(x-posted to This Is Where The Voices Go)
So just after New Year I finished reading the book that I started before Christmas, an awful, dreadful thing stuffed with prostitutes and shotguns, and the kind of dialogue you'd expect from Engrish dubbing. The central character approached the narrative in an ingenious fashion, routinely getting knocked unconscious for the boring parts before coming to just in time for any action.
So just after New Year I finished reading the book that I started before Christmas, an awful, dreadful thing stuffed with prostitutes and shotguns, and the kind of dialogue you'd expect from Engrish dubbing. The central character approached the narrative in an ingenious fashion, routinely getting knocked unconscious for the boring parts before coming to just in time for any action.
I should set up some sort of mental filter that engages when I'm out hunting for second hand books, one that stops me from picking up anything from the crime genre, with all its frustratingly two-dimensional bent cops, hard rains on dirty streets, casual acceptances of pederasty, and meticulous descriptions of gun and car types.
Even that filter would've struggled when I saw the cover of MAIN BITCH in Oxfam. That such a book had found its way into a store filled with cardigans and the smell of old people (boiled sweets and sawdust) was fantastic in itself, but the bold red lettering emblazoned over the tawdry black and white sketch of a sulky prostitute just screamed of deviancy and brown paper bags and the independent press.
There was nothing specifically wrong or singular about such a purchase, but I still felt strangely empowered and aberrant swapping those paperbacked pages for cold hard cash. I was like a teenager buying condoms for the first time.
Then...well then I decided to take the book on the train, and suddenly found myself quite uncomfortable with the looks of concern from tweed old women and from young families travelling to the city for the day, especially when their faces turned from the pleasure and interest of seeing someone read... to the understanding and interpreting of the words and images on the cover. I told myself I should probably be more careful, and more conservative with how I displayed my reading material...
That is until I had a few more hours to kill, and decided to kill them along with a few brain cells in the standing area of a Covent Garden Wetherspoons. Suddenly I was holding the book high and pointing the cover directly at a group of slightly alternative-looking twentysomethings, or anyone who dressed and moved liked they'd been to university, waiting for their slow nods of approval to commence.
Yes, that's right, I'm reading. I'm reading a book in public, rather than kicking a ball or punching someone. I am an academic and we have so much in common, person slowly wondering why that man with the book is nodding at them.
An unofficial office party wound their way to bar, by which I mean a large group of men in suits started baying for booze. I held the book with even more resolution and defiance, often getting in their way as they shouted various slang words for breast and used the entirety of their lungs and spines to laugh at nothing.
Yes, that's right. I'm reading a book in public without shame, in a place you'd never read a book. I know something you don't know, and have access to an understanding that you can't quite grasp. The book itself speaks of a world you don't know, a world you've joked about, a world you wish you knew more about. It intrigues you. Me and my book intrigue you, you men who wish I'd take my buzz kill and go find a place to stand that didn't take up so much space.
So in a matter of hours and a pint and a half I went from a timid travelling academic to a pretentious and showy prick, and all it took was book with a mild swear word in the title. Mark Ravenhill would be so proud.
Nick
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Oh! And it says something for Main Bitch that the best review they could find essentially says "I read it from start to finish, turning each page to see what happened next" .... that isn't a review, that's a description of what happens when you read...
"I read the words and saw pictures in my head! Even when I didn't, but I was generally made aware of chronology of events!" I might review some of the books I've read in my time on Amazon. Any book will do, the review will be the same.
ReplyDeleteSpeaking of Amazon. http://www.amazon.com/Main-Bitch-Bob-George/dp/0749002573/ref=cm_cr_pr_product_top
Before you think there's an end to the praise check out the glowing review from "A Customer".
Seems Bob George is an ex-MET officer working under a pseudonym and "no working in the security industry" (sic). I'm not sure if that last part is an honest typo, or if he was just surmising the stipulations of his severance package.
(18th Jan) But is he absent from the security industry, or employed within it in a way that is "no working"? A slight on his effectiveness perhaps!
DeleteFrom that review... "This is the Brits showing that they can do what the US have been doing for years."
If that's true, then for years the US have been shooting unarmed people through windows, storming residences without warrant, and letting peadophiles do what they want provided they're from a minority. Not sure if I'm too happy that the Brits are showing they can now do this..
Nick
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