i read this a couple of years ago, but i'm not sure why...perhaps it was the picture of the judge on the cover. i think i was on the wrong tram from the start, thinking the main protagonist was the narrator, when it was really Jason Pellew. i think. anyway i read the whole thing feeling confused, and wondering if it would ever lead to anything significant, and it didn't. but there is something hypnotic about the way nigel balchin writes, and though i finished "the fall of the sparrow" wondering what was that all about?, i felt i wanted to read more by him. this lead me to the more enjoyable "mine own executioner", the vastly better "the small back room", and the wonderful, "darkness falls from the air". there are others i want to read, but apparently the standard deteriorated towards the end (damn you evil alcohol)
as i read more of balchin, i realised his great strength lies in his dialogue. his characters are so witty and frank to each other, and nobody ever gets offended. maybe i just wish that real life was like that. and his narrators are SO intelligent, but invariably modest, put-upon, somehow broken, and likeable.
i'm going to read "the fall of the sparrow" again, just as a thank you for sending me to nigel balchin's other books, and hopefully with an insight that will allow me to appreciate the story better.
i might even like it this time.