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The Adult

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Jim Thorne. He wants to understand love. His mum. Her three sisters have epic perms. And they're famous. Dad. Dad's focused on a vital Mario or Sonic? It's England, 1989-2009. So expect a little history. The dolphin's name is Dilly.

256 pages, Hardcover

First published August 2, 2012

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Joe Stretch

12 books14 followers

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5 stars
31 (24%)
4 stars
47 (37%)
3 stars
35 (27%)
2 stars
8 (6%)
1 star
6 (4%)
Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews
Profile Image for Violet wells.
433 reviews4,531 followers
March 7, 2016
On the back cover it says “A well-observed coming-of-age comedy” which is pretty much what the Adult is. It has a nice structure – a kind of intimate complicity with the reader, and deft intrigue-building timing with regards to completing the anecdotes it tells. And there’s a moving pathos about the story towards the end.
Essentially it’s a wry self-conscious dig at Celebrity Culture. Trouble here though is that Celebrity Culture does such a fabulous job of ridiculing itself that a novel setting itself the same task is always going to come out the loser – enough to watch twenty minutes of I’m a celebrity, get me out of here to get anyone shaking their head in amused despair.
The self –pleasuring prose was irritating at times, all the peacock preening, as if Stretch fancies himself as the new Martin Amis. He tries too hard to write quotable cool sentences and though sometimes really good they are just as often pretty bad. Here are a couple of the good ‘uns: “A decade wandered with us like a lost tourist.” And: “Her moans were somehow off kilter and recalled the sympathetic sounds the dinner ladies made when we grazed our knees on the playground of Ridley Primary.”
But what ultimately made me more critical of this novel was the fact it won the Somerset Maugham prize in 2013. I’ve probably read about twenty novels recently by Americans that are so much better than this (Motherless Brooklyn most recently) that it’s depressing to realise how hard up we presently are in the UK for first rate novelists.
Profile Image for Marie.
332 reviews44 followers
October 1, 2012
Usually I prefer to summarise plots in my own words rather than doing a sneaky copy-and-paste from Amazon, but here I am going to make an exception and use the official blurb because I think it sums things up rather well:

"Jim Thorne. He wants to understand love.
His mum. Her three sisters have epic perms. And they're famous.
Dad. Dad's focused on a vital question: Mario or Sonic?
It's England, 1989-2009. So expect a little history."

That's all there is to it - this book is about Jim and his life and his family. About the struggles of having to be an adolescent man in a family full of women. About growing up with unhappy parents in the North of England. Although this makes it sound like little more than a character study and it really runs a whole lot deeper than that. I suppose you could call it a 'coming of age' tale, but I'm not sure whether Jim ever actually does grow up or 'come of age' or learn anything about how to relate to people in the end.

One thing The Adult never is, is a comfortable read. There were times when I found myself cringing on Jim's behalf and my heart ached for him, but equally there were times when I felt he was a repulsive human being who deserved no sympathy whatsoever. Either way, there is a constant horrible sense of inevitability. Jim is unquestionably one of life's strugglers. His clumsy awkwardness - is that a real word? - is portrayed perfectly. This unease is nicely balanced by the dry humour that I loved in Stretch's earlier books. There is also a healthy dose of 1990s nostalgia backed up by numerous pop culture references that manage to highlight some of the things that were terrible about that decade while simultaneously making me wish I was back there. It's quite cleverly done without the aid of any sentimental rose-tinted glasses.

The main thing that strikes me about this novel is how much more sensitive and, I suppose, more 'human' it is than its predecessors. There is definitely a more emotional undercurrent running through The Adult than either Friction or Wildlife and this makes it much more accessible. While I thought both of those books were great, they are certainly bleak and often shocking. Some of my friends couldn't finish them and I definitely wouldn't pass them on to my mum, whereas I think Mum would quite enjoy this one. When he starts writing novels that my Grandma would read I might start to worry, but for now I think Joe Stretch is definitely onto a winner and I hope The Adult gets some more recognition over the coming autumn.
Profile Image for Clare.
10 reviews
August 23, 2015
One of the few writers who offers some compelling insights into the well trodden coming of age narrative. This is a sparkling, incisive book. I've read some of Stretch's early work and always suspected he had a novel like this in him. Read this book!
Profile Image for Karen Rye.
178 reviews3 followers
October 5, 2013
Laugh out loud funny in places. Poignant and heart breaking in others. Full of factoids and examples of what was happening between 1989 & 2009 that evoked such vivid memories it was like being transported back to my teenage years! Which really only added to the book for me. Nicely done.
2 reviews2 followers
February 1, 2014
Unusually funny although sometimes sad too, Joe Stretch has a funky way of observing life in this very well written book. I thoroughly enjoyed it.
Profile Image for Renita D'Silva.
Author 21 books410 followers
October 22, 2014
A tale about quirky families and sibling relationships and growing up, funny and poignant.
42 reviews3 followers
September 3, 2020
Having read his two previous novels Frictions and Wildlife, I think this is my favourite novel of Stretch's to date. His writing style is, as always, frank and laced with humour and wry observations. Nothing is really censored in this book (and being about the years of puberty and first loves you can take a good guess where a lot of subject matter will lie), but this gives a real sense of honesty and an ability to relate to the main character of Jim, who recounts his childhood and life choices throughout the pages of this book. It reads as a memoir of the character.

For those of my generation (a 90s child), many of the references will be all too familiar and there is a certain nostalgia there- Spice Girls/ Nirvana songs and playing Sonic/ GTA after school anyone? There is a universality to the theme of growing up and adolescence in general though, so I feel that the audience shouldn't be restricted by the fact that this is a novel which is very much set in it's time.

This novel evokes a real sense of what growing up can feel like- it can be salacious, scary, confusing and sweet. The dynamics between the characters are well written and interesting. Jim himself is the child of a could-have-been-a-star mother, who is from a famous acting and singing dynasty and a rather more reclusive father. His navigation through the years and the choices he makes make for an interesting story, particularly as you know snippets of Jim's future from the start and so gradually build up the backstory and see his influences.

It is not a life changing read, but there is a certain nostalgia to it and a real sense that this is life being recounted and is definitely not all rainbows and smiles. This just helps draws you in and makes you like Jim and want to know how he manages to surface from the bubble of his, at times strange, childhood.
277 reviews1 follower
September 26, 2021
One point five. I couldn't finish this because I really disliked everyone in it and the way it kept randomly flipping backwards and forwards in time really annoyed me. I also didn't find it at all funny so maybe I missed the joke! I gave it one point for the scenes set in Manchester, which was the only good part of it!
3 reviews1 follower
September 30, 2025
A mate bought me this for my birthday and it sat on my TBR pile for a few more birthdays.

I'm so happy I finally gave it a chance. Funny, but knowing. A short read that I wish had lasted longer. I found myself afterwards thinking about the characters and wondering where they ended up.

I'll be hunting out Stretch's other novels for sure!
Profile Image for Dantanian.
242 reviews3 followers
October 13, 2019
With a host of realistic characters, this is an amusing novel full of awkward identification which tells the tale of a inconsequential life, and that's where it hits... The banality of life. A book of yearning.
Profile Image for Michael Brown.
120 reviews11 followers
September 14, 2015
Two pages into this novel, I encountered this illuminating comparison:

The inside of my fridge is like a room in a modern art gallery - bare, bright white and then the odd disturbing object.


Goodreader, I was hooked. Nearly 200 pages later, our narrator Jim Thorne goes to meet an old friend and prepares as follows:

I rehearsed a smile to greet [her] with but...decided against it, in favour of a subtle frown that was suggestive of reading novels, a high caffeine diet and, I suspected, indifference to television.


In the intervening spaces, a tale is told of our narrator's family - his famous aunts, his obsessive father, his quirky friends and the trip takes us through the 80s and 90s in a way which was, for me, measured out with highly familiar signposts. It's occasionally tempting to claim that overt chronicling is the cheapest form of deixis - and there are whole paragraphs in this novel which are that kind of exposition, ranging in subject from Euro 96 to the tribulations of Dustin Diamond - but I can't complain as I do it myself all the time. The world is the only song all of us know by heart after all.

This is a funny book definitely - at one point a Liberal Democrat spin doctor is described as "prematurely bold" and I'm not sure it's a misprint - but it's very sad in parts too. It crams a lot of good things into its relatively small span, and you can't say more than that for a book... or indeed a life.
Profile Image for Kajoch Kajoch.
Author 4 books10 followers
August 19, 2025
I'm crying by the end.
Didn't realise it would relate to me that much. From names - Jim, Harry, Kate - to mentioning Kafka and Sonic the Hedgehog only pages apart. All told with a Murakami-esque sensibility but partial to realism. Harry's queer reading is wonderful, the humour was delightful and sometimes uncomfortable. Moving around all the time. Meditations on art - "anyone can do it" - to the thought that, were we read our internet history on our deathbed, we'd keel over from sadness and grief there and then. His letter to Jordan and relationship to Kate were wonderful, and all told through an honest lens. Captures the transition not only through centuries but, technically, the threshold of a millennia. Ending with a deliberation on fame with Adorno quotes to reinforce the argument. Combat Bombastic is a clear and tear-jerking reflection of fatherly love.
This was a time capsule.

TO JOE:
"It's a wonderful time capsule of hedonism coated in celebrity, advertisement, brands - all embolic of what living 1980-2010 would comprise. You set out on a mission and achieved it, no matter what, aha. So vivid - and I'm not sure where Joe ends and Jim begins. I do feel, somewhat, as though the book was made for me to read it, considering I've lived in a number of the places, dealt with a familiar number of issues, and felt parts of me throughout. You even mention Kafka in regards to cunnilingus which was great and he'd have probably liked that, for whatever I know ahahahaha"
Profile Image for Louise Jones.
288 reviews11 followers
December 8, 2014
I really enjoyed this book I could at times feel his pain and his joy at growing up something we all have to do and the cringeworthy about the name of the all brights most families have a joke that is only funny to them and seems to follow them around I enjoyed the book went through the history of the times and was amusing how times have changed in a relatively short space of time these days the majority have a mobile not the minority will look out for more things to read by Joe stretch
Profile Image for Thomas Hocknell.
Author 6 books25 followers
April 25, 2015
An amazing book that reads like the autobiography of pop stars SHOULD read. This is the book about lack of success (not through lack of talent), yet is all the better for it. It's as close to the inside of my head as a book can be.
Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews

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