Reviews tagging 'Schizophrenia/Psychosis '

Light Perpetual by Francis Spufford

4 reviews

jesshindes's review against another edition

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emotional hopeful reflective slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.0

I came to this novel with some prejudices for and against the author which I should maybe declare. For: I really loved his previous novel, Golden Hill, so much so that I had to put the book down for six weeks when Something Happened to my favourite character. Con: I got really annoyed by a recent-ish episode where he apparently wrote The Next Great Narnia Novel and then there was an article in the Guardian about how great this book was with all ppl like Philip Pullman saying "Oh this is CS Lewis reincarnate" and then Spufford kicking up a fuss bc the Lewis estate had said he couldn't publish it (not that they had ever said he could, he just wrote it and hoped for the best). Anyway newsflash that is just called FANFICTION and people are writing it every day and he could post it on AO3 if he just wanted people to read it, he just couldn't make money from it!! Sorry but something about middle aged men acting like they invented fanfic drives me nuts ahahaha

Anyway

I came to this book with reasonably high hopes but I was ultimately underwhelmed by it. I should say though that I think the opening chapter is great and very cleverly and skillfully written. It describes a bomb falling on a South London Woolworths during the course of WW2, and it renders the scene in a really effective slow-motion, so you see the building and all the shoppers (including a bunch of children) and the bomb powering towards them, crawling crawling and then suddenly it pulls back with the flash and the bang of the explosion. Really cinematic and great. 

The rest of the novel, though, deals with the lives of those children in another universe in which the bomb hadn't fallen, so you trace the five of them effectively across the latter half of the twentieth century, up until old age and in one case death; and this was the part that just didn't persuade me so much. I can understand the concept - these five ordinary lives stand in for all the other ordinary lives cut short by war, you see these deaths as the end of all this possibility - but Spufford suffered for me by comparison to Kate Atkinson, whose Life After Life and A God in Ruins (a pair of novels) kind of look at something similar but do it in a way that for me was much more fully realised and did much more with the form of the novel. Light Perpetual has that great opener and then turns into basically just a straightforward novel skipping between these five protagonists - some of whose stories I enjoyed at points, some of whom I was less persuaded by (there's a guy called Vern who is a Fat Man and this is a key element of his character, which I always find quite annoying). By the end it sort of gestures back to where it started with but I just didn't think it did quite enough with the idea. Also this is a very minor petty point but it's set in a made-up area of South-East London called 'Bexford' which is somewhere between Catford and Lewisham and Deptford and New Cross and the imaginary geography of the thing drove me NUTS, the whole time I was like 'but where IS it', why could he not just set it in New Cross (where a real Woolworths really did get bombed) I do not know ahahaha

However this was a minor issue and the bigger thing for me was that I just felt like this didn't push its big idea far or hard enough for what I wanted it to do. But it was nominated for the Booker so obviously many people disagreed!

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dasha_musa's review against another edition

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adventurous reflective medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.75

I liked the prose of this book and enjoyed running through the course of each character's life. However, I wish more was done with the concept set up in the beginning (children die in the bombing, but what would their lives be like if they lived)? 

I don't know how it couldve been done differently, but I'm a little disappointed because the beginning of the book gripped me completely, but then the rest of the book just proceeded as the stories of the lives of various characters (irrespective of the set up in the beginning). 

I liked it, but it's missing something for me.

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deedireads's review against another edition

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challenging dark reflective medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.25

All my reviews live at https://deedispeaking.com/reads/.

TL;DR REVIEW:

While this book wasn’t for everyone, I found it to be moving and thought-provoking. Also, the audiobook is incredibly performed and I highly recommend it.

For you if: You like character-driven novels that take place over the span of a lifetime.

FULL REVIEW:

I read Light Perpetual because it was longlisted for the 2021 Booker Prize, with my #BookerOfTheMonth book club. A lot of people who came to our discussion either didn’t care for it or felt neutral about it, but personally, I did quite like it.

The book starts with a sort of thought experiment: Take five young children killed by a bomb in London in 1944. What if they’d lived instead? What would their lives have looked like? We jump forward in time, dropping into their lives every 10–15 years from childhood to old age, getting a snapshot of what’s happening and has happened up to that point in time.

A lot of people at book club had a similar complaint (I don’t think this is really a spoiler, but if you hate knowing things going into a book, stop here): that the bomb, or the fact that none of them actually lives, doesn’t come into play again. The book doesn’t return to this fact at all — the no-bomb-alternative-timeline thing is truly just a thought experiment that launches these characters’ stories into motion. Readers had expected a kind of closure or meaning that never came, and it left them feeling like, what was the point? But personally, this didn’t bother me. I felt like the point was to show that all our lives have ups and downs, and they’re all different, but in that way, they’re also all the same; the alternating mundane and novel aspects of a human lifespan give us more in common than we think. Those who died, if they’d lived, would have found themselves on the same journey as the rest of us, with their own unique struggles and joys. Our lives are special, and also common, and it’s beautiful.

The last thing I’ll say about this one is that the audiobook was incredibly performed — more like a one-woman play performed than a novel narrated — and probably made the difference between me feeling neutral about this and loving it. I’ll be keeping an eye out for books Imogen Church reads in the future!

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lydia123's review against another edition

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emotional informative reflective tense slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

3.5

A very good book! The style in incredibly minute and poetic which can get frustrating but ultimately really works for the subject matter. I wish the author had done all of the protagonists viewpoints in 1949 as it feels like we don’t properly get an idea who they are until 1964 but oh well! 

Read if you feel stuck in life or really like the television programme : Seven Up.

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