Eimear MacBride
Text Publishing
Otago Daily Times, October 8th 2016
For eighteen-year-old Eily, narrator of The Lesser Bohemians, acceptance into a prestigious London drama school will allow her to transform herself from young, Irish virgin to cosmopolitan woman of experience, and “make myself of life here for life is this place and would be start of mine”.
It is a project she embarks on with alacrity, throwing herself into intra- and extra-curricular student activities with equal vigour. Life is a whirl-wind of school, pubs, parties and other such rites of passage that eventually see her thrown out of her bedsit and sharing a squalid squat with a fellow student, his Czech wife and the wife’s equally Czech boyfriend. But it is the turbulent affair with Stephen – an actor old enough to be her father – that dominates her life and forms the core of the novel. It is a relationship that seems doomed to failure, not just because of the age difference but also because both are have survived childhood abuse that, for Stephen in particular, manifests as self-destructiveness. Unlike McBride’s previous novel, A Girl is a Half-Formed Thing, however, this is a story not of fall and fall, but fall and survival; if they can risk trusting in each other and in themselves, they have an opportunity to finally leave the past behind.
Although I was initially uncomfortable with both the novel’s subject matter and form (most events are presented as fragmentary, first person stream-of-consciousness), McBride has managed a brilliant balancing act. Eily’s voice isn’t convincing eighteen, but the mixture of sensory impressions and inner commentary successfully captures the inchoate nature of thought while remaining comprehensible. Indeed, I found myself so lost in her head that an interlude of ‘normal’ storytelling jarringly highlighted how unrealistically smooth most conventional dialogue actually is.
Another unexpected advantage of using a style in which so much is left in the spaces between words is that whilst the physical aspects of their relationship are as important as the emotional, these are generally described as fleeting impressions rather than the cringe-making metaphors that accompany all too many descriptions of sex (the corollary being that what is described explicitly is important). Details of abuse are handled with similar care; present only insofar as they form a necessary part of the story rather than gratuitous detail, although a degree of reader’s discretion is probably advisable.
Eily’s acting classes may take a back seat to the main drama in her life, but the fact that she is required to mine personal experiences and present these to her colleagues also plays a pivotal role in the story. This, in conjunction with the story’s challenging themes and structure reminded me strongly of The Rehearsal, and I was not surprised to see Eleanor Catton’s name in the list of endorsements.
The Lesser Bohemians is not going to appeal to all readers, but if you want something a little outside the blandness of the literary mainstream – or enjoyed either authors’ earlier novels – it is well worth a try.
https://www.odt.co.nz/entertainment/books/novel-brilliant-balancing-act-subject-and-form
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