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Book Loot: Week Ending November 21st, 2010

New Books:

Surprisingly restrained considering my afternoon(s) spent in Kinokuniya in Sydney.

Marginalia

I’ve had an amazing week. Words cannot even begin to express just how great it has been. I saw my favourite band the Manic Street Preachers for the first and second time, met them after both shows, and got a photo with Nicky Wire and James Dean Bradfield. This is a band that has shaped, influenced, changed, and inspired me for over twelve years, so this week was pretty damn important to me and they didn’t let me down. I was on the barrier for both shows, right up the front, screaming and singing my little lungs out. Amazing. And, to have the band be so gracious and attentive to their fans was just a bonus. Meeting fellow fans has also been an encouraging experience.

So, as it was, I didn’t exactly spend much time worrying about blogging. The only conclusion that I’ve managed to reach is that I want to continue writing about books and reading with enthusiasm and sincerity. Posting is going to continue being slightly irregular while I try and “figure things out.” Trust me, I am cringing as I write that. It sounds like the “it’s not you, it’s me” of book blogging.

In and Out of the Goldfish Bowl by Rachel Trezise (2000)

In and Out of the Goldfish Bowl by Rachel Trezise (2002)I take extensive notes while I am reading, sometimes in my reading notebook, or an index card that doubles as a bookmark; notes on characters, story, quotes, ideas, words I want to look up. This is my routine, this is how I read. However, when reading Rachel Trezise‘s In and Out of the Goldfish Bowl recently, I didn’t take any notes. I read it in one sitting, and I couldn’t even bear to put the book down long enough to take a note of the page numbers I wanted to return to, instead I resorted to dog-earring the pages with passages I fell in love with – anything to avoid interrupting the luscious flow of Trezise’s powerful and lyrical prose.

Hendrefadog is a village with a population of five thousand. It seems since Dare pit closed unknown years before I was born there, unemployment had become a fashion which takes too long to die out. Like ski pants, and tennis shirts, clothes which are made popular by fashionable sports, but continue to be worn when sport has become unpopular, worn by middle-aged women who have never been skiing, or given as hand-me-downs to children who have never watched a game of tennis. Like middle-class families who refuse to smash tradition and all become doctors one after the other, Hendrefadog teenagers followed their parents to the dole queue, making us a notch lower than working-class. My generation, the products of unemployed parents, of divorce and downright poverty, tried desperately to find satisfaction in joyriding and class B drugs (which were barely affordable), cider-drinking in lanes, and underage sex.

Rebecca Trigianni is growing up in Wales, she idealizes her glamourous, alcoholic mother and is brutally raped by her step-father at the age of eleven. She is mostly neglected by her mother, and runs away with an older boyfriend at the age of fourteen immersing herself in a life of excesses and danger, until she is dragged back home and returns to school. She falls in love, takes a lot of drugs, gets her heart broken. She sees her rapist walk free. She becomes involved with an emotionally abusive boyfriend, and once that relationship ends Rebecca moves back in with her mother and her new boyfriend. It is only when caring for her dying grandmother that Rebecca realizes that despite everything that has happened to her, she still has her strength and determination, and that will enable her to survive.

Her story is powerful because it is told in her own voice, with all the impassioned urgency and emotional turmoil that involves. In and Out of the Goldfish Bowl isn’t so much about the story, although obviously that plays a huge part in how Rebecca sees the world and herself, but it is Trezise’s ability to convey the feelings of helplessness, loss and strength in Rebecca’s voice. Finally, a literary voice that echoes the sometimes manic energy of my own inner voice, the less than ideal surroundings and circumstance, the unromantic and honest portrayal of pain and heartbreak as utterly devastating. The description of the cultural and social landscape of the working class Welsh valley towns echo my own experience and feelings about where I grew up and live, the regular predictability, the helplessness and the need and the struggle to escape it, the trappings such an environment sets for its inhabitants. And all of this captured in brutal and lively writing.

I began to look at the place of my birth, growth and youth with double vision, one which looked down from above and saw through everyone and everything because I knew I could be bigger; and another vision at eye level which accepted these common, common people because I was afraid it was all I would ever be.
I always felt kind of like Alan Bennett, worrying whether I should be speaking properly or being myself, knowing too well that the difference between metropolitcan and provincial still exists. As his mother’s chance meeting with T.S. Eliot made him conscious of his working-class upbringing, my short visists to Nottingham city and Birmingham Bullring would perpetually remind me what a handicap it could be to grow up in a place like the Rhondda.
Before you had time to worry about what outsiders would think of your accent or your Welsh mannerisms, or your memories of quaint houses stuck together with walls so thin you could hear your neighbours having boring Rhondda missionary-position sex, you would have to worry about what your neighbours thought of you trying to get away from it.
I wanted so desperately to shatter the dreams of hometown people who only find respect for you if you give up the fight for originality. But if you stand out like a sore thumb, looking like you’re doing better than the next one, then someone will knock you down. How can you be the one to make the change in a place where nothing ever changes but the shoes?

The blunt pursuit of emotional honesty to herself and her readers, if not always for those in her life, makes Rebecca’s confessional voice one of the most convincing I’ve read in literature in a while, a deafening scream that refuses to go unheard. If my ramblings about In and Out of the Goldfish Bowl seem a little more fragmented than usual, I’m going to blame the lack of coherent notes. After reading Sixteen Shades of Crazy I thought I would just be keeping a casual eye out for more of Rachel Trezise’s work, but In and Out of the Goldfish Bowl has made me a Trezise devotee.

Sixteen Shades of Crazy by Rachel Trezise (2010)

Sixteen Shades of Crazy by Rachel Trezise (2010)Rachel Trezise’s Sixteen Shades of Crazy is set in a small Welsh valley village, Aberalaw, where three very different women find themselves attracted to an English drugdealer. The three women, Ellie, Siân and Rhiannon, are the girlfriends of a local punk band, the Boobs and after an eighteen month narcotic drought, Johnny provides not only chemicals for the women but intrigue, mystery and the chance of escape.

Ellie is the most sympathetic of the three, she’s educated, sensitive and has resigned herself to dull factory work after her dream of coasting on the wave of what she thought would be the Boobs inevitable successes seems less and less likely. She’s intelligent, aware of the limitations of her surroundings and her self, and how there is an irreperable difference between those around her and what she desires for herself. Her boyfriend, Andy, is intent on planning their upcoming nuptials according to his family traditions, but Ellie is hesitant, realizing that expressing a reluctance to marry and procreate would be akin to blasphemy in the eyes of her friends and his family. For her Johnny is alluring because he seems to offer a escape from the banal future, he engages with her on issues that she is passionate about. Her sights are set beyond Aberalaw, a fact the others – content with the rituals of their insular village life – appear to resent. It is frustrating, at the beginning, that Ellie seems to think her only escape is through Andy’s band, when clearly he doesn’t want to escape the familial tradition and domestic simplicity. Her relationship with Johnny is based on false hopes based on Johnny’s knowledge built on soundbites – he knows enough to get these women interested enough to sleep with him, but there is no need for him to know anything beyond that because once that’s done, well, he really has no need for them.

She never overlooked an opportunity to remind Ellie where she was, because she knew Ellie wanted to be elsewhere, beneath the skyscrapers of New York. Rhiannon had resigned herself to a monotonous existence inthe Welsh gutter and no one else was allowed to look up at the stars.

Siân, as a main character, is unfairly underused; she comes across as merely a supporting player for the endless conflict between Ellie and Rhiannon but her story is just as heartbreaking as theirs. Siân is the image of familial perfection, she has the happy children and the tidy home, but with a clueless husband and working two jobs, a deeper malaise lies beneath her life. Siân’s inner life isn’t as explored as Ellie or Rhiannon’s, but her attraction to Johnny is mainly for his product. He can provide the pills she desires to blunt the motherly instinct she cannot otherwise escape. Her ending is tragic, set in motion by the cruel trickery of Rhiannon.

Rhiannon, nearing forty, is grotesque in her excess: physically, her large body is made comedic by oversized silicon breasts, her attitude, her blunt, rude and abrasive way of speaking, her unsubtle cruelty to others. Sex is her weapon, as attack and defence. Her contempt for beauty (Siân) or intelligence (Ellie) isn’t so much borne of jealousy, she just can’t see their use when her flesh is all she needs to seduce, to get her own way. Rhiannon is pure viciousness, made more disturbing by outbursts of violence that demand she is the focus of all attention. Her attraction to Johnny is one of conquest, having what the others want, and having it before them. It is Rhiannon that ends up with Johnny post-drug bust, but the others have moved on – Ellie to New York, Siân in death – and I wonder whether her supposed victory is soured by the lack of willing competition. There are some brief comments on Rhiannon’s mixed heritage – her father was black, her mother white – but other than inspiring a number of distasteful remarks from minor characters, this doesn’t seem to really go anywhere, I’m uncertain how her race matters here.

The women in Sixteen Shades of Crazy are all desperate, and only a stranger can offer them the opportunity to evolve. The constant tension of casual violence and endless boredom of the working class village remains somewhat in the background, I would have loved more reflection into how the surroundings and culture worked to trap these three women in the first place. However, Sixteen Shades of Crazy is primarily a character driven novel and Trezise creates a rich interior life for these suffocated women – especially with Ellie and Rhiannon – that makes their plights difficult to ignore.

Book Loot: Week Ending May 23rd, 2010

Ernest Hemingway poses with a water buffalo while on safari in Africa, 1953-1954Well, it appears after last week’s overload of links the internet has dried up this week. It’s good, in a way, as I seem to have been a lot more productive this week. Thanks boring internet, but please don’t always be this way. Oh look! Here’s Ernest Hemingway with a buffalo!

Photo credit: Ernest Hemingway poses with a water buffalo while on safari in Africa, 1953-1954. Photograph in the Ernest Hemingway Photograph Collection, John F. Kennedy Presidential Library, Boston.

http://thenewinquiry.com/post/589628505/lester-bangs-and-rock-music-as-the-eternal-high-school