We need to talk about Kevin
Ordinarily, I don't read Booker or Orange Prize winners. For one, the writing is often pretentiously inaccessible. For another, I want to write Orange Prize winners, not read them. And finally, I have a bone to pick with the woman who recommended this book (she runs a bookshop and she refused to put my murder mystery on her shelf because “murder mysteries don’t sell”.)
Nevertheless, I made an exception for this book, and I both glad and incredibly sad that I did.
To begin with, I admit the title’s catchy. "We need to talk about Kevin"... and even before you know that the book is about a teenage mass-murderer, you are burning to know why, why we need to talk about this Kevin chap.
The why is peppered throughout the book: why did he do it? But the sense of mystery and helplessness is not why the book is such a success. Neither is the beautiful prose. For me, the book’s value lies in its astute philosophies and acute observations. The author is merciless on the American way of life, which I admire (the fact, not the way of life); and she exposes the mind of a mother so well that I needed to stop reading a few times just to catch my breath.
Being a mother is, of course, why I’m also so incredibly sad that I’ve read the book. Some emotions are not meant to be experienced, not even through the narrative of a fictional character.
3 comments:
Why don't they sell?
Agatha christi (?) sells well.
Mystery novels do sell. But that particular bookshop owner is into Literature with a capital L, so she wouldn't want a mere murder mystery book polluting her shop. Either that or she a xenophobe.
... And yes, Agatha Christie, Shakespeare and the Bible are the top sellers world-wide (I forget in which order)... not bad for a mere muder mystery novel writer.
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