For 2024 the aim remains to post a review at least every other Friday and to complete the Bookpacking reading journey.

21 June 2019

The Wrong Boy – Willy Russell


This book, though no travelogue, describes two journeys made by young Raymond Marks.

The first is simple in conception and purpose as he tries to get from Failsworth in Manchester to Grimsby to start a job on a building site organised for him by his uncle.  But it is anything but straightforward in execution as his efforts to hitch-hike there fall foul of bad luck, poor decisions and a sketchy grasp of geography.  Happily for the reader it is also extremely funny.

It is all recorded in real time by Raymond in his ‘lyrics book’ in the form of letters written (never to be sent) to his musical hero, Morrissey.  But his letters go further than his current misadventures as he takes the opportunity to share his longer, troubled, journey from boyhood to adolescence.  That has been neither simple nor amusing, though there is plenty of black humour there.  Rather it is engrossing and moving as the reader roots for Raymond as he battles against fate, hostile adults, the system and his own inherent ‘differentness’.

No spoilers here; the unfolding journeys need to be into the unknown, though Russell plants seeds and bait along the way to tempt progress and add a sense of foreboding.  The five hundred pages are full of text but the prose is easy to read having a deceptive simplicity that manages to sound both authentically ‘young’ and articulately clever - believably so as Raymond is clearly a born writer.

As is, of course, Willy Russell.  If further proof was needed it is here in this carefully plotted, well revealed, funny, tragic and thought-provoking book.

07 June 2019

A Question of Blood – Ian Rankin


Three dead bodies at a public school in South Queensferry on the edge of Edinburgh – two pupils (and a third wounded) and an ex-SAS serviceman.  Add a fourth body, this one an ex-con, killed in a suspicious house fire in the inner city.

The two crimes are unrelated, apart from their respective connections to DI John Rebus.  One of the dead school kids is the son of his cousin; the ex-con had been threatening Rebus’s protégée DS Siobhan Clarke and now he is charred to a crisp and Rebus has burns to his hands serious enough to warrant bandages that severely impair elements of his lifestyle – such as holding pint glasses and lighting cigarettes.

He cannot drive either, so when he is called in to give his own ex-SAS (failed) insight into the school shooting he enlists DS Clarke as his driver and factotum.

The two cases unfold in tandem, or maybe that should be entwine, as neither is as straightforward as they first seem.  As is the tendency in these later Rebus books, Siobhan Clarke gets at least an equal share of the action, which does no harm by giving some relief from the curmudgeonly DI.

It is no spoiler to confirm that Rebus gets to the bottom of it all in due course, despite the fact he is officially barred from both investigations, as a near relative of the victim in one and a prime suspect in the other.

Well up to standard for the series.