He’s a sharp author, is Andrew O’Hagan. “Personality” certainly delivers a reflection on our celebrity culture, but he does it in a way that allows characters to be have substance, settings to deliver their sense of place, the inner world and the outer world of the novel the space and shape to unfold and land in the narrative. It would be much easier to just elevate Maria and burn her at the stake of the mainstream media.
Instead, we enter the minds and memories of characters through a carefully crafted series of techniques that never upstage Maria or her story. There’s conventional third person past tense, first person, dramatic layout, italicised thought and flashback. They are used masterfully to serve the greater story, yet each is rich in its own portrayal - the talent quest host’s reflections on talent and entertainment, grandmother Lucia’s mid-war affair (a novella within the novel), Michael’s journey with the war blind working for a charity. Each allows a rich colour to add its tone to the story, enriching the journey, broadening the tone and times and themes, but weaving those threads together to lift the final episode of the book.
It’s a book about loss, music, Italian migrants in Scotland, the war, romance, family, loyalty, manipulation, exploitation, the power and moral indifference of popular culture, obsession, mental health, eating disorders, love, the drive for fulfilment… Or it’s the rise and fall and read-the-rest-for-yourself of a successful TV talent quest winner.
Another fine work by Andrew O’Hagan.
NOTE
I would say that although it serves the story - quite powerfully - and although it is excellently written, the book does contain a graphic sex scene. Some don’t go for that so much. But for that, I think this book would make an excellent school text to study the subtle, successful, masterful use of multiple modes of writing. (Perhaps that’s not such an issue in schools these days.)