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A Long Way DownNick Hornby
It is New Year's Eve and four people meet up on 'Topper's Tower' a well known London jumping off point for those strictly interested in oblivion.
Hornby is a gifted writer who draws the reader in more effectively than most, though I'm struck by his almost total lack of description: no faces, no dawns, no sunsets, no interiors, no exteriors. The scenery is exclusively social. But somehow it doesn't matter. Hornby is very concerned with human communication. 'Everyone knows how to talk,' says one of his characters,'and no one knows what to say'. The dialogue is highly believable and the author manages to inhabit his characters to a degree which makes you feel you know them intimately by the end of the book. One proof of this, perhaps, is the fact that all his books so far have been converted into passably good films. With a plot like this I was half expecting a predictably happy or 'inspiring' ending beginning to flag up its appearance. You know the sort of thing - everyone helps each other understand the reasons for their suicidal intentions and then become firm allies in building new reasons for living. A certain kind of American film would have homed in such an ending like a Tomahawk cruise missile. I suspect Hornby too experienced similar intimations as his characters began to interact. But if he did, he resisted commendably and the book throughout is moving, poignant and insightful without ever becoming unrealistically optimistic or approaching cloying sentimentality. Yet, in spite of all this, the book really does manage to be inspiringly life positive and reinforces wonderfully the truth of the adage that suicide is a permanent answer to a temporary problem. © Bill Jones 2006 [more MODERN FICTION reviews] Nick Hornby, A Long Way Down, London: Penguin, 2006, pp.226, ISBN 0140287027 |
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