I read Mick Jackson's The Underground Man last week. I can't really recommend it enough and I actually think that the fact that it was both a first novel and was short listed for the Booker makes sense (though, it probably shouldn't have won, which it did not). It's such a brilliant use of character and narrative. It's utterly hilarious at times (the most elaborate fart joke I've ever read) and incredibly sad. I found myself actually missing the protagonist when I was at work, not the book, nor reading, but the character himself. Odd, that. Maybe that is the reason for any critique I have of the book. When the 'plot' itself became evident (when it ceased to be the daily wanderings of a doddering, adorable, somewhat worrying old aristocrat in Northern England) I, in turn, became less interested in reading. I would have rather the story just ended and left me with a brilliant and lovely character study. I've been noticing this in a lot of books lately: once there is a very strong narrative tug towards conclusion, or at least significant events I loose interest or begin to find the book tedious.
More Blogs
-
1
Sunday Mar 11, 2007
so im going. i dont really care so much about boobies and there isn… -
0
Friday Mar 09, 2007
Nothing is new. I work and drink and care less about much... -
1
Sunday Feb 18, 2007
Daily our apartment more resembles the interior of a bar. When we m… -
0
Friday Feb 09, 2007
"Red Clay, Motherfucker!" Today: Dogwood smells good when it b… -
0
Thursday Feb 08, 2007
I am alive and living on the eastside of Athens Georgia. I like it ra… -
2
Saturday Nov 11, 2006
Ian Curtis Bedwetting Twenty hours left at Burger King. Christ I h… -
1
Tuesday Nov 07, 2006
hey folks, mostly folks in the south, though a few folks in new york … -
1
Wednesday Nov 01, 2006
My grandmother is visiting soon, from England, this would, then, be m… -
0
Tuesday Oct 31, 2006
On Halloween i give you this: "The mummied dead everywhere. The … -
1
Wednesday Oct 25, 2006
I've reached fever pitch panic about moving. The fifteenth of Novembe…