Monday 3 June 2013

Venus as a Boy by Luke Sutherland

Venus as a Boy is a rather strangely written story in that although it’s fictional, it could easily pass as an autobiography due to how in-depth it appears to be written and how realistic certain events are.

Venus... begins with a writer being approached by a very drunk gig-goer in London claiming to be a friend of someone called Desiree who wants their story told as they believe it will have a large effect on the reader. A week after being approached to tell this story the writer receives a package in the post containing letters, photos and an audio recording which tells the full life-story of Desiree.

What follows is the moving story of the life of one man who grew up in the Scottish lands of Orkney and moved to Soho, London in order to work as a “lady of the night”. Although I wouldn’t say it was an awkward read, it did have its moments which made me feel a little “curious” (I would list one, but I read this book well over a month ago so the memories have somewhat passed). These moments, however, added to the deepness of the book.

Due to the themes of the book such as alcoholism, self-discovery and death, humour was scarce yet the story of Desiree was extremely gripping and the sort of reading material a reader will find hard to put down, especially is psychological fiction/drama is your thing.

At times the story was tricky to follow due to the lack of punctuation marking the beginning and end of a piece of dialogue meaning I had to go back a few lines to pick up who was saying what, but other than that I have no complaints to make at this time. Maybe after the next reading I’ll find something.

Being a course book I originally didn’t expect much of it or didn’t want to read it as I prefer to read by choice not obligation (yeah, I know, not the best thing for a Creative Writing student to say), but once I’d got past the first page I genuinely found it hard to put down. A moving and heavy book, Venus as a Boy was a worthy read.

Overall rating: 7/10

Juliet, Naked by Nick Hornby

Nick Hornby is a writer I’m not overly familiar with. I’ve seen About a Boy endless times as well as currently reading the book for the second time and the organisers of a recent university module seemed to be big fans of Fever Pitch due to its creative non-fiction elements (I didn’t read it due to my huge lack of interest in football). Juliet, Naked is a book I just happened to come across during my search for interesting and fun-to-read books in a charity shop recently.

Fun-to-read isn’t a phrase I’d really associate with this novel, but it was a good read, nonetheless. Juliet, Naked is the story of a woman whose 15 year relationship is on the rails due to a lack of passion and her partner’s obsession with blues/rock singer Tucker Crowe who has recently put together a selection of rough recordings which Duncan, the partner, has managed to get hold of.

After Annie writes a sneaky review of this collection of songs, she is contacted by Crowe and a friendship is built between them. Being a rock star, however, Tucker Crowe has quite a history which has left him as not the best boyfriend material in the world.

Having read About a Boy and a lot of good reviews for his other novels I trusted Nick Hornby to have released something worth reading and possibly keeping (I usually get rid of books after one or two reads in order to control my hoarding) as I build a collection of Hornby writings and I was right to do so.

Deadlines had all passed so I had plenty of free time to read this and I found myself sitting and reading it at any available time. The story was different to other things I had recently read yet it was (from what I remembered) very similar to About a Boy in style and humour. The story isn’t exactly gripping, yet it’s not something that makes the reader want to put it down after 20 pages. The fact that it had a rock star as the protagonist was very likely a helper in this also.

Hornby’s humour is strong, for use of a better word, but has a somewhat darkness element to it in that characters are very often feeling down yet he manages to take that feeling and add some well-placed comments and/or jokes to lighten the mood and keep the reader interested. Juliet, Naked is no different with this. I’d also say his humour is very “English” in that it uses jokes and imagery which is very stereotypical to the English lifestyle, the most obvious being that we all drink loads of tea with biscuits and get roaring drunk in pubs with jukeboxes which play the Spice Girls on repeat. This, however, is far from a complaint as it is a style of writing I thoroughly enjoy, likely due to understanding and connection with the characters, something I found this novel had.

Characters are simple yet believable and the reader is able to form opinions and feelings towards each character, some positive, some not. All in all Juliet, Naked is a well-written and constructed novel which could almost pass as a biographical piece and made me a fan of Nick Hornby.

Overall rating: 8/10