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Ian "Marvin" Graye's Reviews > Black Swan Green

Black Swan Green by David Mitchell
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it was amazing
bookshelves: reviews, read-2011, reviews-5-stars, mitchell

A Spelling Test

I kept this book on the shelf for a few years, before thinking I was ready to read it.

I didn't want to break the spell of the first two David Mitchell books that I had read (I didn't really like Cloud Atlas) and I was a bit apprehensive about the subject matter of a young teenage boy.

Ultimately, it was very much a book of two halves for me.

Teenage Mates Land

The first half captured male teenagerdom in the period in the 60's and 70's (when I grew up) and the 80's (when Jason grew up) perfectly.

It was the tail end of a period of Empire, Britannia Rules the Waves, Scouting for Boys, Biggles books and playing British Bulldog.

It had nearly died by the time of Punk Rock for me, but it had one last inglorious revival when Maggie Thatcher invaded the Falklands, before deflating altogether, so much so that Tony Blair couldn't even revive it.

Teenage Wasteland

The trouble and the troubles set in in the second half.

Things start to challenge the relative security of Jason's adolescent world view.

Girls, gangs, crime, conflict, insecurity, parental estrangement, divorce.

Teenage Resolution

The problem is that the two halves are juxtaposed, but not sewn together in a narrative that resolves them in any way.

It's like a photo album with two photos of the one boy at different ages.

In one, he's fresh-faced and enthusiastic, in the next he's pimply and troubled.

The reader might know or guess what comes next, but David Mitchell stops short of telling us.

I can't help thinking that, if Jason was important enough to care about, David Mitchell could have finished off the story.
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Reading Progress

Started Reading
February 1, 2011 – Finished Reading
February 22, 2011 – Shelved
June 28, 2011 – Shelved as: reviews
September 29, 2011 – Shelved as: read-2011
February 15, 2012 – Shelved as: reviews-5-stars
October 24, 2012 – Shelved as: mitchell

Comments Showing 1-15 of 15 (15 new)

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message 1: by Ian (new) - rated it 5 stars

Ian "Marvin" Graye There is a new fun discussion group on David Mitchell here:

http://www.goodreads.com/group/show/6...


s.penkevich I think this may be the next Mitchell I read. But then again that changes every day. I bought this and Ghostwritten used the other day, i may have to flip a coin. Although I'm not opposed to spending more and getting Number 9 dream or something and hitting that first.


message 3: by Ian (new) - rated it 5 stars

Ian "Marvin" Graye If you do "Ghostwritten" first, you'll be at the same stage as me, and then I'll do "Number 9 Dream".

The two are a good pair.

The diversity kicks in after that, so I think it's good to have the first two under your belt.


s.penkevich Yeah I was thinking that - get his early works out of the way to see where he grew from there. Plus I hear Cavendish makes an appearence and I would like to revisit that character.


message 5: by Brad (new) - added it

Brad It has been sitting on my shelf forever too, and for much the same reason as yours, Ian, though I did like Cloud Atlas. Your review will make sure it stays on the shelf a while longer.


message 6: by Ian (new) - rated it 5 stars

Ian "Marvin" Graye Defer by all means, but don't discard. I have a sneaking suspicion we will see more of this photo album in the future.


message 7: by Brad (new) - added it

Brad I will definitely leave it there daunting me, until the more appears.


Cecily This was the fourth DM I read, and I confess I was disappointed by it, though considering it again via the lens of your review, I'm wondering if I was a little harsh. Then again, I'm intrigued that you give it 5*, yet appear frustrated that DM didn't bother to finish the story.


message 9: by Ian (last edited Jan 03, 2012 01:26PM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Ian "Marvin" Graye Hi, Cecily, I think I rated it some time before my review and decided to leave the rating in place because it was more immediate and spontaneous.

Ultimately, I have to give DM full credit for his stylistic choices. He knows what his options are and he chooses between them consciously.

The best analogy I can think of is photography or film where we want to know what happened either side of the photo or before or after the events described in the film, hence the possbility of a prequel or a sequel.

I will probably have something to say about juxtaposition in my next review.


Cecily DM is certainly entitled to his stylistic choices. He is a superb writer - his range is amazing - even if I enjoy some of his works more than others.


fourtriplezed Why did you think the story unfinished Ian? The parents parting was a fitting end point for me personally.


message 12: by Ian (new) - rated it 5 stars

Ian "Marvin" Graye 4triplezed wrote: "Why did you think the story unfinished Ian? The parents parting was a fitting end point for me personally."

From distant memory, I thought that there was no resolution of the troubles or discussion of their impact on the character.


fourtriplezed Ian wrote: "From distant memory, I thought that there was no resolution of the troubles or discussion of their impact on the character. ."

Interestingly I have just read an interview with Mitchell and he has said he is revisiting the character of Jason.


message 14: by Ian (new) - rated it 5 stars

Ian "Marvin" Graye 4triplezed wrote: "Ian wrote: "From distant memory, I thought that there was no resolution of the troubles or discussion of their impact on the character. ."

Interestingly I have just read an interview with Mitchell..."


Interesting. Can you post a link?


fourtriplezed Ian wrote: "4triplezed wrote: "Ian wrote: "From distant memory, I thought that there was no resolution of the troubles or discussion of their impact on the character. ."

Interestingly I have just read an inte..."


Here 'tis.




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