy Valley � 4 Stars
Do I sense a bit of the supernatural here? This was the first story in this collection that gave the impression of something paranormal occurring, as the woman seemingly saw into her own future. This whole story was so well written, from the beauty of the Valley, to the harshness of the city. The woman’s link to the valley and the cottage located within was so sweetly explored, with a great attention to detail.
'Her dreaming mind, lost to the world and intensely alive in its own dream planet, would quieten and relax, would murmur in solitude, ‘I’m here, I’m happy, I’m home again.�
It was a momentary state beyond heaven and earth, suspended in time between two strokes of a clock, and so would be vanished again, and she waking to the familiarity of her own bedroom and the beginning of another day.'
This has to be one of my favourite pieces in this collection; it travelled so well and then had that slight twist at the end that really caught my surprise.
And His Letters Grew Colder � 3 Stars
Written in the form of letters from a man, known as X, to his love, referred to as A, and how over the passage of time they grew different, more detached, colder. The transition was quite well done, as I was waiting for a slow deterioration, but yet it came on quite suddenly. That a man could actively seek out a woman, and then over time treat her so poorly was very telling, and while he made some notice of her actions when she is around him, I couldn’t help but feel these were likely warranted. So many times X would apologise for hurting A or treating her poorly, and she would forgive him, but then it seemed that once the novelty wore out he was on to bigger and better things, and then just to leave as suddenly as he did.
Daphne has explore love in most of her stories, and focused on the changing nature of relationships, speaking to an experience that she could not have had at such as young age when she wrote the majority of these stories. But yet, she seems to grasp these feelings so well and explore them in an adult and sophisticated way (which I guess was a sign of her time). Perhaps it was the form of the story in letters that this one did not connect me as much to the characters or the story, or perhaps it was the one sided nature of them, but this one didn’t stick me as much as the others.
The Limpet � 4 Stars
This was the longest story in the whole collection, and focused around Dilly reflecting on her past and the people that have come and gone from her life.
'I seem to see faces around me, Father, Mother, Aunt Madge, Kenneth, Edwards, even poor Vermon Miles, and their expressions aren’t kind at all but somehow hunted. It’s as if they want to be rid of me. They can’t bear to be shadows. They’d like to get out of my memory and my life. Or is it that I want to be rid of them? I really don’t know. It’s too much of a muddle.'
Dilly is a manipulator. She has conned and twisted everyone who has come into her life, from her own parents and making them question their decisions, to her husband and constantly making him stand up for himself when he didn’t want to, and her lover as she tries to convince him to attain more power. Everyone in her life leaves her, and it is kind of easy to see why. Then at the end she has the audacity to claim that she was never given everything; she was, but she just squandered it. Dilly is such a well-built character though, and this story needed this length in order to really explore the person that she is. The story flowed so well and was so easy to read, and even the base characters were so well developed. Daphne can work so well both in short-short story as well as the longer short story, and she can shape her writing seemingly however she wants. She had such a skill with the written word.
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Reading Progress
June 18, 2018
–
Started Reading
June 18, 2018
– Shelved
June 18, 2018
– Shelved as:
collections
June 18, 2018
– Shelved as:
gothic
June 24, 2018
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Finished Reading