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by David Mitchell
In a word (or two or three): i bet the swan turns into some futuristic swami or something
From Mr. Hipster:
David Mitchell is usually the master of
the weird postmodern mindfuck. He somehow melds traditional storytelling
with sci-fi and mystery. It's like a nerdy reader's dream. Both Cloud
Atlas and Ghostwritten
had me shaking with anticipation for Black Swan Green. How would he
challenge narrative structures this time? How would he bend space
and time and make me just hate myself for never being able to think
of anything so clever? It turns out he didn't. He wrote what amounts
to a pretty straight-forward coming of age story about a boy with
a stutter in a small British town. I read on, always expecting the
unexpected to pop up on the next page. And it ever did. There was
one scene early on in the book that was a little oddball, and I thought
might hint at a deeper mysticism or magic, but it too turned out to
be pretty normal. We get in the head of our narrator, who references
both "the hangman" in relations to his stutter, and "unborn twin"
referring to what amounts to the devil on his shoulder. Again, I kept
expecting some sort of wackiness around these two "characters," but
nothing came of it, and they just remained nicknames for things going
on inside his head. I finally had to put aside my expectations for
another Mitchell-type novel, and settle in to the fact that this was
just going to be what it was going to be. So, as a coming-of-age novel,
it turned out not to be bad. Mitchell writes in a compelling way that
is neither flowery nor overly-simple. His characters, while pretty
tame in this case, are entertaining and all seem to have an underlying
sadness about them. Our main character is just a normal kid in a school
in the English countryside complete with a kid hierarchy filled with
bullies and nerds and the overwhelming dread that one day his stutter
will come to light and send him spiraling to the bottom of the food
chain. While he keeps that fine social balance in check at school,
his family life is unraveling before his eyes. This is another one
of those slice-of-life stories in which not a ton happens in the broad
world, but ultimately, through his interactions, transforms the main
character thoroughly. There is some Catcher in the Rye stuff
going on here, but it's also clear that Mitchell's life ran some parallels
as well. It'll be interesting to see what his next novel brings--suburban
tales of childhood or century-leaping postmodern masterpiece?
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Cloud
Atlas
Ghostwritten
Number9Dream |
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