5★
“…from the moment we arrive on the planet the universe is against us, conspiring to drown us, set us on fire, bury us in the earth, our spirits floating off into the atmosphere.”
I’m convinced John Boyne can write anything from anyone’s point of view. Here he has thirty-six-year-old Dr Freya Petrus, an acclaimed burns specialist, narrate her tale of revenge, and what a vengeful woman she is… with good reason. The book opens with:
“When I was twelve years old, I was buried alive within the grounds of a construction site.”
This is the FIRE part of Boyne’s ELEMENTS QUARTET which begins with WATER and EARTH. So far, (in my words), not only are the elements conspiring against us, we have used them to drown our sorrows, bury our past, and burn our bridges to bad memories. AIR is still to come.
The books are loosely connected, so reading them out of order would give some spoilers to the previous books, although each story is self-contained.
Freya narrates her story in the first person, as if she’s addressing us, the reader. Her tone seems to shift between showing off her cleverness and explaining why she has been driven to do what she does – regularly – to make up for the damage done during the summer she was twelve.
She lived with her grandmother, Hannah, because her mother, Beth, couldn’t cope so moved away to share her life and bed with a series of short-term boyfriends.
“Hannah was only thirty-two when I was born and thirty-three when my mother, Beth, moved to Cornwall, leaving me in her care.
. . .
Both had become pregnant when they were teenagers and, thinking this was the natural order of things, I assumed that I would be a mother myself at sixteen, but, thankfully, I knew better than to bring a child into this world.”
She sure did know better. She was sent to Cornwall every summer to spend two months with her mother, but the only people who were interested in her were the fourteen-year-old twin boys who lived in the rather grand house nearby. Mum had her own life.
“ Instead of feeling welcome in her home or being over-compensated for her lack of maternal affection across the other ten months of the year, I always went to bed on my first night aware that she was counting down the days until I could be despatched back to Norfolk.”
As for finding out about her father, grandmother Hannah had told her all that she knew.
“That he was a lad from the year above Beth in school, a wrong ’un from a family of tinkers who were no better than they ought to be, and he’d just shrugged his shoulders when Beth told him that he’d got her up the spout, saying it was nothing to do with him if she was the town bike and how did she know it was his anyway? Half the school first eleven had had her.
‘Which they hadn’t,’ she insisted. ‘Not half, anyway.’”
Freya was always smart and is known as a good, thorough doctor, but a bit cold and hard. She is admired but not liked. In a conversation with her medical student, whom she was surprised had chosen to work with her in spite of her difficult reputation, they are discussing why she chose burns as a specialty.
“ ‘The elements destroy everything. Think of water. When someone drowns, and their body floats back to shore, their features are so bloated it can be difficult to identify them. Think of earth. When a body is buried, it starts to decompose immediately. Think of air. If we’re deprived of it for even a few minutes, we die. Then think of fire. When someone’s physical appearance is damaged by burns, we turn away, repulsed. We don’t want to know.’”
She’s mysterious and dangerous with a fascinating compulsion.
Boyne writes from the perspective of both perpetrators and victims (often the same person at different times of their life). There are reasons people become perpetrators and reasons they select the victims they do. The public has a tendency to choose sides quickly when crimes are committed, and I like seeing Boyne shake that up.
I always love his writing, and I particularly I like the connections between these short books. They have all been dark, exposing people’s vulnerabilities as they do, but they are insightful and thought-provoking. Could I have done some of these things?
I remember a primary school principal telling me that parents insist “MY child would NEVER do or say such a thing”.
She would reply that “ANY child, given the right set of circumstances, will do or say almost anything.” (I may have added the “almost”.)
It’s more of a thriller than I expected, but it makes perfect sense. He is showing us those “circumstances” and what keeps happening in every generation because we haven’t managed to create better “circumstances”.
Thanks to NetGalley and Transworld/Doubleday for the copy for review from which I’ve quoted. This will be out in a few weeks and is still available on NetGalley.