Book Loot: Week Ending June 13th, 2010

Book Loot: Week Ending June 13th, 2010Say hello to the latest little darlings to join my evergrowing book collection:

And, I was lucky enough to have a kindly someone slip a bookmark with one of the Book Depository bookmark competition winning designs into Kingdom Come. Not my favourite one: “Bob was so stuck into his book he didn’t realize he was in SPACE” but a very cute bookmark nonetheless. I guess I’ll just have to keep buying more books until I get the Bob in Space bookmark.

This week I renewed the startnarrativehere.com domain for another two years, so it looks like I’m going to be around for little while longer. Speaking of which, my one year anniversary is coming up … I wonder what I’ll do to celebrate? (No, seriously. Any ideas?)

Until then,

  • Listverse lists the Top 10 Difficult Literary Works. I’ve only read 1/10 – T.S. Eliot’s The Waste Land – hooray for first year Literature university courses!  (Listverse is easily of my favourite non-book related websites, I spend so much time here and have way too many random “no one cares Jess” facts from reading their various lists.)
  • Even though I too favour marginalia and such in physical books versus the cold, hard plastic of e-readers sometimes I wonder whether it is just the old “But physical album art is so important for the experience of music!” argument rehashed for the literature crowd. In the latest bit of heartwarming reportage, a man tracks down and reconnects with an old friend after finding a bunch of old books in a second hand bookstore with the friend’s ex-libris sticker inside.
  • More John Waters promotional articles as Role Models is released, The New Yorker recounts a recent event with Waters:

“I love feel-bad books,” Waters said, perched cross-legged on the edge of a couch. “I want to have a hate book club where we all come over and read about hateful characters.”

“I love feel-bad books,” Waters said, perched cross-legged on the edge of a couch. “I want to have a hate book club where we all come over and read about hateful characters.”

The Sopranos by Alan Warner (1998)

The Sopranos by Alan Warner (1998)First of all, Alan Warner‘s novel The Sopranos is not about a troubled gangster’s life of family and organized crime in New Jersey, as the librarian so gleefully exclaimed when I borrowed it: “I didn’t knowthe series was a book too!” Anyway. Rather, The Sopranos is about a group of choirgirls from a Scottish port town who are headed into the city to compete in a school choir competition. The choir from Our Lady of Perpetual Succour have reached the finals of their school choir competition, which means a trip into the city. However, the Sopranos minds aren’t on winning the competition, or even singing. Their priorities lie in getting drunk, getting laid and going shopping. And, hopefully, returning home in time to get to the local nightclub where they anticipate attractive and randy sailors from the submarine in port will be.

Ach what’s ‘insecure’? Eh? A word out ah Cosmopolitan. It’s just another word for ‘scared’. Ahm scared Kay, just like you probably are, scared about what I am, where am going, what job, if ah ever get one, ahm going to do, wondering if it’s possible to plan anything in a life anymore. Am ah ever going to get out the Port?

At first, mainly due to Warner’s technique of not using quotation marks and heavily accented dialogue, I found it difficult to distinguish between the five girls. As their back stories are revealed in flashbacks, they become more distinct. Orla has been seriously ill and has received radiation therapy which has left her, she worries, too skinny and without breasts. In the hospital she attempted to have sex with a man in a coma – which reminded me of a very similar scene in The World According to Garp. She is intent on losing her virginity on the city trip. Kylah (who, for some reason, I couldn’t help but imagine looking like Effy Stonem from Skins.) is a talented singer who is in a local band, Lemonfinger. She doesn’t treat it as seriously as her male bandmates, all of whom she has slept with without the others realizing. Chell is a bit of a mystery, with a tragic family past and a fondness for animals (though there is a seriously disturbing anecdote about Chell keeping puppies), and she seems forever infantile, as if she is somehow emotionally stunted. Manda’s father is extremely poor, she is the most promiscuous of the five girls and their unofficial leader. Fionnula’s story remains a secret until a revealing conversation with Sopranos enemy, Kay, at a bar as they drink themselves sick and stupid. She tells Kay of her lesbian urges and her fear of acting on them due to living in such a small town.

And on and on, till they came to a roundabout, the grass at its side muddied, the high arc lamps already on, despite the generosity of the evening light, an the cars jostlin round, beepin and fightin all in a hurry to get to where an why, an it was possibly one of the ugliest places in the land, for these girls who came from a town, hunched round a harbour like a classical amphitheatre, where the ocean grew still in a trapped bay an the mountains of the islands seemed to hang in the skies of summer nights and in November the sea turned black while salt gathered in the window corners of even the furthest-back houses.

The trip into the city sees the girls shed their uniforms and inhibitions as though the freedom and anonymity of the city is something that is completely unavailable to them in their small town. As they move around the city they gradually reveal their personalities – although they always diminish somewhat in the context of the group. They also reveal their small town naiveté, as they trust people they shouldn’t, and expect the same small town attention from city services. There is the usual gossiping about each other behind their backs, much of the tension centred around Manda and Fionnula’s growing differences. As they form new friendships, find new boys, get their school uniforms stolen, get taken to hospital and eventually turn up to the choir competition either late or without appropriate uniform, expulsion from school seems likely. Of course, this only means that the Sopranos have even more reason to continue their shenanigans into the night. To their dismay, the submarine was only in port to offload a deceased soldier so the nightclubs are filled with the regular crowds. A few more adventures and personal revelations, and the Sopranos end their night eating free breakfasts in a local diner.

What I really loved about The Sopranos is Warner’s heartfelt compassion for these girls. He gets into their heads and the group of girls mentality so well. It did take me a while to warm to the characters and their stories, as a group they tend to blur together, but as their trip went on and especially as they returned to their hometown, I fell for these girls and Warner’s portrayal of them in a major way. In their hometown, beautiful visual images of three of the girls in the Mantrap nightclub, covered in dust glowing under ultraviolet light after heaping a pile of seaweed together in order to climb into the club toilets when the bouncer won’t let them in. Or setting off fireworks in a bouncer’s house and accidentally setting fire to his marijuana plants and sending a rocket through the window of a bank. Warner ends the novel with a scene of melancholic ambiguity that doesn’t diminish the power of the changes the girls have gone through over the course of the novel. If anything, it merely affirms their youthful adventures as necessary for change and for freedom. The Sopranos is a lot of fun to read, and it has such a huge amount of heart and warmth that makes it very difficult not to fall for these characters.

(I have the recently released sequel, The Stars in the Bright Sky, on hold at the library and as soon as it comes in from processing it will be a reading priority. I just want to know more of Finn, Kylah, Kay, Manda, Chell and Orla.)

The Radleys by Matt Haig (2010)

The Radleys by Matt Haig (2010)

‘Vampire? Such a provocative word, wrapped in too many clichés and girly novels.’

Such was my hesitation with reading Matt Haig’s newest novel The Radleys. Vampires, surely their time is almost up? As someone who still believes the pinnacle of vampiric pop culture is Buffy the Vampire Slayer, I’ve somehow managed to avoid the current publishing trend for lovelorn vampires and nasty bloodsuckers. The Radleys, however, manages to take the almost tired vampire myth as a tasty metaphor for repression and moves it into the suburbs.

The Radleys are a family living in a middle-class suburb in Britain. Peter Radley is the local town doctor, longing for the bloody sexual shenanigans of his past, while his wife Helen Radley secretly longs for the vampire that converted her. Their children, Rowan and Clara, are on the verge of discovering exactly what it is that makes them so different from their peers. Clara has gone vegan in an effort to stop animals from being scared of her, only much to the knowing dismay of her parents, it appears to be doing damage to her health than good. Rowan can’t sleep at night, plagued by rashes and a crippling shyness in the face of his schoolboy tormentors. The scene of suburban disguise, where the threat of being unveiled is always present, and sets the intrigue of things to come with hints and clues to let the reader in on the Radleys secrets.

Rowan nods, knowing he could never tell her he has only heard birdsong online, or that he and Clara once spent a good hour watching video footage of chirping sedge-warblers and chaffinches, nearly in tears.

It is only when a sickly Clara leaves a teenage bonfire party, and is followed by a boy who forces himself onto her and she reacts in an unthinkably violent manner that the teenage Radleys secret is revealed to them by their parents.  Peter, much to Helen’s reluctance and protests, calls his brother Will. Will refuses the hidden abstainer vampire life, instead living his life like a rebel rocker vampire. Only Will has his own secrets too, and his vicious attacks are just as much a method of hiding from his desires as Peter and Helen’s façade of suburban normality. There is a definite narrative synchronicity here, people and events are neatly connected. It’s as though Clara’s “coming out”, as it were, is all it takes to settle the tenuous image the Radleys have built for themselves, all the lies told in order to construct a coherent identity unravel so easily.

I really loved all the references to classic literature, such as Lord Byron and Thomas de Quincey as vampires living it up as DJs in Ibiza – Don Juan and DJ Opium! Haig switches the narrative voice between the major and minor characters to give readers a complete and varied perspective on the Radleys predicament. Excerpts from a self-help book Peter gives Rowan called The Abstainer’s Handbook also provide a background for the story, as well as being satire of how to beat addiction guides. The story reads quite smoothly, as everyone and everything seems to be connected in convenient ways, however there are also a few surprise twists. The Radleys is a clever analogy for repressed desires and suburbia, if in the end, a little too easy to swallow.

[Disclaimer: publisher supplied proof copy from work. The Radleys is released in Australia by Text Publishing on the 28th June 2010, ISBN: 978-1-921656-41-5]

Book Loot: Week Ending 6th June, 2010

A Book Loot: Week Ending 6th June, 2010rather decent haul this week. There seems to be a trend among book bloggers at the moment of self-imposed book buying bans but obviously I laugh in the face of trends.

With the Larkin so-called Collected Poems I really should have done some research before buying this edition. The edition I worshipped at the university library was much thicker than the one I received which confused me, and some cursory research revealed that the earlier edition contains much more of Larkin’s unpublished, uncollected and juvenile poetry. Whereas my edition contains his four main poetry books, and a handful of uncollected poetry – all kept in Larkin’s own ordering for his poems rather than chronological. I know there are some poems in the earlier edition which are necessary, so it looks like I’ll be hunting down a copy of the earlier edition as well. I can’t help but feel that Larkin deserves a better treatment but I am a completist.

Links!:

  • Driven to Distraction: Cate Kennedy on the internet and the writing life is now online at Overland. When there were excerpts posted online a few months ago, I was totally adamant that she had things utterly wrong, but the full article is a lot more persuasive, the argument fleshed out more than the “controversial” soundbites listed in mainstream newspapers.
  • There is now an Australian Book Blogger Directory. Hopefully this will become a really useful resource, I wonder if this means we are a step closer to seeing an Australian Book Blogger Convention?
  • I have such a crush on this post from My Girl Friday. Steph has made polyvore sets for characters from young adult novels, and the results are so fantastic and creative! I might be awed because I have a complete lack of fashion sense, black goes with black right? I’m one of those Melbournians with a monochromatic wardrobe.