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A Shock
The Goldsmiths Prize
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2021 Goldsmiths Prize Shortlist - A Shock
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Hugh, Active moderator
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rated it 3 stars
Oct 06, 2021 12:12PM


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(Indeed Gumble has redeemed himself!)
For US based readers and indy press fans - this one is out with New Directions in the US. So buy it from there.
https://www.ndbooks.com/author/keith-...
That ND feature it also tells me it's going to be good


And even worse I think I was one of the first to mention Little Scratch as a contender.
Completely ruined my hitherto deplorable record.
I guess One Sky Day might have been my “read it but did not mention as a vague contender” book but Paul listed it instead.

As I have ditched meticulously planned TBR stacks the probably of reading this will be soon (when it arrives in a month)
message 9:
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Gumble's Yard - Golden Reviewer
(last edited Oct 09, 2021 12:46PM)
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rated it 3 stars

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
The way I can best describe this book is as follows.
Imagine someone made a collage of South London Life which was a combination of representational art with the more occasional absurdist elements and which was made from overlapping pieces of material which are drawn from the detritus of South London Life itself.
After I wrote this I found the author’s own description which I think is not that different, he calls it an enneaptych – a nine-panelled painting – “each panel portrays something of its own, but it’s how they work together that makes it what it is. You usually see panel paintings on altars. And, yes, the altar here is London. And it’s a foul and profane and fractured altar, but it’s mine, and I’m poisoned by it”
There is a lot to like, particularly the interaction between the ideas of liminal spaces and of lives being trapped and circumscribed and how both are represented physically as well as emotionally. I liked the way that a party (and the Labour Party) and a party wall were all ways in which the different characters both converged and were trapped.
My two biggest issues I think were:
Firstly that it is all just a bit too sordid for me (two chapters in particular rather ruined my experience but the whole thing felt tainted)
Secondly that it is perhaps oddly a little too straightforward (at least compared to my prior expectations) - the connections between the different characters and chapters seemed in many cases a little too obvious (even at times over Laboured - if you can pardon the pun). A good example of this would be a subtle detail of the first chapter which is explained in painstaking detail by a character in the last story.

Perhaps they should have given the connected short stories with a sense of place slot to Luckenbooth

The judges controversially had marked that as ineligible as the book is set outside London and the author does not live there either. They did note that the author did degrees at two different London universities but because she left to finalise her PhD in Edinburgh it counted against her.

I was looking at a policy proposal the other day. Trial Universal Basic Income in London. Pay £3,500 to each man, woman and child, non-means tested and tax free. And it doesn't cost a penny in extra spending for the government as it's entirely self-funded by London.

A Shock is an odd pick for me - perhaps it is deliberate London-centricity, perhaps the others weren’t entered for a novel prize, but whatever the reason, this is a rare misfire on a strong list.


I read this as the 6th book on a list where the other 5 books were all book-of-the-year level for me, so I was expecting/hoping to be blown away. And it just felt like one of several connected short story collections this year which probably qualified more as the author insisted it was a novel* (remember David Szalay's All That A Man Is).
I guess you are now coming to it after GY and I (think Neil is also in same camp) had given it a disappointed meh, so can be pleasantly surprised that it's actually not bad if measured objectively.
Incidentally this one does make me want to seek out his previous book (which has been on my radar for some time) so I can't have disliked it that much.
[* In turn that reminds me a bit - see this year's International Booker - of books that are ostensibly memoirs but qualify for fiction/novel prizes on the grounds they are entered. And then often do well, since as novels they seem innovative.]




message 20:
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Gumble's Yard - Golden Reviewer
(last edited Oct 12, 2021 07:21AM)
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rated it 3 stars

(*) the idea of being trapped in a narrow or hidden space is key to the novel.
There is a lot to like here but for me it loses at least 0.5 stars each for: a drug taking chapter (which makes Great Circle's shrooms look like literature), general squalidness and the worse attempt at London accents since Dick van Dyke (which sadly in this case are seemingly meant to be public school accents).


On reflection I am being very unfair to Dick van Dyke
- he did not actually live in London
- I can at least see what he was trying to do
- Mary Poppins is a masterwork

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
I have to concede that A Shock is not in the same league as Hawthorn & Child. When I made my guess in at the shortlist, I thought Lean Fall Stand and The Tomb Guardians would be more likely contenders than this.
Still, I find there is some powerful writing here (I love the first chapter, for example). From a Goldsmiths point of view, the loosely connected structure really works to reflect the sense of community in the book.
Heck, I even liked the bit with the accents, because I thought it was meant as a deliberate parody of fiction that represents working-class accents phonetically.
message 25:
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Gumble's Yard - Golden Reviewer
(last edited Oct 12, 2021 09:07AM)
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rated it 3 stars

The Party is definitely a highlight: I think having read that and The Camera I felt the book rather descended after that - with a brief pick up for The Story

Problem I had was that as someone living in South London, the only bit I could identify with was the private schoolkids, and they don't speak anything like that. This year's trend appears to be to flatten vowels - so eg the 'o' in a word like swollen is pronounced more like the o in "not" than the o is "no".


Those accents are miles apart.





Does that make any sense?




https://www.newstatesman.com/culture/...

Books mentioned in this topic
A Shock (other topics)Hawthorn & Child (other topics)
Lean Fall Stand (other topics)
The Tomb Guardians (other topics)
A Shock (other topics)