Write a poem or story from the viewpoint of a particular kind of weather phenomenon. Here are some possibilities:
hurricane
tornado
gale
thunderstorm
lightning
heatwave
heavy rain
snow
sleet
hail
drizzle
fog
mist
mild sunny weather
Write a poem or story from the viewpoint of a particular kind of weather phenomenon. Here are some possibilities:
hurricane
tornado
gale
thunderstorm
lightning
heatwave
heavy rain
snow
sleet
hail
drizzle
fog
mist
mild sunny weather
Two of my poems will appear in next edition of Pushing Out The Boat, a fantastic mag based in Scotland.
My poem 'Rattled' appeared in the April edition of English Review - thank you, Luke McBratney.
Two of my poems appeared in the recent first edition of Makarelle, a fab new publication created by three fantastic writers who did the MA in Creative Writing with me last year - thank you, Dini Armstrong, Jane Langan and Ruth Loten.
One of my poems appeared recently on The Haar, a fantastic literary blog - thank you, Lydia Popowich.
Bandit magazine has accepted one of my stories, 'Seahouses', for publication later in the year.
Conversations With Friends by Sally Rooney
Conversations With Friends, Irish writer Rooney's debut novel, was published in 2017 after what appears to be a fairly frenzied bidding war between publishers. It was nominated for the 2018 Swansea University International Dylan Thomas Prize and the 2018 Folio Prize, and won the 2017 Sunday Times/Peters Fraser and Dunlop Young Writer Of The Year Award.
I feel a degree of personal interest in Rooney as she was, for a couple of years, editor (and is still a contributing editor) of Dublin magazine The Stinging Fly, which has published two of my poems in the past and which I rate highly as a literary journal.
According to Wikipedia, Rooney wrote the first 100,000 words of the novel in three months while studying for an MA in American Literature at Trinity College Dublin, which gives you a flavour of her drive, energy and ambition.
Her follow-up novel, Normal People, was an international bestseller and was longlisted for the 2018 Man Booker Prize. It won Irish Book Of The Year at the Irish Book Awards and Waterstone's Book of the Year for 2018. In 2019, it won the Costa Prize and was shortlisted for the Dylan Thomas Prize and the Women's Prize for Fiction. It was made into a critically-acclaimed 12-part mini-series by BBC3 and Hulu, and Conversations With Friends is also going to be made into a TV series. Her third novel, Beautiful World, Where Are You?, is due to be published later this year (2021).
The problem with this sort of success is that it sets reader-expectations unfeasibly high. I was given a copy of this novel for Christmas a couple of years ago and have only got round to reading it this year, but I was aware of the hype surrounding the novel when it was first published. Even the cover quotations, ironically, have a kind of negative effect on the reader. They had this effect on me, anyway. The stream of flamboyantly admiring quotations from celebrity commentators on the dust jacket and inside the front cover of the paperback felt like they couldn't possibly be true, or even seemed like a challenge to the reader to prove them wrong. It felt as if we were being told what to think about the novel, and most readers, I suspect, aren't completely keen on this.
On the front cover, a quotation from the Sunday Telegraph describes the novel as 'darkly funny', but I have to say that I didn't find it even remotely funny, except very slightly in odd vignettes here and there. I felt it had an atmosphere of imminent tragedy all the way through, as if something terrible was about to happen. So I was primed to find the novel different from how these celebrities viewed it, right from the start.
This does a disservice to the book, as in fact it is a fine piece of writing. However, it took me a long, long time to start appreciating its qualities and strengths (though I am obviously in a minority here). The narrator, 21-year-old Frances, a highly intelligent university student, has a flat narrative voice where everything she tells us seems lacking in emotion. It takes a while for the reader to understand that this is intentional: Frances is a damaged individual who self-harms and represses her emotions. Her best friend and ex-lover, the beautiful Bobbi, seemed inconsistent to me - sometimes vividly drawn but often responding to events in ways I found unconvincing, though I eventually decided that this too was part of the unreliability of the narrative voice. The two women perform poetry written by Frances, and through this they meet Melissa, a photographer and essayist, and her handsome actor husband, Nick, with whom Frances embarks on an affair. The novel is built around the various conversations Frances has with the other three members of this group, and with other characters such as her mother and alcoholic father. These include telephone conversations, emails and texts.
For a good part of the novel, I found this constant focus on Frances's inner life rather tedious, if I'm honest. She seemed rather cold, distanced, and the novel appeared to be solely about the emotional game-playing, self-delusion, and often slightly mystifying interactions between these characters, none of whom I found recognisable. I'm a middle-aged, working-class Yorkshire woman, and I don't mix with actors and photographers, even minor ones, or with 21-year-old writers who are offered several hundred euros to publish the first short story they've ever written. I found it difficult to really care about these people and they seemed to be from a different planet to the one I live in, but not in an interesting Star Trekky way. When I was twenty-one, I wrote poetry but I was never the kind of woman that an extremely handsome actor in his thirties would have found sexually or romantically attractive. So I'm probably not the target audience for this novel. It is, in fact, an indication of the power of Rooney's writing that I kept reading for long enough for the novel to get under my skin.
I found myself beginning to feel intrigued by Frances, invested in what happened to her, almost in spite of my mild boredom and failure to empathise with her. I began to realise the depth of her low self-esteem, the way she despises herself and constantly self-sabotages, her inability to talk about her feelings with her close friends, her constant dissection of the discourses in which she participates and the supposedly Bohemian morality of her group of friends which only thinly conceals their basic human feelings of jealous insecurity.
As the novel progressed, I still often found it sometimes irritating. Characters often seemed to react to things in ways I found implausible. Melissa's sort-of-acceptance of Frances's relationship with Nick seemed unlikely. The fact that the highly intelligent and well-read Frances seems never to have heard of endometriosis struck me as peculiar, though I suppose that a woman of her age might not have heard of it. The fact that no one immediately investigates why Frances's father told her he had transferred money to her bank account but then it turned out he hadn't, struck me as odd. And there were aspects of the writing that I found difficult to evaluate - images that I found problematic (were they terrible or brilliant?): 'The sky was soft like cloth and birds ran over it in long threads', 'We were driving along by the harbour, where the ships implied themselves as concepts behind the fog'.
Yet I found the novel increasingly compelling. There were moments when the story came vividly alive for me, one being the visit of the horrendous literary agent, Valerie, during Melissa and Nick's sojourn in Etables. Though there were moments when I wanted to shake Frances and tell her to grow up, there were others when I felt deeply sorry for her and found her inability to recognise her own emotions very poignant. And I have found that I appreciate the novel much more in retrospect than while I was reading it: it has stayed with me in a way that many novels fail to. It had a greater impact on me than the last thing I read, Celeste Ng's Little Fires Everywhere. For this reason, I would, slightly grudgingly, give it four stars and consider reading more of Rooney's work. I think that a different kind of reader would find it deeply rewarding. All I would say is that you should ignore the promotional blurb and just read the novel itself. Make up your own mind.
****
Let me tell you
about my only trip to Germany. In 2004, my sister and I went on a coach trip to
the Christmas fair in Cologne. We spent longer on the bus than at the
destination, but it was all we could afford (story of my life). My sister
insisted we both take travel sickness tablets as she gets bad motion sickness. I’m not sure why I had to take the pills too,
but my sister is not a woman you argue with. There was an overnight stop on the
outskirts of Belgium and a further two-hour coach journey next morning. Due to
the tendency of travel sickness pills to make you sleepy, we both overslept and
missed breakfast, and then we found we couldn’t stay awake on the coach. I
mean, we just couldn’t stay awake. It was as if we’d been shot with tranquiliser
darts. To make it worse, for this final stretch of the journey, we were sitting
on the very front seat, close to the driver and the spare driver. We tried to
take it in turns to sleep, but neither of us could keep our eyes open and we
ended up jerking awake in Cologne in a pool of our own dribble, with the driver
and the spare driver laughing their heads off because we’d been snoring most of
the way.
Anyway, after this ignominious start, we disembarked and the cold air soon woke us up. I got into a ludicrous tussle with a middle-aged German man whom I thought was trying to steal my shoulder bag but it turned out he was trying to instruct me to wear the strap bandolier-style in order to prevent my bag being snatched. This was my introduction to the German tendency to interfere for the good of others, a trait I find intellectually laudable but in reality, speaking as an English layabout, a bit alarming. A friend of mine lived in Germany for a year and her landlady once rang her at work to ask her to come home and rearrange the washing she had put on the line to dry. My friend refused and when she got home the landlady had rearranged all my friend’s wet clothes so they were now ordered by category, size and colour.
What struck my sister and myself most was how physically large and healthy-looking the Germans were. They all looked like Olympic athletes. They seemed like giants to us, though it might have been another side effect of the travel sickness pills.
Anyway, the main thing I want to say here is that we were both mightily impressed by the Christmas Fair. This was in the days before such fairs became so ubiquitous in Britain that you can’t visit a large British town or city between November and January without emerging covered in fairy-lights and tinsel. And even now, the Cologne Christmas Fair was the best I’ve ever experienced. For one thing, it went on for what seemed liked miles. Round every corner, a new stretch of colourful wooden huts would appear, like in the holodeck on Star Trek: The Next Generation which appears to increase in size as you walk round it. Everywhere you turned, you’d see new delights: a huge ice-skating rink, street performers, an oompah band, carol-singers, stalls selling bratwurst and huge cauldrons full of deliciously fattening potato-y concoctions. We drank so much gluhwein we almost missed the bus back home (I still have two gluhwein mugs in my cupboard), and we travelled for ten hours on the homeward journey with our purchases packed around us like polystyrene peanuts.
But it was the quality of everything that blew my mind, particularly on the stalls selling German goods. The marzipan didn’t taste like playdough but instead as if it should be called ‘marchpane’ and served on a golden platter to the queen. Christmas tree ornaments in wood and metal that were genuine works of art. Intricate puzzles and clever handmade toys, clockwork that actually worked, glittering tealights and handmade chocolates that tasted of actual chocolate rather than fat and sugar.
This very short experience of Germanic excellence has coloured my view of German craftsmanship ever since. Our Bosch fridge-freezer was bought in 2001 and is the most reliable thing I’ve ever bought – we now have a Bosch washing machine and a Bosch oven. So, after some deliberation, I decided to get my wedding rings from a German company. We’d originally liked the old-film fantasy of wandering into an upmarket jewellery store, where an eccentric but romantic sales assistant would smile benignly at our poverty and give us a good deal on a special ring. But then I realised that, even if such things ever did happen in real life, they didn’t happen to people our age who don’t look like Robert Redford and Jane Fonda at the height of their physical perfection. When you’re middle-aged, being a bit poor seems like failure rather than the charming temporary Bohemian poverty of youth. And if you’re short and dumpy, you just never get treated like Audrey Hepburn, something I’ve regretfully had to accept over the years! The reality of such a visit to a real-life jewellery store would be that, through subtle methods like not actually putting prices on individual rings and employing ever-so-slightly-slightly snooty staff, we’d be made to feel like over-reaching paupers. And I have eczema and my hands often look like they belong to someone who’s been gutting fish on a Grimsby dockside for thirty years, so I’m not keen to try on rings in front of a perfectly manicured young shop assistant. Also, we’d have to wear masks so there’d be the chance we would mishear the prices quoted, which might lead to embarrassment.
‘That ring is mumble-mumble-mumble.’
‘Oh, a hundred and fifty pounds? We’ll
take it.’
‘No, I said one thousand, one
hundred and fifty pounds.’
‘Oh.’
So, we chose an online German company, though I was slightly worried that Brexit would lead to problems (it didn’t). They sent us, free, a device to measure our fingers which arrived only two days after I’d asked for it. I mean, during the pandemic, I’ve sent letters, first class, to friends in the next town up the motorway which have taken a fortnight to get there! We had to make compromises, of course, but at least we didn’t have to do this in front of a condescending sales assistant. I wanted 18ct white gold rings in a modern style, maybe studded with diamonds, but we ended up with the substantially cheaper 14ct yellow gold traditional plain bands, though mine has a minuscule diamond in it just so we know which is which. Inscriptions on the rings were free. One ring has ‘Grow old along with me’ inscribed in it, and the other has ‘The best is yet to be’, two lines from a Browning poem. We constructed our rings using their easy-to-use online tool which allowed us to choose material, thickness, style, decorative flourishes, size, etc and gave us very clear prices for every choice we considered.
I did have a brief patch of doubt about spending what for us is a substantial amount of money on two small items that might get lost in the post, and I emailed the company to ask whether we’d be refunded if the rings failed to arrive; I got a reassuring reply the same afternoon in perfect English.
The rings arrived on the middle day of the three the company specified, at the reasonable time of eleven o’clock, and the delivery man knocked on our door THREE TIMES! I mean, when does this ever happen? I don’t know about you, but I usually arrive at the door breathless, pulling up my knickers or trying to flatten down my bed hair, to see the delivery van vanishing over the hill and my goods resting the wrong way up on my doorstep. I’d been worried that the rings would be different from what we expected when they arrived – we’d open the packaging to find we’d been sent chrome curtain rings or the inscriptions would be two lines from ‘Humpty Dumpty’. But the rings are precisely what we ordered and fit perfectly. And they were expertly packaged in an appropriately sized box (I once received a paperback book from Amazon which arrived inside a cardboard box big enough to fit my four-year-old nephew inside).
I wish the Germans could just arrange the entire wedding, frankly.
I showed the rings to my now-seven-year-old nephew yesterday. He twisted them round in his grubby fingers for a while, peering at them critically. I asked if he would consider being a ‘ring-bearer’ at the wedding. He asked for details of what exactly his duties would be. I explained, as I retrieved partner’s ring from down the back of the settee, that he’d have to hold the rings in their box until called upon to hand them over.
‘You’d be responsible for keeping
them safe,’ explained partner, as I fished my ring out of the box of toy cars
where it had fallen when nephew momentarily lost interest.
‘You don’t have to decide now,’ I
told nephew. ‘The wedding isn’t until December.’
‘Will I be eight by then?’
‘No, but you’ll be nearly eight.’
He looked dubious, as if him being
eight was a deal-breaker.
As I wiped the melted chocolate from his fingers off both rings and replaced them in their box, he gave a shrug and grudgingly said he’d think about it.
It’s the best we could hope for, really…
Yes, I know. When
you've lived with someone for twenty-eight years, it hardly seems worth getting
married, does it? It's like announcing to your family that you've bought a pet
after they've been looking after Fido or Tiddles for you every time you've gone
on holiday for the past three decades.
As a statement of romantic commitment, it seems
hardly worth saying, does it? When you've shared a home with a person for so
long, you've kinda made it clear that you're prepared to tolerate his noisy
eating and the way he re-interprets your instructions to suit himself, because
he's such a good nurse when you're ill and he's so thoughtful and kind - or, in
his case, that he can tolerate your outbursts of irrational rage and your
nagging because you’re so sexy and beautiful...
It was Covid what dun it, gov. We were all plunged into this terrible
pandemic and suddenly it seemed like maybe we ought to tie the knot finally
after all. I mean, if we're on our way to Apocalypse Very Soon, we ought to be
legally-bound to each other in respectable matrimony, didn't we? That will
surely ensure we survive the End Times, won't it? - or at least that we’ve
one good party before one or both of us expires.
Initially, we wanted to just sneak off to the
register office and commit to each other secretly and privately. No fuss. No
Oom-pah-pah. We wouldn't even have to tell anyone (except the registrar and the
witnesses). If we didn't have the money for a fully-fledged 'proper' wedding,
then we could have a very cheap clandestine one instead. What a hoot! Everyone
would think we were still living in sin, when, unbeknown to them, in fact we'd
actually be legally wed. It could be our guilty secret. I mean, I actually like
the notion that I've been 'living in sin' for twenty-eight years - it sounds
racy and exciting, even though the reality is that it's exactly like being
married but without the rings and the tax breaks. I like my friend referring to my partner as my 'Live-in Lover' - way cooler than 'my husband'!
So being secretly married would have meant we looked like unconventional rebels
on the outside while, behind the scenes, being boringly betrothed.
My sister put paid to that idea by pointing out that, if it
ever got out (and, of course, inevitably, it would), our respective mums would
be upset that they hadn't been invited to the wedding. So we gritted our teeth
and booked the slightly larger ceremony suite at the Town Hall. As it turned
out, my mum was mystified and told us she thought we were already married (?),
and partner's mum was horrified at the thought of having to leave her house to
attend the ceremony (self-isolation has become a way of life for her). She
refused to go to the meal afterwards point-blank due to her belief that restaurants
would a) serve her food she couldn’t actually eat (she considers capsicum
peppers to be dangerously exotic) and/or b) give her portions far too large for
human consumption.
And this was only the start of what I can tell is going to
become a typical Wilford-Badger catalogue of, if not exactly disasters, at
least muddles. misunderstandings and potential mayhem. For one thing, I will
have to wear high heels and that means, given my recent track record, there’s a high chance I’ll fall over at
some point during the ceremony, probably while reciting my vows. I'm not kidding - this is a serious possibility. My most recent
fall was during a sedate walk on a completely flat canal path, while wearing completely flat
walking shoes. On that occasion, I landed face down, performed a comic skid and my head rebounded against the floor like a gong against a cymbal but less melodically. And then I made it worse by shouting ‘F***ing sh***ing
hell, not again!’ at the top of my voice just as a couple in their mid-nineties
sprinted over to ask if they could help. Hands laminated with industrial grit, forehead swelling to Klingon-like proportions, and muttering apologies, I hobbled to a nearby wall
next to a road to wait for partner to bring the car round, and pretended I
always went hiking wearing trousers with the knees ripped out and with only one lens in my glasses. I have a friend
who also falls over a lot, and we don’t tend to go out for walks together in
public any more for fear of being mistaken for Abbott and Costello.
So walking slowly across a carpeted indoor room will be no guarantee that I won’t fall over. Some of these municipal carpets have really thick piles.
Choose ONE word from each of the following lists:
LIST ONE: LIST TWO: LIST THREE: LIST FOUR: LIST FIVE:
silver cherry bacon horse steam train
pewter orange bread elephant Porsche
clay lime banana tortoise school bus
treacle pomegranate yogurt cuttlefish skateboard
ruby persimmon quinoa labrador helicopter
soot apple cheese snake aeroplane
chalk pear linguine lion raft
linen grape potato frog scooter
Now, write down your five words and try to think of as many things associated with those words as you can. Allow your mind to wander and write down everything that comes to you. Don't put too much thought into this. Let one idea suggest another. Each word might suggest something specific or generic, something only you would think of or something many people would think of. Cross out any association that seems too obvious or uninteresting.
EXAMPLE:
'soot' - after a fire - burnt-out building - letter burning in a fireplace - industrial site - nineteenth century air pollution in big cities - darkness (black as soot, sooty sky) - Sooty and Sweep - Sooty as name for a beloved teddy bear or pet - Sooty as a racist slur - a world of soot with soot covering every surface - wet soot like black ink - what has been burned? Soot = ashes? - blackness - dustiness - dirt - smudges - knee-deep in soot - Othello's 'sooty bosom' - soot/foot/gut/slut/glut/shut/hut/mutt/cut/strut
Next, try to make some connections between items on your 'Ideas Chart'. Which ideas are you most drawn to? Can you see any narratives forming, or possibly just ideas or hints for narratives? Have any unexpected images arisen? Do any of the ideas have a strong emotional pull for you? Are different ideas coalescing or transforming your original thoughts?
Use this 'Ideas Chart' to generate some prompts for stories or poems. Hopefully, you will find that each Ideas Chart you produce gives you several ideas for writing, and you can go back to the five lists you started with to select different words as often as you like.
You might also attempt to link the words, or write a story which uses all five words, or use derivatives of the words (such as 'elephantine', 'chalky', 'appleblossom', 'cheesy', 'rafting', etc). The words are there to be used in whatever way you wish.
Happy writing!
Someone bought this novel for me a few years ago and it has been sitting on my bookshelf ever since, until recently I picked it up to read in a fit of boredom. Published in 2017, this is Celeste Ng’s second major novel. Her debut novel, Everything I never told you, won the Hopwood Award, the Massachusetts Book Award, the Asian/Pacific American Award for Literature and the American Library Association’s Alex Award. Little Fires Everywhere was a critically-acclaimed bestseller and has been made into a TV mini-series starring Reese Witherspoon (premiered on Hulu and later generally released on Amazon Prime).
This novel was a bestseller, and therefore it feels
a little churlish of me to have failed to find it as compelling as others obviously
did. This is not to suggest that I hated it, but simply that I found it a
struggle at times. The opening chapter, which describes the housefire that
occurs at the climax of the story, in theory should make the beginning of the
novel grab the reader’s attention – writers are always being told to begin in
medias res, after all. But somehow I found this chapter strangely lacking
in drama – there seemed to be a large ensemble of characters, their names all
introduced in this first chapter, and I couldn’t get a grip on who they all
were straight away. The reader isn’t thrown straight into the drama of the fire
itself but into its slightly dull aftermath, and though there were many hints
at what had happened and who had done it, these hints were too confusing or too
dull to fully engage my attention. And I have to be honest (potential spoiler
alert here), when I finally reached the end of the novel, I found the full
revelation about who caused the fire and why to be slightly underwhelming and
obvious, and is more or less revealed in this first chapter.
However,
this is a ‘literary’ novel, and Ng is a serious writer. She doesn’t go in for
fancy tricks or plot twists. She is aiming to say something profound and
meaningful about life. And the fact is, though I did find Chapter One tedious,
I nevertheless read on. In fact, I was roughly halfway through before I became
fully engaged with the story, but the fact that I kept reading anyway, despite
this, says more about the novel’s strengths than about my staying power. Ng’s
style is lucid and easy to follow. This isn’t one of those irritating books
where the author is showing off his/her cleverness by using elaborate imagery, obscure
references and ‘experimental’ narrative devices. It is a reasonably complex
plot which is organised effectively and told with great clarity. And I suspect
that is actually where my lack of interest comes from, sadly.
On
my MA in Creative Writing, we were told repeatedly to ‘show’ rather than ‘tell’.
While there are obviously times when telling is needed, the advice was usually
to always try to show people’s emotions through their dialogue and actions
rather than just telling the reader. But Ng tends to tell us what is going on
inside characters’ heads: she describes what they do, often in retrospect or
summarised, so we are given the information quite quickly, and she tends to
focus on the aftermath of emotionally-intense situations – for instance, when
Lexie has an abortion, we learn very little about the experience itself but we
see her being comforted by Mia afterwards and we are told about how her sister
Izzy and Mia’s daughter Pearl feel about this. When Pearl begins to have sex
with Lexie’s brother, Trip, we are told this and given a quick overview of how
it comes about, but I never felt truly involved in Pearl’s feelings about the
experience. In fact, I never felt that I
knew Pearl much at all, throughout the novel, despite her being such a central
character. We are told a great deal about Elena’s thought processes and why she
has certain emotions, but we actually see very little interaction between her
and her children and husband. We are told that Mia and Pearl are very close and
given information about their life together, but we see very little of this
tight bond in operation. This has a distancing effect on the reader – I felt
that I didn’t care about the characters as much as I was intended to, which
made their experiences less compelling.
I
wondered about the necessity for such a large cast of characters too. For
example, I found the character of Moody to be ultimately superfluous to the
plot – in the early chapters, I felt like he was going to be a central element
in the unfolding plot, but in fact by the end I couldn’t really see what his
purpose in the narrative was at all, other than as a means of introducing Pearl
to the Richardson family. Nevertheless, all the characters are realistic and
psychologically plausible. They respond like real people, they interact like
real people. But we are generally kept at arm’s length from them, mainly due to
the necessity for Ng to keep all these different characters’ individual stories
going, like spinning plates on the tops of poles that have to be constantly
swivelled to keep them spinning. And, though the writing seems effortless and
unflashy (which I liked), and there are some lovely images here and there, I
did feel that occasionally it dipped into cliché in the language-choices it employed.
There
were two particular strengths to this novel which struck me and made it overall
a satisfactory read. One was the clever plotting. Each character’s responses to
each other and to events leads quite naturally to what happens next – one event
leads to another in a way that seemed completely natural and never contrived.
In fact, I would have liked a bit more drama, as ultimately everyone was oddly
calm and controlled. There were no spiteful cat-fights, screaming matches, bitter
arguments – it was all rather constrained and quiet. The simmering emotional
cauldron Ng kept hinting at never really materialised. There were moments when
I almost hoped for something terrible to happen – the most dramatic event in
the novel, relating to the infant Mirabelle/May Ling at the heart of the story,
was narrated with a singular lack of dramatic impact. The revelations were
interesting but not much more than that. Mia was by far the most interesting
character but even with her I rarely felt that I was being invited into her
inner life, or at least not very far in. There always seemed to be a bit more
psychic distance than I needed. It
occurred to me at one point that this style of writing is something I employ in
my own short stories at times, and I wondered whether this was the aspect that
my final coursework marker on the MA course referred to as being ‘rather pedestrian
in places’, lacking in variety. It was odd, but enlightening, to find myself
criticising a well-respected novelist for a writing style which is like my own!
The
thing I thought Ng did superbly well was her descriptions of Mia’s photographs.
Mia is an artist, her medium photography, and she is presented as being exceptionally
talented. This is always extremely difficult for writers to convey. How do you get
across to the reader the experience a viewer of a Rembrandt painting or the
listener of a Beethoven concerto has, when you only have words on a page? Getting across the idea that Mia is gifted
and original takes real skill. Ng does it wonderfully. She spends a lot of time
describing Mia’s artistic method, her ideas, the ways she brings media and
objects and thoughts together and creates works of art that you can imagine
would be sought-after. Ng gives us just enough information to whet our
appetite, to make us feel that Mia has true talent, without describing the
works in such detail that they begin to seem trivial, banal, unexciting. I felt
that maybe Ng herself had ability as a visual artist as well as a writer: she
certainly has a great deal of expertise and a very active and creative
imagination. It was in fact these passages about Mia’s artwork that kept me
reading and which have stayed with me since. They are also not there purely for
decoration or for back-story – they are central to Mia’s character and crucial
elements of the story’s climax.
You can find out more about Celeste Ng at: https://www.celesteng.com/about
RATING: Little Fires Everywhere ***
Key:
*****
highly
recommended - a 'must-read'
**** good - well worth taking the time to
read
*** ok - will help to
pass the time in a boring situation
** not very good
- just about readable but flawed
* not recommended -
boring, offensive, badly-written or deeply flawed in some other way