Stonemouth
By Iain Banks
Published by Little,
Brown.
RRP $36.99
What every writer aspires to is a terrific voice. All the fancy prose in the world is no
substitute for that sacred, special and often rare thing, ‘a voice’. I’ve envied ‘voices’ in creative writing
classes, where colleagues who’ve never written a novel before have somehow
nailed that very thing that elusive and special thing, we call ‘voice’. But harder still, is to sustain that voice
for the length of a novel and to keep it fresh and real.
Right from the
start, I was mesmerised by the narrator’s voice, Stewart (or Stu or Stuie) with
his brilliant observations of the world.
Stewart from Stonemouth, ‘an estuary
town north of Aberdeen’ (a fictitious Scottish town – well, at least I do hope
so). A town so articulately recalled
and vivified through the memories of Stewart, who has returned home from London
for a funeral. No ordinary funeral
either. The funeral of the father and
grandfather of one of Stonemouth’s head crime families; the Murstons. Essentially, there are two crime families (the
Murstons and Mike MacAvett) who run the town and Stewart used to be on side
with both of them. That is, until he crossed the Murston family
and was run out of town.
It takes quite a
while before you find out why Stewart was driven out of town. There’s menace right from the start when
Stewart’s standing on the bridge above the Firth of Stoun, watching the water –
a bridge monitored by cameras because of its notoriety for suicides – evidently
it’s not the jump that kills you, you just break all your bones when you hit
the water and that renders you useless for swimming, and so you drown. Stu (via Iain Banks) doesn’t hold back on
detail. He has this delightful Scottish
story-telling brogue with just the right balance of cynical detachment and
clinical self observation spiced with unsentimental insight into his fellow
characters. It reminded me of reading
‘Independence Day’ by Richard Ford. Not
the themes so much as the ability to draw the reader so acutely into the heart
of the story through the eye of the protagonist and to boot, the accent. In this case, I found myself reading with a
broad Scottish accent. I loved that. And sometimes I went into perfect Glaswegian
when the character called for it.
Stonemouth is a
scary place if you happen to fall out with either of the key players and their
families. I wanted to disbelieve in it,
but Iain Banks would have me believe in it.
It is so perfectly described that you feel he knows this territory
intimately. In my last review of a
novel I complained about label-dropping, but Stu names cars and clothes all the
time to perfect effect – it amplifies the whole neighbourhood, in particular
the crime families.
The plot unravels
with Stu returning for the funeral of Jo Murston and then reminiscing about
growing up in Stonemouth and how he got to be run out of town. There’s a constant sense of menace throughout
the novel and yet he’s only home for a few days, possibly just the weekend, for
the funeral. I found my tolerance
tested, but I guess it’s the mark of a good writer that I stayed with it, in
spite of my distaste at times.
An example of the
humour I really enjoyed - the Murston brothers are setting the record straight
for Stu when he starts dating their sister Ellie. “All four were wearing new
jeans – with what looked suspiciously like ironed-in creases – and padded
tartan shirts over different designer tees.
The tartan shirts were pretty bulky.
It was like being intimidated by a convention of Highland hotel sofas.” Ellie
is central to the story. It’s a coming
of age and a love story with the back-drop of tough working-class made-it-rich
characters, families with form and history in the town, a sense of belonging
that is palpable.
I also love this
when Stewart goes out for the evening with his parents to celebrate having made
partnership in London
“Mum drove us out to the Turrie
Inn, near Roadside of Durrens on the Loanstoun road. Fine meal, fine wine. Place was busy on the strength of the chef’s
word-of-mouth reputation, some magazine features and rumours of a Michelin star
next year, maybe.” And then, “Quietly
pissed, but feeling like a child again, I watched through the side window of
the Audi as a waning moon like a paring from Gods’ big toenail flickered
between the black trunks of sentry trees riding lines of distant hills.”
Banks milks the
Scottish brogue and the language but it’s never overdone.
“...names already slipping from common use, and not really that much
help. If a girl said ‘Is that a cuckoo?,
and you said, ‘Naw, quine, yon’s a gowk’ you’d generally be looked at aghast,
like you were talking a foreign language.
Which you kind of were.”
Or...
“Fine Scoatish name. Whereaboots in the Toun ye wantin?”
Stonemouth is the
toun to all of the characters.
This novel comes with a warning.
If you don’t like swearing, sex and a constant sense of menace as well
as some nasty descriptions of potential violence (not always enacted), then
this book is definitely not your sort of book. But if you like good writing, enjoy coming
of age stories, love, smart-arsed witty dialogue and insightful observations of
human character and small towns, then you may very find Stu and his friends,
just the ticket – a canny, wise, but slightly foolish character the number of
times he tempts fate with the Murstons, but a man with a heart and a growing
sense of decent philosophical insight into the world. I couldn’t put it down, even though I didn’t
really like the level of violence or many of the characters, apart from Stu and
Ellie.
Footnote:
Footnote:
1 comment:
Thanks for this review Maggie. I'm afraid I didn't like it quite as much although I thought he did a good job with the location.
You can see my review for Booksellers NZ on their blog here: http://booksellersnz.wordpress.com/2012/07/30/book-review-stonemouth-by-iain-banks-2/ or on my own book review site here: http://cphowe.wordpress.com/2012/07/30/review-of-stonemouth-by-iain-banks/
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