Saturday, 26 July 2014

Never Mind by Edward St Aubyn

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Edward St Aubyn was recently interviewed on BBC Culture Show (well perhaps not that recently but we only recently got around to watching it...).

Never Mind is the first in a sequence of novels that follow the life of Patrick Melrose, it is also based on the events of Edward St Aubyn's own life.

This rises very interesting questions about the relationship between the fiction of Melrose and the reality of St Aubyn. In the Culture Show interview St Aubyn clearly states that some passages are direct accounts of the events that he actually experienced, but much, perhaps most, of the novel Never Mind tells of events which are happening beyond the experience of the 5 year old Melrose, and therefore it would seem are imagined by St Aubyn rather than recalled.

To draw attention to this relationship is not to make a judgement – that St Aubyn has “made up” most of the novel does not devalue it, nor does it lessen its status as a “truthful” account, but it reminds us that too often we operate with an overly simplistic definition of a “true story”.

Patrick Melrose in fact plays a fairly small part in the novel – and if it was not for the priming by the Culture Show that these that the “Patrick Melrose” novels I think I might well have overlooked him entirely (much as the rest of the characters in the novel clearly disregard him) and I certainly wouldn't have come to the conclusion that it was a book “about” him...

This is a short book, just under 200 pages, and that was a good thing, as it is populated with a cast of dislikeable individuals, which in interaction with each other seem only to emphasis one another's failings. There is the sense that if I had not read it in a single sitting I would not have brought myself back to it, I would have had little desire to reacquaint myself with this menagerie of human brokenness.

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