An abandoned farmhouse on the Iowa prairie. Robinson's fiction is set in an isolated and remote America. iStock
An abandoned farmhouse on the Iowa prairie. Robinson's fiction is set in an isolated and remote America. iStock

Wild and magnificent: Marilynne Robinson’s Lila concludes the dazzling achievement of her Iowa trilogy



Lila [Amazon.com; Amazon.co.uk] begins with a neglected and as yet nameless child stolen away from a stoop under the cover of darkness. An itinerant worker named Doll sweeps down "like an angel in the wilderness", gathers the dirty, unloved wildcat of a child up into her arms and walks off with her into the night.

Taking refuge in the cottage of a sympathetic friend, the two women bathe the bruised and dirty child: “The old woman held her standing in a white basin on the floor by the stove and Doll washed her down with a rag and a bit of soap, scrubbing a little where the cats had scratched her, and on the chigger bites and mosquito bites where she had scratched herself, and where there were slivers in her knees, and where she had a habit of biting her hand. The water in the basin got so dirty they threw it out the door and started over.”

The women shear the child’s tangled, nit-ridden hair, “then they soaped and scrubbed her head, and water and suds ran into her eyes, and she struggled and yelled with all the strength she had and told them both they could rot in hell”.

This is the first of the baptisms in the book, the image of watery rebirths trickling through the text. “I been thinking about ‘Lila’. I had a sister Lila,” the old woman says soon after. “Give her a pretty name, maybe she could turn out pretty.”

“Maybe,” replies Doll. “Don’t matter.”

Readers familiar with Marilynne Robinson's previous two novels Gilead and Home will know that Lila doesn't turn out particularly pretty but Doll was right, it's of no matter. She grows up to become the younger, second wife of old Reverend John Ames – one of the (fictional) Iowa town of Gilead's two Protestant pastors, the lives of whose families are the subject of Robinson's trilogy.

Chronologically the action of Lila – Lila's arrival in Gilead, a town where dogs sleep in the sun in the road and "you could hear the cornfields rustling almost anywhere in it, they were so close and it was so quiet"; her and Ames's brief courtship, subsequent marriage and the birth of their child; all interwoven with the fragmented story of her nomadic past – happens before that of Gilead, which is set in 1957, and takes the form of a letter written by the 76-year-old Ames to his now 7-year-old son.

(Home, incidentally, runs parallel to Gilead, set in the household of Ames's friend and confidant, the Reverend Robert Boughton.)

To read Lila as the final piece in the puzzle is a different experience to reading it as a stand-alone novel. One could advocate either way as each bring their own rewards. To have read Gilead first is to have heard a slightly different version of Lila and Ames's courtship, but Ames is a romantic whereas Lila remains a pragmatist, something of the near-feral child she began life as having never quite left her (Lila is narrated in the third person but everything is filtered through the central character's consciousness). She has a wary eye for people, even those offering charity since she doesn't trust "nobody", not even her own husband, and her only dowry is a knife, passed down to her from Doll with a murdered man's blood on its blade.

Lila wanders into Gilead not expecting to linger there for long – she was brought up on the open road – so her and Ames’s marriage is as much as surprise to her as it is to him; at his age, this kind of second chance at life couldn’t be anything but. It turns out, however, that both their lives have been marked by loss and loneliness, and as much as the novel is about suffering and redemption, and faith in the face of an existence of “bitterness and fear” – “I’ve been tramping around with the heathens. They’re just as good as anybody, so far as I can see. They sure don’t deserve no hellfire,” Lila informs Ames – it’s also a study of precarity: of people living on the edge, exposed and unstable, emotionally as much if not more so as financially.

A conspicuous absence from this first year of American contenders for the Man Booker Prize, this novel has a sort of untamed savagery to it that sets it ablaze. Something of Lila’s own raw, uncultivated vitality runs through Robinson’s very prose and the result is magnificent.

Lucy Scholes is a freelance journalist who lives in London.

hall of shame

SUNDERLAND 2002-03

No one has ended a Premier League season quite like Sunderland. They lost each of their final 15 games, taking no points after January. They ended up with 19 in total, sacking managers Peter Reid and Howard Wilkinson and losing 3-1 to Charlton when they scored three own goals in eight minutes.

SUNDERLAND 2005-06

Until Derby came along, Sunderland’s total of 15 points was the Premier League’s record low. They made it until May and their final home game before winning at the Stadium of Light while they lost a joint record 29 of their 38 league games.

HUDDERSFIELD 2018-19

Joined Derby as the only team to be relegated in March. No striker scored until January, while only two players got more assists than goalkeeper Jonas Lossl. The mid-season appointment Jan Siewert was to end his time as Huddersfield manager with a 5.3 per cent win rate.

ASTON VILLA 2015-16

Perhaps the most inexplicably bad season, considering they signed Idrissa Gueye and Adama Traore and still only got 17 points. Villa won their first league game, but none of the next 19. They ended an abominable campaign by taking one point from the last 39 available.

FULHAM 2018-19

Terrible in different ways. Fulham’s total of 26 points is not among the lowest ever but they contrived to get relegated after spending over £100 million (Dh457m) in the transfer market. Much of it went on defenders but they only kept two clean sheets in their first 33 games.

LA LIGA: Sporting Gijon, 13 points in 1997-98.

BUNDESLIGA: Tasmania Berlin, 10 points in 1965-66

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Education: Mr Al Bahar was born in 1979 and graduated in 2008 from the Judicial Institute. He took after his father, who was one of the first Emirati lawyers

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Day 5, Abu Dhabi Test: At a glance

Moment of the day When Dilruwan Perera dismissed Yasir Shah to end Pakistan’s limp resistance, the Sri Lankans charged around the field with the fevered delirium of a side not used to winning. Trouble was, they had not. The delivery was deemed a no ball. Sri Lanka had a nervy wait, but it was merely a stay of execution for the beleaguered hosts.

Stat of the day – 5 Pakistan have lost all 10 wickets on the fifth day of a Test five times since the start of 2016. It is an alarming departure for a side who had apparently erased regular collapses from their resume. “The only thing I can say, it’s not a mitigating excuse at all, but that’s a young batting line up, obviously trying to find their way,” said Mickey Arthur, Pakistan’s coach.

The verdict Test matches in the UAE are known for speeding up on the last two days, but this was extreme. The first two innings of this Test took 11 sessions to complete. The remaining two were done in less than four. The nature of Pakistan’s capitulation at the end showed just how difficult the transition is going to be in the post Misbah-ul-Haq era.

In numbers: PKK’s money network in Europe

Germany: PKK collectors typically bring in $18 million in cash a year – amount has trebled since 2010

Revolutionary tax: Investigators say about $2 million a year raised from ‘tax collection’ around Marseille

Extortion: Gunman convicted in 2023 of demanding $10,000 from Kurdish businessman in Stockholm

Drug trade: PKK income claimed by Turkish anti-drugs force in 2024 to be as high as $500 million a year

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Contributions: Hundreds of euros expected from typical Kurdish families and thousands from business owners

TV channel: Kurdish Roj TV accounts frozen and went bankrupt after Denmark fined it more than $1 million over PKK links in 2013 

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NO OTHER LAND

Director: Basel Adra, Yuval Abraham, Rachel Szor, Hamdan Ballal

Stars: Basel Adra, Yuval Abraham

Rating: 3.5/5