Darkmans edition by Nicola Barker Literature Fiction eBooks
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Shortlisted for the 2007 Man Booker Prize, an epic novel of startling originality which confirms Nicola Barker as one of Britain's most exciting literary talents.
If history is a sick joke which keeps on repeating, then who keeps on telling it? Could it be John Scogin, Edward IV's jester, whose favourite skit was to burn people alive? Or could it be Andrew Boarde, physician to Henry VIII, who wrote John Scogin's biography? Or could it be a Kurd called Gaffar whose days are blighted by an unspeakable terror of salad? Or a beautiful bulimic with brittle bones? Or a man who guards Beckley Woods with a Samurai sword and a pregnant terrier?
Darkmans is a very modern book, set in ridiculously modern Ashford, about two old-fashioned subjects love and jealousy. And the main character? The past, creeping up on the present and whispering something quite dark into its ear.
Darkmans is the third of Nicola Barker's visionary Thames Gateway novels. Following Wide Open (winner Dublin IMPAC award 2000) and Behindlings it confirms one of Britain's most original literary talents.
Darkmans edition by Nicola Barker Literature Fiction eBooks
If plot is the summary of events, you have a plot. If events are truly formed from well-formed sentences, you have events. If you are looking for tidy entertainment, you shouldn't read Darkmans. But if you wish to be captivated and astounded for the 14 hours it will take you to start, and finish, then buy the book (and take it along on a transoceanic plane ride. It lasts about as long, if you read in great gulps) . I did. I am glad I did.Barker's way with words, her characterizations, her elusivity as regards past and present, shared reality and nuttiness, her skills at dialogue and her sense of humour, are topnotch. Her ability to set a scene and to capitalize on it to keep the work moving forward is remarkable. We want to know what's going to happen, we want a denouement, we want all to be tidily tied together. We are deprived of this wish, as life so deprives us: so does Darkmans mirror our life. And just as the real world sets forth coincidences, so does Darkmans.
Logic falters in the face of the present, stories are made of what we hope happened, or what SHOULD happen. Barker doesn't let us off that easily. Readers are left confused and frustrated, at least in part. Darkmans hosts a hundred characters, of which none, after we close the back cover, can we conclude lived a life fantastic. Some, in fact, were left to hang far before that, and the few false notes in Darkmans may be the treatment of some of the minor figures: in a weft that required so many threads, occasionally a few will snarl the weave.
Other criticisms? The end. There's no ease in the finish. Was Barker rushed by her publisher? It is a long work, surely. Without giving anything away, the last 20 pages involves stop and go traffic, accidents, a sort of perpetuum mobile that made me wonder whether Barker's editor had pushed her too hard to finish.
Ostensibly, the work is set in the UK of a few years ago. Ostensibly, there are references to Edward IV's jester, John Scoggin, to schizophrenia, and to fatal attractions. What of it? Barker's way with words are such that you would be intrigued were she to write a history of laundry soap.
Reader, if you like Pynchon, or Murakami, Vollman, or even Elias Canetti, you will want to read Darkmans. If you prefer uncertainty to a tidy settlement, if you are comfortable with implication and in the drawing of only partial conclusion, in short, if you are looking for a modern work that requires you to bright forth your own, and then withdraw your ideas on character, direction, and end, than you will want to read Darkmans. Having just done so, I envy you the opportunity.
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Darkmans edition by Nicola Barker Literature Fiction eBooks Reviews
I say this from the depths of my cerebral cortex I truly have no idea what this book, in toto, is about. Yes, the editorials and other reviewers are correct in that the past, so to speak, is a definite theme - that is, if you grant that there actually is a past, present, and future existing, as we like to think of them, in a causal fashion - a notion this book seems to play merry hell with, I might add. But the "seepage of the past into the present", or however one wants to phrase it, in not what caught this reader's eye. Faulkner and, more recently, Graham Swift in his novel Waterland, are much better at that sort of thing; nor does Thomas Pynchon seem the main influence here - I noticed no triple integrals or higher mathematics in the book. Rather, Barker's master seems to be Joyce and her main concern to be with words, their power over us, their ability to confound us, our helplessness without them. But I'm getting a tad ahead of myself. Here are the three things that I found most striking
1.) The verve and panache with which the younger set of Barker's characters (i.e., Kelly and Kane) use the modern British idiom. It's truly spot on and delightful. Yank readers be prepared to look some words up, and don't get chuffy about it!
2.) The humour is blindingly funny. I'm thinking particularly of Kelly's - um - conversion to Christianity. What makes these scenes doubly grand, moreover, is however insane and wavering and comical it comes across. - And it DOES come across that way, Deo Laus. - This is actually the way most people I know find some sense of the numinous in their lives. Even the most orthodox believers seldom experience a road to Damascus experience settling everything for all time. It's filled with doubts and apprehensions and yes, comedy. In short, despite (or because of) the high comedy, Kelly's experience rings extraordinarily true to the psychological reality of belief. I was reminded of Nietzsche's comment that he could only believe in a God that could laugh.
3.) WORDS-Indo-European, werdh, Latin, verbum, Sanskrit, vratam command, law. The characters frequently come to the point of mental breakdown and aphasia through constant groping for the right words, especially when the history of the word occurs to them. A sample from Dory's Diary
"(The whore playing the martyr? What a joke! What a travesty)...Travesty trans - over + vestire - to dress. I still find myself using words which I can't understand." I might add that "trans" also means "across" in Latin - Crossdresser? The book is permeated with etymological breakdowns (in both senses) like this one. This is why I say Joyce is Barker's true master. Ever had a go at Finnegans Wake?
But, more importantly, these are the passages of the book (and they are legion) that struck home most piquantly to me. I know EXACTLY how these characters feel, and Barker, needless to say, does as well. They feel as if they are losing their hold on what connects them to other human beings, "the shareable part of experience" as it was once put to me by an Oxford don. They feel, in other words, like they are going insane. And the reader, at least this reader, whose head is crammed full of Latin and Ancient Greek, feels the slippage along with them. - As a personal example, I can't say how many times I've mulled over the word "nice" which comes from "nescire" in Latin, to be ignorant. Am I, in some fundamental way that I'm only half consciously aware of calling a person an ignoramus, a fool, an idiot when I say that s/he is "nice"? I have, in fact, had to expunge that particular word from my vocabulary because it troubles me so. For any reader who has reflected on how s/he communicates with others (or fail in some way to do so), these recurrent semantic breakdowns become eerie almost to the point of terror as they mount throughout the book.
But, as I say, I don't really know what this book is "about", if anything. The truth is....well, what Peta says near the end, "The truth is just a series of disparate ideas which briefly congeal and then slowly fall apart again..." p. 824. This is a very good description of what happens in the book as well. If there were just a tad more to it, I would give it five stars.
Quirky. This is an intriguing book with enough of interest occurring to keep you reading. There is a strange, trickster force (Darkmans) possessing various of the characters at different points in the plot. There are rather endearingly eccentric characters. There are psychological difficulties for enough of the characters to keep you involved with them. Overall, I enjoyed it.
Barker interrupts the flow of the story frequently to make comment. It took me some time to get used to this - I was trying to work out who was interrupting. It is never quite clear - sometimes it is an observer (the Darkmans?) and sometimes it seems to be the character interrupting his or herself. The effect is to make it clear that some other is in charge here.
The theme (as far as I could discern) is Chance. In order to make this clear to the reader, Barker has rather didactic dialogue coming from characters who would be unlikely to speak in philosophical terms. This jarred. But it has a great ending.
If plot is the summary of events, you have a plot. If events are truly formed from well-formed sentences, you have events. If you are looking for tidy entertainment, you shouldn't read Darkmans. But if you wish to be captivated and astounded for the 14 hours it will take you to start, and finish, then buy the book (and take it along on a transoceanic plane ride. It lasts about as long, if you read in great gulps) . I did. I am glad I did.
Barker's way with words, her characterizations, her elusivity as regards past and present, shared reality and nuttiness, her skills at dialogue and her sense of humour, are topnotch. Her ability to set a scene and to capitalize on it to keep the work moving forward is remarkable. We want to know what's going to happen, we want a denouement, we want all to be tidily tied together. We are deprived of this wish, as life so deprives us so does Darkmans mirror our life. And just as the real world sets forth coincidences, so does Darkmans.
Logic falters in the face of the present, stories are made of what we hope happened, or what SHOULD happen. Barker doesn't let us off that easily. Readers are left confused and frustrated, at least in part. Darkmans hosts a hundred characters, of which none, after we close the back cover, can we conclude lived a life fantastic. Some, in fact, were left to hang far before that, and the few false notes in Darkmans may be the treatment of some of the minor figures in a weft that required so many threads, occasionally a few will snarl the weave.
Other criticisms? The end. There's no ease in the finish. Was Barker rushed by her publisher? It is a long work, surely. Without giving anything away, the last 20 pages involves stop and go traffic, accidents, a sort of perpetuum mobile that made me wonder whether Barker's editor had pushed her too hard to finish.
Ostensibly, the work is set in the UK of a few years ago. Ostensibly, there are references to Edward IV's jester, John Scoggin, to schizophrenia, and to fatal attractions. What of it? Barker's way with words are such that you would be intrigued were she to write a history of laundry soap.
Reader, if you like Pynchon, or Murakami, Vollman, or even Elias Canetti, you will want to read Darkmans. If you prefer uncertainty to a tidy settlement, if you are comfortable with implication and in the drawing of only partial conclusion, in short, if you are looking for a modern work that requires you to bright forth your own, and then withdraw your ideas on character, direction, and end, than you will want to read Darkmans. Having just done so, I envy you the opportunity.
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